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From WABE Local News:

Jessica Johnson says that the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form typically takes about 30 minutes to complete. However, she understands how the number of steps can be […]

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BREAKING: Atlanta mayor yanks support for eastside Beltline streetcar Josh Green Thu, 03/13/2025 - 15:22 In a surprising turn of events, Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens today indicated the city is shifting priorities from building out a light-rail system on the most popular Beltline section to instead focus on transit in other parts of town. 

Dickens told MARTA’s Board of Directors during a transit meeting today that a southside Beltline transit system in conjunction with MARTA would better serve the city than downtown’s current streetcar branching to the Eastside Trail, and then on to Ponce City Market, according to WSB-TV

Another focus would be improving the current streetcar system and extending it into Southwest Atlanta, with a connection at the Beltline’s planned Murphy Crossing development. 

Courtney English, chief policy officer and senior advisor to the mayor, told the AJC the city remains committed to building rail in the Beltline corridor but not with the eastside strategy that’s been planned—and hotly debated—for several years. 

MARTA officials had estimated the streetcar extension project along the Eastside Trail to Ponce City Market would cost roughly $230 million. The transit agency’s forecasts called for breaking ground late this year and beginning fare service sometime in 2028. 

Transit-rich future for the Beltline's Southside Trail? Atlanta BeltLine Inc.

Early reactions

Walter Brown, president of Better Atlanta Transit, which has lobbied against rail-based transit in the Eastside Trail corridor, provided the following statement in the wake of Dickens’ comments to MARTA officials: 

“Congratulations to Mayor Dickens for making the wise and courageous decision to defund the expensive, unnecessary, and inequitable Streetcar Extension East. It’s clear that the $3 billion Beltline rail loop would do nothing to address Atlanta’s actual transit needs and that it would detract from the enormous success of the Beltline. 

The Streetcar Extension would have gobbled up hundreds of millions of precious More MARTA dollars for a rail stub serving primarily wealthy eastside neighborhoods. That money will be better spent on transit TO the Beltline, such as the mayor’s proposed infill stations, and on transit that serves ridership demand in less well-healed neighborhoods, such as the Hollowell Parkway-North Avenue Bus-Rapid Transit line. 

We urge Atlanta Beltline Inc. to use this opportunity to leverage the Beltline’s success as an Emerald Necklace of trails and parks that has already connected neighborhoods and spurred economic growth. The Beltline trail is a wildly successful micromobility corridor. ABI must do more to nurture this asset. One place to start would be to examine the possibility of building a separate path for pedestrians along the most crowded stretches of the trail.”

Regarding the matter of Beltline transit and the mayor’s opinion, Matthew Rao, Beltline Rail Now chair, provided Urbanize Atlanta with the following transcript of his statement to MARTA’s board: 

“Today you heard from Mayor Dickens and Courtney English about the administration’s changed priorities for building rail on the Beltline, nearly a year after pausing this project in final design with a $13-million contract approved unanimously by this board. 

We heard a brilliant presentation by English characterizing one of the principal pillars upon which Beltline rail as a cornerstone of the Beltline project is based—and that is equity. But that presentation for all its luster leaves much to the imagination and ignores certain realities. 

English drew a line from Northwest to Southeast and suggested that statistics show that the income divide is along that line. He is right to do so. The entire Beltline project and its transit component are based on equity. And while income inequality is represented by that line, so is the prosperity divide. The opportunity that exists on one side of that line does not exist on the other today, and delaying connection to the Eastside Trail with a thought of one day connecting the southwest side will not help move the equity needle, not in the short term nor in the long-term. The Peachtree Center MARTA station that exists now can get you to the Beltline at Ponce City Market in 15 to 20 minutes, if we adopt reasonable fixes to the downtown streetcar. We have the density and precursors for ridership success there. 

The fact is, you stand ready to deliver a project in revenue service in three years that crosses that equity divide. That’s a fact. You will be blamed for a failure to show progress if you delay —not the mayor. He will be long gone when those projects happen. What are you going to do now? 

We have met with your staff and are confident that they want to deliver a world-class project and that they can, if given the chance. Our impression is that MARTA is eager. It is City Hall that wants to take your eyes off the ball and then let you take the fall. 

To start over yet again would waste your progress and millions of dollars. And we would not get rail transit in three years but more like seven to 10. That not only represents a delay, but also a fabulous waste of money—and a delay in the point when people can access the thousands of jobs, the recreational, and health and shopping opportunities that already exist, and are only growing more rapidly in that corridor. 

It also puts pressure on developers to continue to increase the problem English identified, which is the city of cars choking on traffic based on large amounts of parking in every development to make them economically viable. 

The antidote was always planned—and that is Beltline rail. 

And by starting later somewhere else and one day, hopefully coming back around to where we already are, we will not deliver on that promise. And it will have been too late. We urge you to continue with [a streetcar extension eastward] on the Beltline and to move forward and enact the program that English proposed for Southside rail in due time when it is ready and it can be paid for. 

You have collected nearly $700 million in taxes and spent nearly eight years doing it. It’s time to show progress today and not someday, halfway into the 40-year program. With your leadership, collaboration and cooperation with this and future mayors, there must be away forward from where we are now that does not mean sidelining Beltline rail yet again.”

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Streetcar news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta) 

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Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens Beltline Atlanta BeltLine Better Atlanta Transit BeltLine Rail BeltLine Rail Now!

Subtitle City feels southside is more logical option for transit alternative

Neighborhood Citywide

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From WABE Arts and Culture News:

A stenographer’s job is to capture cold, hard facts and transmit them to the official record. But what if the facts won’t cooperate? What if the heart gets in the […]

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Arts Atlanta:

‘People are finding ways to adapt,’ says one talent agency head, and focusing less on volume and more on strategy. :: Since 2023’s Screen Actors Guild and Writers Guild of America strikes, Atlanta’s film industry has drastically changed, with recent transplants and longtime Atlanta film workers adapting to a shakier, more volatile creative climate.  The...

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From WABE Politics News:

President Donald Trump is just over 50 days into his second term. In a matter of weeks, he has signed a flurry of executive actions that have spurred confusion, led […]

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From WABE Local News:

U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff introduced Tuesday a bipartisan bill designed to make homeownership affordable for first responders and teachers nationwide. Alongside Republican Florida Sen. Ashley Moody, Ossoff brought the Homes […]

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From the Saporta Report:

During a tense address from the City of Atlanta to the MARTA Board of Directors, city officials committed to building light rail on the Beltline – but not as the planned streetcar extension.  Chief Policy Advisor Courtney English announced the news on behalf of Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens during public “Transit for All” remarks focused on […]

The post City commits to Beltline rail on Southside trail appeared first on SaportaReport.

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From WABE Politics News:

An hours-long outage Wednesday on StudentAid.gov, the federal website for student loans and financial aid, underscored the risks in rapidly gutting the Department of Education, as President Donald Trump aims to dismantle […]

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From the Saporta Report:

Annual Beltline Lantern Parade returns for 15th year The Atlanta Beltline will light up on Saturday, May 3 with the 15th annual Lantern Parade on the southwest trail.  The one-mile parade will kick off in Adair Park with creator Chantelle Rytter and the Krewe of the Grateful Gluttons in the lead. Her krewe makes most […]

The post Reporter’s Notebook: Lantern Parade returns, Rotarians honored, Hartsfield-Jackson named Best Airport in North America appeared first on SaportaReport.

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From WABE Politics News:

Demonstrators from a Jewish group filled the lobby of Trump Tower on Thursday to denounce the immigration arrest of a Columbia University activist who helped lead student protests on the Manhattan campus […]

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From WABE Local News:

Georgia’s Fulton County, where past elections have been marred by long lines, slow precinct reporting and even false claims of voter fraud, conducted an “organized and orderly” election last year, […]

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From WABE Politics News:

Georgia Association of Educators President Lisa Morgan said educators are “extremely concerned” about the next school year, as President Donald Trump’s administration fulfilled its promise to gut the U.S. Department […]

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From the Saporta Report:

Four Emory University undergraduate students have been selected for a remarkable internship opportunity with Grammy-winning producer Jermaine Dupri and his iconic record label, So So Def. Initially planning to select only two interns, Dupri expanded the opportunity after recognizing the outstanding talent among the applicants, ultimately choosing Ella Ferguson, Luccas Perez, David Qiu and Emmett Roth […]

The post Four Emory students selected for internship with legendary producer Jermaine Dupri and So So Def appeared first on SaportaReport.

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From WABE Local News:

Included in the ongoing purge of federal workers by the Trump administration were employees at the Atlanta regional office of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. One federal […]

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Fresh map puts $5.2B downtown development boom in perspective Josh Green Thu, 03/13/2025 - 11:11 Does the scope of downtown Atlanta development—both proposed and ongoing—make your head spin? Central Atlanta Progress has an app for that. 

Actually, it’s more of a webpage, but the agency’s updated edition of the Downtown Atlanta Investment Map recently went live online and is also available in print

Like a development wonk’s dream, the tool succinctly summarizes projects ranging from towering high-rises to low-slung renovations of old buildings across six districts, spanning from South Downtown to Science Square, the Stitch, and beyond. 

Not every project is solidly in what most Atlantans consider downtown—see: Bank of America Plaza renovations; the stalled Waldo’s; and the four-story, A Ma Maniere condo-retail combo at 479 Edgewood Ave.—but most are. 

The map features 71 projects total, each color-coded as complete, under construction, or planned.  

According to CAP’s tabulations, the finished and proposed developments across downtown total $5.2 billion in investments. 

Expected look of activated patios at The Mitchell building, with Mercedes-Benz Stadium across the street. Courtesy of Centennial Yards; images by Apex Visualization

Of that, 1,800 units of housing have popped up in the past two years, at projects such as Broadstone 2Thirty on Memorial Drive, Centennial Yards’ The Mitchell, and The Grace Residences

But that could pale in comparison to what CAP says is coming in the next five years: more than 5,000 housing units in some form of planning or development right now. 

That’s in addition to 1,000 new hotel rooms and what map creators call “vital bike, sidewalk, and park infrastructure projects that connect the private and public realm.”

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• Downtown news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)

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Central Atlanta Progress Atlanta Development Atlanta Construction Downtown Development downtown construction South Downtown Centennial Yards

Subtitle Where 5,000 housing units (or more) is expected to materialize in coming years

Neighborhood Downtown

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From WABE Arts and Culture News:

Astronaut, engineer and physicist Dr. Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, was an icon and role model who inspired women and girls everywhere. The new National Geographic documentary […]

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From WABE Arts and Culture News:

WABE’s H. Johnson has been a fixture on 90.1 FM since 1978. As host of both “Blues Classics” and “Jazz Classics,” Johnson continually educates and entertains WABE listeners every Friday and Saturday […]

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From WABE Local News:

Harvard University, the University of Washington and the University of Pittsburgh are among the latest institutions of higher education to announce hiring freezes, citing the uncertainty around federal funding. Leaders […]

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From WABE Local News:

This story was updated on Thursday, March 13 at 9:58 a.m. The White House has withdrawn the nomination of Dr. David Weldon, a former Florida congressman, to lead the Centers […]

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First look: Beltline-adjacent project bound for Southwest Atlanta Josh Green Thu, 03/13/2025 - 07:52 Atlanta urbanists and West End residents who’ve lobbied for residential development to accompany the vibrant former warehouse district that is Lee + White should take note. 

Demolition along White Street signals the beginning of an infill townhome project from Ackerman & Co., the same developer that owns Lee + White and its expanding office, retail, and food offerings. 

Ackerman reps tell Urbanize Atlanta the project will be called Hopkins and White Townhomes—named for the streets it will front—and that it will include 23 new residences eventually.

Overview of the full 23-unit townhome project between the Beltline and a Dunkin' in West End. Courtesy of Ackerman & Co.

Situated across the street from the Beltline’s Westside Trail and Gordon-White Park, just north of the Lee + White district, the properties in question were formerly home to two notable businesses: Best Friends Car Wash, which doubled as an outdoor art gallery for muralists, and Lean Draft House, once celebrated as the first new business to open on the Westside Trail eight years ago. 

As of a Saturday visit, the former car wash was rubble. 

Ackerman reps say the first phase of 13 townhomes is scheduled to be finished in spring 2026. 

The former Best Friends Car Wash on White Street was recently demolished, making way for townhome construction. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

General scope of the properties in question, with the Beltline's Westside Trail shown at left. Google Maps

Each townhome will have three bedrooms and three and ½ bathrooms in 2,056 square feet, with two-car garages at the base and rooftop decks above. 

The community will also feature a fenced-in dog park, according to project officials, who say it remains to be seen if Ackerman will use its name in association with the project.

Price ranges for the townhomes have yet to be determined, according to developers. 

The lone available rendering shows two rows of units, with rooftops emphasizing views of the pocket park and Westside Trail, which is set to be expanded in former rail corridor nearby. 

Maybe it's not the wave of new Beltline-adjacent housing in the area some have called for—but it's certainly a start. 

The former Lean Draft House building stood next to recent demolition Saturday. Google Maps

The site in relation to downtown and SW ATL landmarks. Google Maps

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• West End news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)

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600 Hopkins St. SW Hopkins and White Townhomes Lean Draft House West End Car Wash West End Development West End Homes West End Construction Westside Trail Beltline Atlanta BeltLine Lee + White SW ATL Southwest Atlanta Ackerman & Co. Ackerman and Co. Atlanta Townhomes Atlanta Development Beltline Homes Beltline Townhomes Atlanta Construction Great Foundations Best Friends Car Wash Gordon-White Park

Images

The site in relation to downtown and SW ATL landmarks. Google Maps

The former Best Friends Car Wash on White Street was recently demolished, making way for townhome construction. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

The former Lean Draft House building stood next to recent demolition Saturday. Google Maps

General scope of the properties in question, with the Beltline's Westside Trail shown at left. Google Maps

Overview of the full 23-unit townhome project between the Beltline and a Dunkin' in West End. Courtesy of Ackerman & Co.

Subtitle West End townhomes near Lee + White district replacing car wash, former restaurant building

Neighborhood West End

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Image An image of a large development site where townhomes are being built near the Westside Trail Beltline next to two wide streets.

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From the Atlanta Daily World:

MARCH 12 1773—This is the most probable date when Black explorer Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable begins building the settlement, which would eventually become the city of Chicago, Ill. The Haitian-born (c 1745) du Sable would over time become a man of considerable wealth, owning commercial build­ings, docks, trading posts and a mansion. Du Sable … Continued

The post This Week In Black History March 12-18, 2025 appeared first on Atlanta Daily World.

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From WABE Arts and Culture News:

Emory University’s Goizueta Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center is preparing to host “Drag Down Memory Lane,” an event to connect Atlanta’s LGBTQ community with brain health initiatives. Dr. Monica Parker is […]

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From WABE Politics News:

Democratic Georgia State Rep. Mary Margaret Oliver entered the world of politics in 1987. The DeKalb County native and attorney says she was in her 30s at the time, and […]

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From WABE Local News:

Atlanta police say they’ve arrested the suspect who was recorded allegedly cutting up tents at the Old Wheat Street homeless encampment in the Sweet Auburn District earlier this month. According […]

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From the Saporta Report:

A Fulton County Superior Court judge has dismissed a lawsuit brought by three residents who are fighting the building of a lithium-ion battery storage facility project that abuts their neighborhood.  The residents are considering an appeal. Attorney Linda Dunlavy filed the lawsuit last October on behalf of South Fulton residents Carmen Miller, Steven Mack and […]

The post Lawsuit to stop lithium-ion plant in College Park dismissed, residents consider appeal appeared first on SaportaReport.

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