Commentary will follow soon, espcially on the four documented "nuisances". These maps were generated with ORR's from Dunwoody city hall and analysis of state incorporation records and publicly available business directories. Hit the "minus sign" button in the bottom right of each map to zoom out. Click on a marker for more information and my personal commentary
The comprehensive map with all markers can be found at
https://www.zeemaps.com/map?group=1012300#
ABOVE: All home businesses with licenses issued by the City of Dunwoody AND have no record of code enforcement complaints. Total = 570
ABOVE: All home businesses with active business websites and/or some kind of incorporation WITHOUT a city license AND have no record of code enforcement complaints. Total = 128
ABOVE: All known FORMER home businesses that existed at one time in Dunwoody, but are not currently present. Meaning, they may have closed, the homeowner moved or died, relocated out of town, or migrated to a traditional commercial space. These also had NO record of code enforcement complaints. Total = 268
Total number of recorded Dunwoody home businesses with NO code enforcement complaints: 969
ABOVE: All home businesses that have had a complaint filed against them via code enforcement (licensed or not) since 2009 Yellow = complaint filed, not confirmed. Orange = cited for operating a business without a license and no other nuisance activity noted. Red = nuisance activity confirmed.
Total code enforcement complaints filed against a home business since Dunwoody incorporated = 13
Perspective: the first article published documenting the first version of this map project
Sunday, January 1, 2017
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Atlanta Panhellenic Opens Scholarship Competition Online
The Atlanta Alumnae Panhellenic Association has opened its annual scholarship competition to women in high school, college, or graduate programs. For the first time, applications will be accepted online.
The following scholarships will be awarded at the Scholarship Luncheon on May 13, 2017:
Six (6) High School Senior Scholarships at $1,500 each
Three (3) Collegiate Member Scholarships at $2,000 each
One (1) Alumnae Scholarship at $2,000
That's the official announcement from AAPA, a 10-year client of SDOC.
Now here's the rest of the story....
For years the Scholarship Committee requested that the application forms in the competition be formatted as fillable PDFs - the kind you can download, fill in on your computer, print and then mail. The members at the time thought it would be easier. For them it probably was. This year the Scholarship chair wanted AAPA to organize a procedure that mirrored other online applications. The PDFs were put out to pasture and yours truly was tasked with creating a system of online applications.
There is no "plugin" or "extension" for scholarship applications for your CMS and you don't need one. I created the system for AAPA using Contact Form 7 for WordPress. (You can do the same thing with other content management systems - the original Dunwoody Chamber online application was made with the Webform plugin.)
The key is in the details. First, make a very clear list of what information you need to collect from your visitors. Then you decide how you want to collect that info - entering text into a box, selecting from a drop-down menu, uploading a file, etc. Finally you divide up the info into forms for each group you want to reach and sequence them so that your visitor has a logical workflow that leads them from one step to the next.
Complex information collection doesn't require fancy add-ons. But it does require close attention to detail and a visitor-centered POV.
On a final note, the Atlanta Panhellenic has called Dunwoody home for at least 15 years. From the meeting room near the Library, they have been reaching out to Atlanta-area counties with information about modern NPC sorority life and educational opportunities. AAPA has been providing scholarships to area young women since 1932 and the total granted to date is approximately $100,000. The total planned to be presented this year is $17,000. If you hang your hat in and around Atlanta, please visit and investigate this opportunity for scholarship funds.
The following scholarships will be awarded at the Scholarship Luncheon on May 13, 2017:
Six (6) High School Senior Scholarships at $1,500 each
Three (3) Collegiate Member Scholarships at $2,000 each
One (1) Alumnae Scholarship at $2,000
Learn more and access the secured applications at http://www.atlantapanhellenic.org/scholarships/
That's the official announcement from AAPA, a 10-year client of SDOC.
Now here's the rest of the story....
For years the Scholarship Committee requested that the application forms in the competition be formatted as fillable PDFs - the kind you can download, fill in on your computer, print and then mail. The members at the time thought it would be easier. For them it probably was. This year the Scholarship chair wanted AAPA to organize a procedure that mirrored other online applications. The PDFs were put out to pasture and yours truly was tasked with creating a system of online applications.
There is no "plugin" or "extension" for scholarship applications for your CMS and you don't need one. I created the system for AAPA using Contact Form 7 for WordPress. (You can do the same thing with other content management systems - the original Dunwoody Chamber online application was made with the Webform plugin.)
The key is in the details. First, make a very clear list of what information you need to collect from your visitors. Then you decide how you want to collect that info - entering text into a box, selecting from a drop-down menu, uploading a file, etc. Finally you divide up the info into forms for each group you want to reach and sequence them so that your visitor has a logical workflow that leads them from one step to the next.
Complex information collection doesn't require fancy add-ons. But it does require close attention to detail and a visitor-centered POV.
On a final note, the Atlanta Panhellenic has called Dunwoody home for at least 15 years. From the meeting room near the Library, they have been reaching out to Atlanta-area counties with information about modern NPC sorority life and educational opportunities. AAPA has been providing scholarships to area young women since 1932 and the total granted to date is approximately $100,000. The total planned to be presented this year is $17,000. If you hang your hat in and around Atlanta, please visit and investigate this opportunity for scholarship funds.
Saturday, November 26, 2016
Everything's Great Until It's Not - Hacked Websites, What to Do About Them and How to Prevent a Hacking
Earlier this year, I was hired to repair a hacked website for a Los Angeles-based entertainment company. Ever since then, I have been knocking the concept for this post around in my head. With the City of Dunwoody's website hacking, the subject has come to the front burner and I decided it was time to get this one posted.
This may or may not be a DIY job, depending on how comfortable you are with the files and database that drive your website. When in doubt, consult a professional.
If you have a simple website and your webhost provides a routine backup option (or "snapshot", as its called by some) you can simply restore an older version of the website to replace the hacked version. This requires some planning ahead and I'll go into those plans further down.
But what if you didn't plan ahead and there are no backups to restore? That's when you have to take the step-by-step approach.
Security is Relative
There is no such thing as a 100%-hack-safe computer on the Internet. Whenever I see RFPs requesting "100% uptime" in their website, I take that as a red flag that someone doesn't understand computer security. Even NORAD and NASA were hacked by teenagers. A developer or network admin can make hacking extremely difficult - so much so that a hacker decides the site isn't worth their time and moves on. But if a hacker wants to get into a computer system, they will eventually find a way in. Website owners and hosting admins have to be vigilant and plan for recovery from attacks before they happen.All Hacks Are Not the Same
Hacked websites will appear and behave differently based on the intent of the hacker. In Dunwoody's case, somebody wanted to make a point and make sure the entire planet knew who they were and what was on their mind. My entertainment company hack was more insidious: the site looked the same but the administrator could not log on. The hacker had made numerous changes in the back end that not only allowed clandestine access rights but also made it difficult to track down and remove the rogue code.You Got Hacked! What Now?
The name of the game is to eliminate any code or other elements that were placed by hackers and make sure your actual website code is intact. How much work is involved is going to depend on what the hacker did once they got access to your site or server account and in some cases, how much stuff you had stored there in the first place.This may or may not be a DIY job, depending on how comfortable you are with the files and database that drive your website. When in doubt, consult a professional.
If you have a simple website and your webhost provides a routine backup option (or "snapshot", as its called by some) you can simply restore an older version of the website to replace the hacked version. This requires some planning ahead and I'll go into those plans further down.
But what if you didn't plan ahead and there are no backups to restore? That's when you have to take the step-by-step approach.
The Most Complete Hack Job I've Ever Seen
My entertainment site hack client was an example of a very deliberate, stealthy, even surgical hack that left the public face of the site intact but prevented legit administrators from accessing the dashboard, allowed different admins access, and hid the hacked content inside of normal files. Here's what I found.- The hacked site was in WordPress. Which had not been updated in years. The site also used a commercial theme purchased from a developer. Which also had updates available and also had not been updated in years. The host was bare-bones GoDaddy. Without a site backup option. Problem #1 was identified. The owner provided access to the GoDaddy account and the files could be read through a browser.
- There were a ton of directories with obsolete code from earlier versions of the website. Inside were recently-added PHP code files with benign names like "security.php" and "file.php". But they weren't benign - they were part of the admin control hack. The tip-off was the date when they were added: when all of the files are 2,3,4 years old and you have a new file that was added last month, that's your culprit. The delete key was my friend.
- Similar benign-sounding-but-not files were found in directories that housed javascript files that drive the interactive and animated elements of the website. When you have a directory full of files that end in ".js" and there's a recently added file ending in ".php", that's a file that doesn't belong there. Delete key again.
- Same process was repeated in the "uploads" file where images and the like are kept. When you see a bunch of ".jpg" and ".gif" files and a new one out of nowhere ending in ".php", that's the file you delete.
- Database edits: the hackers created an additional table in the WP database to override the admin commands. They also added new users with administrator roles. Delete the extra table and delete any and all users that were not currently authorized on the site. This is where a professional database admin comes in handy and we leave the DIY Zone.
- The last piece of the puzzle was the worst. The hackers had not only done ALL of the above, but they had inserted lines of code into actual WordPress files, either at the very beginning, or at the very end. Now if you're a developer who is used to looking at the individual files that make up WordPress and reading the code, you can tell when something is added that doesn't belong there. There is NO way a casual user would have caught this. Even if they managed to spot and delete all of the above hacks, the result would have been the site crashing altogether. I reviewed all of the files in the core content management system and removed code that wasn't kosher.
BINGO! The administrators could log in. Software got updated, including the outdated theme and my customer was updating the website again. No further hacks.
The above cleanup process took about 12 hours and I charge my hourly rate for that kind of work. Can that situation be avoided? Oh hell yes. And I highly prefer it to fixing a site that had been entered by somebody using a server in the Czech Republic.
Six Steps To Avoid the Highway to Hacker Hell
- This is no longer a joke, gang. If you are one of the many millions on Planet Earth using some kind of content management system (CMS) whether open-source or commercially available, apply all of your updates when you are aware of them. The purpose of these updates is to close those little loopholes where hackers get through. That's the core software. Plus the little add-ons - "plugins", "modules", "extensions", whatever they're called. And your themes. Or "templates", whatever they're called too. Most of these can be done automatically through the administrator's dashboard. Or even from a VAN DOWN BY THE RIVER!!!
Contact the CMS' manufacturer's website (or tech support if you're using a proprietary software like Sitefinity). Don't put it off. If you can't work it into your schedule, hire a pro to review it regularly. That's cheaper than recovery. - BACKUP, BACKUP, BACKUP If your webhost has an automatic backup function, turn it on and use it. If they don't, back up your files manually and find a new webhost that offers this service. Backups refer to both the files where your data is displayed, and the database where the data is stored. Most competent web hosts have help files and/or tech support that will walk you through this. When in doubt - hire a professional and have it done for you regularly. Monthly, at the very least for the typical non-government small business.
- Remove any obsolete files or directories from your web host. If you're not using old plugins or other code, delete it from your server. Save it to a local drive for posterity if you want but it's just a trouble magnet on the Internet. Follow your CMS' instructions for uninstalling and removing components for your website. Old directories with code no longer in use need to go. If you're not sure how to do this ... wait for it.... hire a professional.
WordPress users: even if you uninstall and delete a plugin properly, the data from that plugin may still be left behind in the database. That can still be a vulnerability, albeit a rare one. There are plugins available that can clean out "orphan" data from a database but a database admin can manually go through and remove anything no longer in use. - Remove any users who are no longer working on the site. I believe this may have been part of what led to the major hacking I cleaned up. There were a number of users still listed on the site who edited content and plugins from time to time, but were no longer involved. They were still there, same passwords in place. A disgruntled former employee can do a lot of damage. But even if there are no bad feelings, what if that former employee gets hacked and someone gets a hold of their login credentials? The result is the same. Just delete the user and their access. If they return, give them a new login.
- Rotate your passwords. I know, passwords are a PITA to remember and use. Changing them on a regular basis can prevent hacking and other fraud. Don't forget to make it something that a hacker won't be able to find using a standard algorithm of searching for common words. Many CMS and hosting providers require a minimum security level, including a mix of numbers, upper and lower case letters, and punctuation. Anyone who still uses "password" or "123456" needs to be slapped. As well as kept away from computers!
- Reevaluate your hosting provider periodically. Not all hosts are created equally. The uber-cheapo hosts are great for hosting vacation pictures by Aunt Suzie from Syracuse. E-commerce needs something more secure, and that will require an investment. Do some research as your web presence expands to make sure your website's foundation is secure and has the power to run your applications without hanging or crashing. Government agencies and municipalities - don't skimp on this, no matter what the citizenry says. When I consult for any government office or agency, I have a very short list of providers I will work with.
Amazon web hosting is the gold standard for high-volume performance and security. To give you an idea of what they are capable of, Amazon hosts WhiteHouse.gov, Georgia.gov and a number of federal agencies, including the CDC here in Atlanta. In the private sector, they host NetFlix. But hosting like that costs big bucks - there is no price menu at Amazon, all contracts are negotiated especially the high visibility ones. Most enterprises do not need this level (or cost) of power and security but the point is, this isn't a place to go cheap.
It's all about paying regular attention to the bones of your website. Either set aside the time or hire someone who will. The following does not have to be you, if you apply some regular due diligence.
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
Happy Thanksgiving 2016
As usual, the sun doesn't set on an entrepreneur so between baking pie, roasting turkey and making sure the kids get out and run off some energy, I'll be upgrading software for my e-commerce clients in advance of Cyber Monday.
I hope all reading this can find some peace this week, through Christmas, Hanukkah, and the New Year.
Usually I post a brief excerpt from Nathaniel Philbrick's Mayflower regarding how building a community takes hard work and compromise. Not going to cut it this year. Here's the link if you'd like to review.
After the kids are settled in for the night Pat and I will split a bottle of pinot noir and a viewing of Places in the Heart.
Not a typical Thanksgiving movie. Or any holiday movie for that matter.
Places represents Sally Field's 2nd Oscar win. The movie is set in Great Depression-era Waxahachie, Texas (yes, that's a real town, just outside of DFW). Won't spoil the plot if you'd like to see it but my takeaway is that family and community can grow anywhere - whether you want it to or not - in places you can't imagine. Forces outside that family can modify it, but not destroy it if you don't let them. (Warning: given the date and setting there is some blatant racial violence in a few scenes. Parents, judge carefully and be ready for an intense conversation if you allow your children to watch.)
Also a movie I recommend for Sisterhood nights in Phi Mu or any sorority chapter gathering.
We'll be home for turkey day, so it's OK to stop by and pass judgement on my cooking. :-)
I hope all reading this can find some peace this week, through Christmas, Hanukkah, and the New Year.
Usually I post a brief excerpt from Nathaniel Philbrick's Mayflower regarding how building a community takes hard work and compromise. Not going to cut it this year. Here's the link if you'd like to review.
After the kids are settled in for the night Pat and I will split a bottle of pinot noir and a viewing of Places in the Heart.
Not a typical Thanksgiving movie. Or any holiday movie for that matter.
Places represents Sally Field's 2nd Oscar win. The movie is set in Great Depression-era Waxahachie, Texas (yes, that's a real town, just outside of DFW). Won't spoil the plot if you'd like to see it but my takeaway is that family and community can grow anywhere - whether you want it to or not - in places you can't imagine. Forces outside that family can modify it, but not destroy it if you don't let them. (Warning: given the date and setting there is some blatant racial violence in a few scenes. Parents, judge carefully and be ready for an intense conversation if you allow your children to watch.)
Also a movie I recommend for Sisterhood nights in Phi Mu or any sorority chapter gathering.
We'll be home for turkey day, so it's OK to stop by and pass judgement on my cooking. :-)
Monday, November 14, 2016
DHA Speakers Video Recap: GLASS, Dunwoody Senior Baseball, school contribution requests
In case you missed it...
Dunwoody Homeowners Association's monthly meeting played host to several groups last night. The following videos were streamed live on my Facebook feed.
All of these are publicly available. Please view and share and continue the conversation in your neighborhoods.
DHA will meet again in December. Come and join in live and in person next time. Until then, we'll see you at Light Up Dunwoody on November 20 at the Cheek-Spruill Farmhouse!
GLASS (Georgians for Local Area School Systems) legislative update
Dunwoody Senior Baseball presents their case for changing the IGA and the new baseball field location.
School funding requests from Kingsley and Vanderlyn.
Dunwoody Homeowners Association's monthly meeting played host to several groups last night. The following videos were streamed live on my Facebook feed.
All of these are publicly available. Please view and share and continue the conversation in your neighborhoods.
DHA will meet again in December. Come and join in live and in person next time. Until then, we'll see you at Light Up Dunwoody on November 20 at the Cheek-Spruill Farmhouse!
GLASS (Georgians for Local Area School Systems) legislative update
Dunwoody Senior Baseball presents their case for changing the IGA and the new baseball field location.
School funding requests from Kingsley and Vanderlyn.
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Monsters From the Id - Social Media and 21st Century Politics
Forbidden Planet, released in 1956, was a groundbreaking movie in a range of aspects, only a few of which were in special effects.
The "planet" was previously home to a technologically "superior" race - the Krell. During the course of the movie, we learn this civilization had created an infrastructure that could manufacture anything and deliver it to anyone with a thought. It sounds like a great idea when Robby the Robot was creating jewels and clothing for Altaira or whiskey for the spaceship's drunken cook.
But the technology couldn't differentiate between a conscious wish and a subconscious nightmare. So when the Krell slept, and the "Id" came alive, their technology delivered their greatest horrors. No one was spared - not the most intelligent, not even the creators of the technology.
It is now 2016 and it is time to cut the bullshit daydreaming that our voting communities can be "united" after venting themselves on the Internet during election season.
The US Civil War was 150 years ago, and even though the USA is legally one country, the cultural prejudices and hostilities between North and South persist to this day.
Neither Trump nor Clinton will "unify" the US, regardless of who wins today. It's unreasonable to call your opponent's supporters a "basket of deplorables" and expect them to fall in line with your inauguration. It is equally unreasonable to make unfiltered knee-jerk smart-ass comments about your personal nemeses day after day for months and think all will be forgotten on November 9.
It's not just national politics.
In my little burg, the greatest advocates of "preservation" have torn elements of our community to pieces all in the name of keeping physical relics alive. Our elected officials have turned to petty dictators in an effort to mold our city into their personal living room. And ran afoul of the state government within 6 months of our last municipal election. But that isn't new. For years one representative or another has advocated for one group's lifestyle in this city to the detriment of others. All in the name of "building community". I have a flash for you, Barney - you don't create a community by turning elements of it against each other over residential lifestyle differences.
Then there's the nuclear arsenal of the carpool set: school redistricting. We have our playdates, we have our chance meetings on the playground. We have our scouts, and youth groups and sports teams. Then the idea of rearranging our school populations rolls in like a live grenade and the monster devours everyone again. Think I'm exaggerating? Read for yourself and decide. You can figure out the personalities with a few minutes of research.
With all of the blog posts and social media clips and screenshots - nothing will be forgotten. No matter how many photo ops are taken or how many charity projects supported after the fact, everyone will remember getting attacked and hurt. Everyone will remember who was on what side, and what attack they made. Forgiveness is another topic altogether and I'm not holding out too much hope for that either.
The Krell planet eventually found peace - when the population disappeared and there was no one left to dream up a monster.
The best any elected official at any level can hope for in 2016 is a cessation of hostilities. An equilibrium between groups whose POVs are irreconcilable. It takes superhuman objectivity and a committed refusal to engage in combat online. That's a very short list of capable people. No one can achieve it perfectly. But "unity"? Forget it. It's gone. Mutual coexistence while minimizing overt hostility is the best you can shoot for.
I can't watch the returns tonight. Likewise when keeping up with local politics, I do it alone, in a closed office. Best when social media is turned off.
Migrating databases, debugging source code and managing household paperwork has never looked so good. It's peaceful and it puts the Id to sleep.
Thursday, October 27, 2016
INTRODUCING: Rik Emmett & RESolution9
It's been just about 4 years since I got that late-evening call from Rik Emmett to take over the maintenance of his website.
Here's the first blog post detailing the initial work. Once I got the software and theme code updated, keeping it all maintained and bug-free is a much smoother and less time-consuming process.
The only constant in website creation and maintenance is change and there have been quite a few.
First, the overall site design got upgraded to a fully responsive design where all elements adjust to the screen size, however large or small. A lot of the graphics could be recreated with source code instead of image files, so the site runs faster now too. If I've said it once, I've said it 100 times, fully-responsive design for small screens/mobile devices is no longer optional.
Just making a quickie mobile-friendly front page and leaving the rest of the site to desktop-only may fool the search engines, but it cheats your customers. As of this morning, a full 40% of this site's visitors are made on a tablet or phone; 30% of all sales in the e-commerce store is made from a mobile device.
There is no reason that a smartphone visitor must endure a sterile, stripped-down shadow of a website.
Next was improved social media integration. Photos are managed via Flickr, videos are managed via YouTube and those channels are fed into the site via plugins. Most social media sites (including Google properties) have an API that will connect to a website in the hands of a webmaster who can walk through the steps. Adding media galleries to social media where possible cuts down on the amount of site maintenance and hands-on programming required and speeds up the website and makes updating content easier by using multiple channels every day.
Video page, powered by YouTube:
Photo gallery page, powered by Flickr:
All of this slicing and dicing and planning for unknown future contingencies has paid off. Rik recently signed with Mascot Label Group based in the Netherlands for a new rock album. The team just got bigger.
Rik and I have gotten into a comfortable groove where I can make design and layout adjustments where they are necessary at my own direction. But once a record label gets involved, the contract is law - literally.
The first image in the post is the new album jacket/CD insert. (Yes, there is a limited pressing in vinyl. Some serious music fans swear by analog recordings to this day.) The graphic artists working for Mascot are also based in the Netherlands and they're calling the shots on designs for the new project, RESolution9. North America-based label operations are in New York. Large-venue booking agent is in Montreal. Small-venue booking agent in the US is in Philadelphia. Small-venue booking agent in Canada is in Toronto. News media have expanded from predominantly the US and Canada to almost every country in Europe, with intense hot spots in Germany and Scandinavia. My job in this machine is to integrate the designs for the project into Rik's current site, with the graphic artists' approval.
Thank God they speak English fluently because my Dutch is non-existent. :-)
Between Mascot's internal machine and my content management planning, this process couldn't have been easier. Even considering that adding a new splash page (entry page into the site with calls to action) is more than just slapping a single image onto a web page and calling it a day. The artists sent me a file of the cover image that allowed me to extract all of the individual elements, then reconstruct them into a format that looks just like the record jacket on a laptop - but will reconfigure itself into a comfortable arrangement on a cell phone or tiny tablet.
Then I set up the page so that it could become the first page a visitor sees. Again, there were timelines and deadlines and "go live" was planned down to the minute within a specified time zone, dictated by a project manager. Everything was loaded into the site the night before, and changing the front page literally took 2 seconds when I got the alert.
Most jobs that I work on currently require me to work independently and report to the site's owner. But being part of an international team has a special buzz all its own and a unique satisfaction when the composite machine runs smoothly. The fans and music buyers don't notice the work, they notice the results. Working in different states, different countries, different continents, makes no difference at all. And when the info goes live in the right venue at the right time, they spend money, and we all earn our living.
I didn't make the videos, but updating the site with video embeds is all in a day's work. Here's the original album teaser for your enjoyment!
Thursday, October 6, 2016
DHA Meeting October 9 - First Presentation of Proposed DCSS Land Swap and more
Everyone is invited to bring your questions and be part of the conversation on these initiatives that will impact Dunwoody education. As usual I'll try to live stream the speakers on Facebook.
Board of Directors Meeting
Sunday, October 9, 2016 @ 7:30 P.M.
North DeKalb Cultural Arts Center, Room 4
5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Rd, Atlanta, GA 30338
Presentation and Discussion – Austin Elementary School land swap and ball field relocation between City of Dunwoody and DeKalb Board of Ed.
Chris Pike, Dunwoody CFO
Chris Pike, the city’s CFO, will present details on the just-announced deal with the school system to swap land for a new Austin Elementary school and for the Dunwoody Senior ballfields to be relocated to Peachtree Middle. This is the first of several public presentations to the community and is a great opportunity to understand the deal and discuss its impact on Dunwoody.
More info and news announcement.
More info and news announcement.
Presentation and Discussion – Ballot measure for proposed creation of an Opportunity School District— State Senator Fran Millar and State Representative Tom Taylor
Also on the agenda will be a presentation by Senator Millar
and Representative Taylor on the proposed constitutional amendment that will be
on the ballot on November 8th to create a statewide “Opportunity School
District” to allow the state to take over chronically failing schools
(including quite a few in DeKalb County).
3 Food Truck Thursdays Left in 2016
I don't know about anyone else but I think the fall Food Truck Thursdays are the best because the sweltering heat has passed. Our family is hosting some relatives from Savannah evacuating ahead of the hurricane so it's another reason for a perfect night.
Dinner Trucks:
Dessert Trucks:
Don't forget Truck-or-Treat on October 27! Kids - dress up in your Halloween costumes and "Trick or Treat" among the food trucks!
Sunday, September 11, 2016
Friday, September 9, 2016
How do developers get tax abatements in Dunwoody? Dunwoody Homeowners Association Meeting this Sunday, September 11
Sunday, September 11 7:30 PM
North DeKalb Cultural Center, Room 4
North DeKalb Cultural Center, Room 4
This Sunday Dunwoody's Economic Development Director Mike Starling will be visiting to talk about development tax abatements - who gets them, what are the criteria, and what is the economic impact on Dunwoody and its full-time residents and homeowners.
Interest in tax abatements perked up when Transwestern announced a new speculative office tower project near Perimeter Mall - one of the most sought-after regions in the area for development. Then went to the development authority in Dunwoody to request a tax abatement to "encourage" them to complete the project. Maybe Mike can make sense out of the bad smell following that around.
Elsewhere on the agenda - GID Urban Development, the developers of the long-awaited "High Street" "multi-use" development with residential towers, shops, etc, near the State Farm complex will be presenting their current plans for the site.
To recap:
1) This project was approved via SLUP by DeKalb County in 2007, the year before Dunwoody incorporated as a city.
2) This project is arguably one of the reasons Dunwoody incorporated - to put the brakes on large-scale, high density developments exactly like this.
3) The approval of the SLUP cannot be reversed without a long, painful, expensive legal fight and success is a long way from certain.
4) The only influence on the developers was the DHA who, while they could not stop project approval (we are talking about DeKalb County under Vernon Jones, remember) could at least negotiate the ratio of owner-occupied to rental units. This agreement happened before my DHA tenure so I hope those involved will include their recollections in person.
5) The economic downturn in 2008-2009 stalled the project. This development and its approvals are neither new nor recent. They were merely put on hold for just shy of 10 years until economic conditions became favorable to the owners.
Bring your questions and your comments - this will be one of the only chances to address them in person to the development/legal team. Once you've put together your opinion based on the latest info, let your elected officials know what you want them to do with it.
Both of these speakers will be streamed live on Facebook. Here's the profile: https://www.facebook.com/sdocpublishing
Not everything on that is public but these videos will be viewable (and more importantly, shareable) by everyone.
Not everything on that is public but these videos will be viewable (and more importantly, shareable) by everyone.
After the public meeting, the voting board will discuss some text modifications that clarifies the DHA position on city appointed board members who also serve on the voting board of the DHA.
Some background:
In July of 2008, before the vote for city incorporporation, the DHA modified its bylaws so that anyone who was elected to office (assuming the incorporation vote was successful) from the DHA's voting board would be moved to an "ex officio" status. DHA did this independently, without any pressure from any government. So any elected officials on city council today who were previously on the DHA's voting board did not resign due to some moral quandry or "icky feelings". The decision was made for them, years ago, prior to their election.
Currently, members who are both DHA voting members and city board members are expected to abstain from any vote, at the least. The bylaws will be clarified that these members will physically leave the room at the end of the public portions of meetings where issues coming before them in their official capacity will get a DHA endorsement vote. Those affected will be documented in the minutes.
More background:
Here's a little insight into voting board-only sessions: the entire group does not sit around agreeing with each other. There is almost always a minority report and some votes are very close. That means - people learn to agree to disagree and move on to the next day in our lives. No one gives up their opinions regardless of the majority.
Bottom line, city board members who are DHA members have never been forced to give the DHA's majority opinion in their role on a city board. There is all kinds of communication between board members because they're all interested in what happens to their community. But the DHA does not dictate any members' vote in an official capacity. As for the two dozen other HOAs plus myriad civic groups (like the Womens' Club and the Preservation Trust, for example) - you'll have to ask them directly.
Some people need their minds put at ease on that question. So the bylaws will clarify that DHA majority opinions do not dictate how board members vote.
That should be the final blow that puts this dumpster fire of a decision to rest once and for all. Everyone is tired of the fallout, it shouldn't have happened in the first place, and I hope no one is silly enough to resurrect it in the future.
--Seth Weissman in presentation to Dunwoody Homeowners Association,, August 2015
“Most zoning actions ultimately result in some kind of compromise. And what any planning professor would say is, the more people get together and talk, and have opportunities to talk and discuss the issues, the greater the likelihood there will be a compromise. And nobody gets sued. And really, you want to encourage developers and neighborhoods to meet. Having a Dunwoody Homeowners Association is not a unique situation. There are neighborhood associations all over the metro area. And they serve a very positive function of helping to bring the parties together and helping to reach compromises.
The thought that there’s some “magical thing” that happens here at the meetings that must be stopped … is very illogical.”
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