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Atlanta Mayor: We Need To ‘Increase The Value, Efficiency, And Sustainability Of Our Cities’

Mayor Reed. Photo Courtesy of AP

by Kasim Reed, Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia

At the Clinton Global Initiative America meeting in Chicago earlier this summer, I joined President Clinton and other mayors from across the country and across party lines to explore how to accelerate investment in job-creating domestic infrastructure.

Each mayor faced unique challenges, but there was an immediate recognition of the enormous potential to improve our cities and our economies through public-private partnerships. We looked closely at the example of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s newly created Infrastructure Trust – a nonprofit entity designed to attract private capital for infrastructure investment, which will promote job creation and economic growth in Chicago.

We all left that initial meeting with a clear desire to sustain collaboration among mayors to explore better tools for public and private financing. Mayor Nutter, president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, recently expressed interest in similar strategies to overcome the fiscal challenges local governments can face. Working together, I believe we can identify successful financing solutions and models that would work in any city in America to increase the value, efficiency, and sustainability of our cities. Simply, a successful private-partnership could improve not only our roads and bridges and electrical grids but also our citizens’ quality of life.

So, this week in Tarrytown, New York, President Clinton is hosting a two-day meeting organized by the Clinton Global Initiative that I’ll attend with Asheville Mayor Terry M. Bellamy, Bridgeport Mayor Bill Finch, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx, Jacksonville Mayor Alvin Brown, Joplin Mayor Melodee Colbert-Kean, and Portland Mayor Sam Adams, as well as top city officials from Chicago, Denver, Kansas City, Louisville, New Orleans, New York, Philadelphia, San Diego, and San Francisco. Former Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell, former director of the Office of Management and Budget and current Vice Chairman at Citigroup Peter Orszag, as well as infrastructure experts and capital providers will also attend in the hopes of advancing that conversation that began in Chicago this June. While each of us represent different cities and constituencies, I hope we will work towards a common goal—finding a workable model to increase private investment in public infrastructure.

In Atlanta, I’ve seen the potential for success in exactly this kind of partnership in our own Atlanta BeltLine, which I believe is one of the most transformative urban development projects in the nation. The Atlanta BeltLine will be a system of rails, trails, and greenspace that will seamlessly connect 45 of our neighborhoods, while providing first- and last-mile transit connectivity for the entire metro Atlanta region. This is the most comprehensive revitalization effort ever undertaken in our city and a true model of sustainability, smart land use, and mobility.

The success of this project hinges on private-public partnerships.

To date, tens of thousands of passionate grassroots supporters are engaged, and the city’s philanthropic and business communities have generously invested in this dynamic initiative.

And we’ll continue to bring our diverse perspectives and discuss strategies for accessing private capital to finance public investment in projects including transportation, water, energy efficiency, clean energy, and other strategic infrastructures. We’ll take a holistic look at our current fiscal challenges to investment in public infrastructure and existing models of leveraging private capital for investment in public infrastructure, and then think through the steps of creating an urban infrastructure bank and identifying investable projects.

In June, we started the discussion about how we could replicate Chicago’s feat in other American cities, including Atlanta. I look forward to meeting with other mayors, senior city staff, funders, and experts over the next two days to identify and implement strategies for accessing private capital to finance public investment in the roads, bridges, and water systems that bring value to our city and jobs to our citizens. Public-private partnerships are promising opportunities to get domestic infrastructure funded by putting in a small amount of public funds to attract corporate investment. More importantly, such partnerships are crucial to putting more people back to work and creating a better Atlanta.

Kasim Reed is the Mayor of the City of Atlanta. For more updates on the work of President Clinton, CGI, and the Clinton Foundation, visit http://www.clintonfoundation.org/blog.

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3 Responses to Atlanta Mayor: We Need To ‘Increase The Value, Efficiency, And Sustainability Of Our Cities’

  1. clays says:

    Heads up, green spaces with won’t improve your city.

    Best way to improve a city is ground up. Not infrastructure but the people. Better people bring better companies with better jobs which increase tax base which can be then be used to improve infrastructure and build fancy parks politicians can attach their name to.

    Good luck.

  2. Leif says:

    The Right controls capitalism, and in turn capitalism controles the Right. Capitalism also controls the mess media which in turn is controled by the segment of society that just happens to control all the wealth. Why can’t “Humanity” at least have its own National Bank? One that is dedicated to human sustainability and Earth’s life support systems in a transparent Government Backed bank? One that “WE” could all invest in, perhaps affiliated with local credit unions. Secure low intrest loans and secure in the knowledge that the money is invested in the “most bang for the buck” scientific manor? Marginal profits disrtibuted to only investers. A “We the People” bank. My solar investmnt of 25K last year is paying me 9+%. Show me that on Wall Street if you are not an insider. Mine is in the back yard and I can fondel it. It is good for the air, I collect the water and grow food, I sell the extra to the local power company and they resell it for a couple of cents mark up. That may not sound like much but it is 20% ROI. That power then goes to my neighbor with minimial line loss. What is not to like here?

    One of the biggest ways for cities to lower their carbon footprint would be to support rural wind and solar.
    Each in turn rewarding the other. Not the fossil barrons.

  3. SighingEcho says:

    Yes please~! Invest in sustainable energy! Solarroadways.com has a brilliant plan that could solve a lot of our energy needs and begin to eliminate petroleum. We also need to eliminate plastics and improve our waste systems.

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