Atlanta Police Training Center Opponents Sue Over Delays in Approving Referendum

Opponents of Atlanta’s proposed police and firefighter training center are suing the city, saying the city clerk is delaying a petition drive that seeks to force a voter referendum on halting the complex.

The suit, filed Tuesday in Fulton County Superior Court, asks a judge to order acting City Clerk Vanessa Waldron to approve the petition so organizers can start gathering signatures.

The proposed referendum is an effort to halt the Cop City project. They filed the petition on June 7, the day after the City Council rejected protesters’ pleas to refuse to fund the training facility.

The $90 million facility would replace current training facilities with urban warfare training facilities. The Atlanta police department has struggles to retain officers after the nationwide George Floyd Uprising against police and racial injustice three years ago.

Cop City is designed to lead to greater militarization of the police and its construction will exacerbate environmental damage in a poor, majority-Black area. The Stop Cop City effort has gone on for more than two years and at times has successfully halted construction plans through militant action.

Under the proposed referendum, voters would choose whether they want to repeal the ordinance that authorized the lease of the city-owned land upon which the project is set to be built.

In order for the language to get on the ballot, organizers must first gather the signatures of as many as 70,000 Atlanta voters. They’re soliciting money to pay canvassers to aid in the effort.

By law, the opponents have 60 days to gather signatures. But because of the timetable to place a referendum on the November ballot, they say they must turn in all signatures by Aug. 15, no matter when they start. That deadline was 59 days away as of Tuesday.

“Each additional day the clerk delays in approving the petition deprives petitioners of one of the days in which it is entitled to collect signatures to include the referendum on the ballot in the next municipal election,” lawyer Kurt Kastorf wrote.

The opponents can’t start gathering signatures until they get official copies of the petition from the clerk.

In the lawsuit, opponents said Waldon had seven days to approve their petition, waited until the last day on June 14, and then denied the petition on frivolous.

Waldron issued a second rejection Tuesday, saying the opponents’ second attempt incorrectly cited the Atlanta city code, didn’t ask signers to swear they were registered to vote in the last city election, and demanding that organizers also collect birthdates to help verify voter registrations.

Activists said two of the items demanded by Waldron Tuesday aren’t legally required and that she should have raised concerns before now.

“The clerk’s rejection today confirms what we already knew: the City of Atlanta is attempting to block the referendum effort and continue their ongoing pattern of silencing the voice of the people through whatever means they can find,” Mary Hooks, a referendum organizer, said in a statement.

Construction crews have already begun clearing wide swaths of the unique urban forest in an unincorporated area of DeKalb County ahead of the planned construction of the 85-acre (34-hectare) campus. Project opponents said they plan to seek a court order to halt the work pending the outcome of their proposed referendum.

As approved by the City Council in September 2021, the land is being leased to the private Atlanta Police Foundation for $10 a year. The proposed referendum would seek to cancel that agreement.