The April 18 Peachtree City Council meeting was uncomfortably predictable. The near-empty agenda consisted of two presentations, approval of past meeting minutes, and six easy consent agenda items requiring no discussion and approval with a single vote. That’s it (see: https://peachtreecityga.portal.civicclerk.com/event/2062/files/agenda/2937).
Look at all the Learnard Administration’s meeting agendas. So, how is all the business of the people of Peachtree City being conducted? Where is the creation of policy debates? Where is the discussion on vital government activities? It’s not being performed in public.
Anything but transparency
Council Members Frant Destadio and Laura Johnson began citing the excessive cost and staff time for placing agenda items on a city council meeting agenda as an excuse for drastically restricting items from being placed on a meeting agenda. I am not sure how any reasonable elected official could make such a claim, especially since their agendas are embarrassingly barebones, to begin with.
We definitely know that the people’s business is not being handled in the public forum from looking at the agendas. In over two decades of following local governments, I have never seen so little being done in public.
A concerted effort to cut you out
The citizens of Peachtree City have been force-marched through one council measure after another on restricting the public’s ability to speak in public meetings and have items of concern placed on a council meeting agenda.
The most recent draconian measure of a three-member majority was severe restrictions on city council members and the citizens being able to place items of concern on a council meeting agenda (see: https://thecitizen.com/2024/04/09/what-3-council-members-ripped-away-from-citizens-last-week/). The logic behind the restrictions was outlandish and illogical.
The real rationale for keeping their colleagues on the council and concerned citizens from placing issues of importance on an agenda is it prevents those council members working outside the will of the people from having to cast an official on-the-record vote against something the people want.
It’s a diabolical way for an untrustworthy elected official to lie and say he/she was never opposed to a measure while at the same time preventing it from ever appearing on an agenda for a vote.
Defiantly dismantling our speech
I watched as a millennial neighbor got up during the public comment section of the April 18 city council meeting, as if speaking on behalf of the mayor, stating that nothing was wrong and local citizens could redress their grievances in public government meetings. He claimed he was doing just that at the time.
I found the gentleman’s address disheartening as he quickly left the building. We have done a poor job of educating our younger generations on freedom, liberty, and government accountability. We just assumed they would “get it” and waved as they departed to universities where the faculty instructed them to disavow traditional standards and tolerate the loss of our God-given rights.
What the neighbor did not realize was that the last two city administrations limited the number of citizens who could speak in the “public comment” section of the meeting to just 10 citizens out of 39,000 residents.
Of those limited 10, they have to rush through what they are saying because they have a giant stopwatch projected on the screen counting down the scant three minutes they are allowed. The moment the giant stopwatch hits zero, a loud recorded voice goes off telling them they are finished and to go sit down.
I watched as mothers holding toddlers rushed to make their comments in time.
Does that tell the public the city council cares about what the constituents have to say? Their empty agendas mean the meetings only last about 45 minutes, yet they do not want to take a little more time listening to the constituents.
What the gentleman also did not know is that a citizen is absolutely not allowed to say anything about an item on that meeting’s agenda. That is not in the ordinance that I can see, but it is a bizarre policy that was created at some point in time, and probably never voted on. Likewise, once most of the agenda items are introduced by the mayor at the meeting, citizens cannot speak on the items then either. Why the gag rule?
Trying to keep colleagues off the meeting agendas
Council Members Clint Holland and Suzanne Brown (no relation) attempted during the April 18 meeting to place some items on a future meeting agenda using the harsh new format implemented by Mayor Kim Learnard, Destadio, and Johnson.
There were groans and head-shaking from the audience as Learnard, Destadio, and Johnson did everything possible to prevent their colleagues from being able to post an item on a future agenda.
Learnard and Johnson openly stated they would rather discuss their colleagues’ proposals in private behind closed doors even though both said their impetus for their ordinance changes on submitting agenda items at the last meeting was about promoting transparency. Their intentions are obvious.
Johnson claimed several times that her colleagues had waited too late to introduce the topics even though she openly approved of introducing agenda item proposals the same day as the meeting and doing so during the “council/staff topics” portion of the agenda at the April 4 council meeting. Johnson’s double-talk was called out and she eventually backed down.
Destadio took a different tack and claimed the proposed agenda items from his colleagues would be too costly and devour large amounts of staff time to present. That argument made absolutely no sense.
You can see how hard the three-member majority works to keep items they oppose from appearing on a meeting agenda.
Common sense agenda items the citizens support
So, what were the items Holland and Brown wanted placed on a future agenda?
Holland wanted to change the city’s horrible administrative variance ordinance which was being used to subvert state law and our local zoning ordinances. The dreadful ordinance was modified on then-Mayor Vanessa Fleisch’s last meeting in office, a nasty parting gift, allowing a 50 percent exemption to the zoning setback requirements (see: https://thecitizen.com/2023/07/24/councilman-calls-out-council-for-open-meetings-violations-gets-slammed-for-doing-it-in-public/).
Holland’s agenda item would consist of a red-lined copy of the ordinance with his proposed changes, costing nothing with little to no staff involvement as Destadio countered.
Brown wanted to place a resolution on a future agenda stating that the city council was not in favor of local taxpayer dollars being used to care for illegal immigrants should they be forwarded to our area. It is an important policy decision on a major issue that is crippling cities across the nation.
Counter to Destadio’s claims, the resolution would consist of the text created by Brown with little to no staff involvement.
You can make things change
Please remember that we have municipal elections coming up in November of 2025. We do not need the totalitarian tendencies of some of our elected officials. We do not put people in elected positions to shred our rights. And we expect our elected officials to be interested in our welfare, not their power.
[Brown is a former mayor of Peachtree City and served two terms on the Fayette County Board of Commissioners. You can read all his columns by clicking on his photo below.]
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