More on Atlanta

The neighborhood of Buckhead, in north Atlanta, by some measures the wealthiest (although it is definitely inferior to Druid Hills, a much older neighborhood designed by Frederick Law Olmstead, now merely the ninth richest). I have walked through Buckhead many times though it wasn't really my kind of place. I once saw Concrete Blonde at the Roxy theater there.  

It's full of restaurants and very expensive hotels, the city's wealthiest shopping district, a few very rich churches, and the kind of trendy nightclubs that you normally wouldn't see in the South. 

And now it's trying to secede from Atlanta over sky-high murder rates.
Homicides were up 63 percent across Atlanta from January 1 through May 23 and rape rates increased 108 percent.

Shooting incidents rose 45 percent, robberies were up 2 percent and aggravated assaults jumped 29 percent.

Adjusting for population, a person living in Atlanta is more likely to be a victim of a serious crime, including murder and aggravated assault, than in Chicago, where crime rates are higher, reported 11Alive....

The sharp increase in crime rates has prompted residents in the wealthy Buckhead neighborhood to form the Buckhead Exploratory Committee to create its own police force and look into the possibility of breaking away from Atlanta, after around 200 officers left the city's police force in the wake of the shooting death of black man Rayshard Brooks by a white cop in June 2020.  

There are now two bills in the Georgia State Legislature to have Buckhead secede from the city, but city officials have opposed the idea of separating the wealthy, largely white neighborhood from the rest of Atlanta, which is predominantly black, arguing it would siphon away much of the city's tax base.
Rich people are going to have their police, one way or another. The rest of the city might not be able to pay for as many services, but I suppose they can cut the police budget to make up the shortfall. 

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I grew up in "Buckhead." Shortly after my father bought a lot and contracted on a home, the property was annexed by the City of Atlanta. What is now Buckhead was annexed by Atlanta in abut 1952 in order to fund Atlanta.

I made good my "Escape from Atlanta" in the 1990's. Taxes on that property had gone from a couple hundred dollars a year to over $20K a year to support Atlanta. Now, I pay about $700/year in Cherokee county taxes and have a rock-solid Sheriff's department watching my back.

Buckhead, however, is a prisoner of its own device. Driving through the affluent areas, and the hipster areas ($500,000.00 condos perched over coffee shops) during the recent election season, what you saw were Biden and BLM signs. Many Buckhead residents -- not all, of course -- are getting what they voted for and what they financially backed in Atlanta and Fulton county.

Now, some in Buckhead are talking about secession. Somehow they have so far tamped down how RACIST that sounds, but I'm sure that card will be played. Their next alternative will be to "vote with their feet" and move out. Maybe it's time for Cherokee County to "build a wall." Don't need them to come up here and start voting!

SH

Mike Guenther said...

Used to be a thing in Buckhead called the "Buckhead Crawl" which was starting at one end of Peachtree Rd hitting every bar/club for a drink, then making your way back down the other side back to your starting point. Back in the mid 80's. It was a walking tour.

Texan99 said...

My favorite argument: "You can't leave. We want to keep your taxes; in fact, that's the only thing we like about you."

Grim said...

MG:

I never found a club in Buckhead I liked well enough to drink there. It was never my favorite part of town.

Now, there used to be some great parties in outlaw clubs out on Ponce near Little Five Points, back when that was a run down industrial area with minimal police presence. Well, great in the sense that they were exciting. Probably some of what went on there wouldn't be considered great (and certainly not good) according to more ordinary standards.

Grim said...

Tex:

Yes, exactly.