That's not even all the issues related to the location itself. The parcel that the City of Atlanta owns and is using for Cop City is adjacent to [what used to be] Intrenchment Creek Park, a Dekalb County park. By law, once land is a park, it's supposed to remain so in perpetuity. Nevertheless, Dekalb County decided to make a "land swap" deal with a nearby movie studio to give them that land in exchange for some (less valuable) mostly-unbuildable flood plain on the other side of Bouldercrest Road. Consequences of that debacle include:
It set a very dangerous precedent; no greenspace in Dekalb County (or possibly the entire State of Georgia) can be considered as safely protected as it used to be.
The park was largely destroyed, bulldozed by people hired by the studio (compare 2017 to the latest imagery)
One of the protestors occupying that park was murdered by police. That's the first time in the United States that an environmental activist has been killed by police, by the way.
It's small potatoes compared to the above, but it also gratuitously cut off access to the South River Trail from Bouldercrest Road even though the connection barely touches the disputed site (compare 2014 to the latest imagery), which as a cyclist I'm particularly salty about.
That's not even all the issues related to the location itself. The parcel that the City of Atlanta owns and is using for Cop City is adjacent to [what used to be] Intrenchment Creek Park, a Dekalb County park. By law, once land is a park, it's supposed to remain so in perpetuity. Nevertheless, Dekalb County decided to make a "land swap" deal with a nearby movie studio to give them that land in exchange for some (less valuable) mostly-unbuildable flood plain on the other side of Bouldercrest Road. Consequences of that debacle include:
It set a very dangerous precedent; no greenspace in Dekalb County (or possibly the entire State of Georgia) can be considered as safely protected as it used to be.
The park was largely destroyed, bulldozed by people hired by the studio (compare 2017 to the latest imagery)
One of the protestors occupying that park was murdered by police. That's the first time in the United States that an environmental activist has been killed by police, by the way.
It's small potatoes compared to the above, but it also gratuitously cut off access to the South River Trail from Bouldercrest Road even though the connection barely touches the disputed site (compare 2014 to the latest imagery), which as a cyclist I'm particularly salty about.
Huh. Even more layers of fuck. That’s awful :(