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March 21, 2024 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | Ser ving the community since 1976
Congress funds segment of Top End I-285 Trail in Dunwoody
like clarifying the City Council’s vision for staff, moving forward and continuously improving, developing a long-term strategy and honing the city’s operational model. “What do you want this place to look like, and how do we get there?” Connell said. Before the retreat moved into its first presentation, Connell asked councilmembers to provide a barrier to
DUNWOODY, Ga. — A segment of the Top End I-285 Trail in Dunwoody received $850,000 in funding March 9 as a part of a federal package of spending bills. The city requested $3 million in funds for a segment of the Top End I-285 Trail, connecting the Georgetown Shopping Center to Perimeter Center. The proposed Dunwoody portion of the Top End Trail runs along the southern city limits from PATH 400 in Sandy Springs to North Shallowford Road, with a crossing into Chamblee. The westside trails in the Dunwoody Trail Master Plan, including the Georgetown area, are focused on Perimeter Center. The proposed network calls for more north-south connections via the North Nancy Creek Greenway and eastwest routes via the Top End Trail. A proposed I-285 underpass in the Dunwoody Trail Master Plan would connect the city’s path network to Brookhaven’s Murphy Candler Park. The $850,000 will be used for constructing a paved bicycle and walking path along the proposed I-285 Top End Express Lanes project, which adds two new, barrier-separated express lanes in both directions of a portion of I-285 and Ga. 400.
See RETREAT, Page 5
See TRAIL, Page 3
HAYDEN SUMLIN/APPEN MEDIA
Dunwoody officials listen to Mayor Lynn Deutsch, right center, discuss property taxes at the city’s annual retreat March 12 in Clarksville. Deutsch said the consensus is to table plans for another bond referendum, “soften” paths through neighborhoods and prioritize promises to the community.
Dunwoody officials talk city finances at retreat By HAYDEN SUMLIN hayden@appenmedia.com CLARKSVILLE, Ga. — A couple miles off U.S. Route 23 in the foothills of the Appalachians, the Dunwoody City Council met with departments heads March 12-13 for the city’s annual retreat. The Glen-Ella Springs Inn & Restaurant in Clarksville at the end of gravel road served as the setting for a review of Dunwoody’s commercial properties, parks, budget trends and
property taxes. The City Council also discussed the failure of the bond referendum in November, a possible removal of the city’s millage cap and some priorities for capital improvement projects. Jock Connell, a former city administrator in Gwinnett and Hall counties, opened the meeting with an exercise for each councilmember, asking them to state one goal for Dunwoody in the next ten years. The answers varied with objectives
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