COLORBEARER OF ATHENS, GEORGIA LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1987
December 18, 2012

Big Change for Downtown Athens

After a closed-door meeting, Athens Downtown Development Authority Executive Director Kathryn Lookofsky says she's resigning.

Kathryn Lookofsky will be out in June after seven years as executive director of the Athens Downtown Development Authority.

 

During an ADDA board meeting Tuesday morning, Lookofsky opted to leave at the end of her contract, which expires June 30, according to Chairwoman Erica Cascio. "The outcome was, she isn't going to seek to extend her contract," said Cascio, the owner of Square One Fish Co.

 

Lookofsky confirmed she resigned in an email Tuesday night, "I truly love Downtown Athens and the Athens community," she said. "I am very happy to have had a chance to serve this great community and am very excited about the future of Downtown Athens. I currently have no plans, but I would love to stay in the area."

 

Other board members either didn't respond to requests for comment or referred questions to Cascio, who said she couldn't discuss most of what happened during the approximately two-hour meeting. All but a few minutes were closed to the public, as Georgia law allows for personnel discussions. "The rest of it was all privileged, personnel," Cascio said. "I can't discuss it."

Lookofsky was scheduled for a performance review last week, but the ADDA board postponed it because two members, Mayor Nancy Denson and Commissioner Mike Hamby, had to leave for another meeting, leaving the group without a quorum. 

An entirely different ADDA board—all seven members have since turned over—hired Lookofsky away from a similar position in Jonesboro in 2006 to replace Art Jackson. At the time, board members praised her enthusiasm and people skills. Since then, she has relentlessly championed a downtown master plan, buying local and downtown activities like the Athens Farmers Market. But keeping diverse constituents like retailers and bar owners or college students and older visitors happy is no easy task. And downtown has continued to struggle with familiar problems, notably cleanliness and parking. Some board members have accused Lookofsky of not being active enough in solving those problems.

The ADDA board will discuss hiring a new executive director at its January meeting, Cascio said. "We're pretty sure it's going to be a lengthy process," she said. "We have six-and-a-half months to get it done."

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