Can Peachtree City’s Leaders Be Civil?

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A seemingly routine agenda item sparked a telling debate at Peachtree City’s March 20th, 2025 City Council meeting. 

On the table was renewing the Georgia Municipal Association’s “City of Civility” designation – essentially a pledge for elected officials to conduct themselves with respect and courtesy. Councilmember Clint Holland asked that the full text of the civility pledge be added into the meeting minutes and suggested postponing the discussion until the entire council could weigh in (Councilmember Frank Destadio was absent)​. 

His requests drew a mixed response. 

Councilmember Suzanne Brown voiced significant disapproval. “We already have issues with civility on this council,” she declared while alluding to examples of councilmembers being uncivil despite the previous pledge. She concluded her remarks by saying renewing the document “means nothing” and “achieves nothing.”

On the other side, Councilmember Laura Johnson supported renewing the designation. “Even if it’s just symbolic, it’s important,” she argued at the meeting. She emphasized that formally recommitting to respectful debate served as a valuable reminder for the officials themselves. 

In the end, with Destadio absent and the council split, Mayor Kim Learnard and Councilmembers Holland & Johnson voted in favor of delaying further discussion until the next meeting. Councilmember Brown voted in opposition. 

Underlying this brief debate is an uncomfortable question with a fraught history: How civil has Peachtree City’s leadership been? 

The GMA’s “Embrace Civility” program, launched in 2023, encourages cities to model “open, free, and vigorous debate while maintaining the highest standards of civility, honesty, and mutual respect.” Peachtree City was even among the inaugural group of 77 cities recognized as a “City of Civility” in 2023, which some may find ironic considering it coincided with examples of incivility raised by Councilmember Brown. 

But as Councilmember Brown’s misgivings suggest, adopting a resolution is one thing. Living up to it might be another. 

Have We Been Civil?

The very need for a civility pledge implies there’s room for improvement. In the past three years, Peachtree City’s council meetings have generally been orderly but not without friction. There have been flashes of discord behind the scenes, particularly in internal communications. For instance, during last year’s contentious budget deliberations, there were internal emails showing deep disagreements on fiscal policy that turned surprisingly personal.

Tensions on the dais have occasionally flared in plain view as well. Barbed comments and sharp retorts occur. Even when Councilmember Johnson defended the civility designation, she tacitly acknowledged that public lapses in decorum happen.

A History of Discord at City Hall

While these recent events suggest civility is a current issue, Peachtree City’s political dramas are not new and have been arguably worse. 

In the early 2000s, Mayor Steve Brown routinely stirred negative reactions with his outspoken and often combative style. Frequently, he loudly positioned himself as right and most everyone else was wrong, corrupt, or conspiring against him and his interests. Even before taking office, Brown gained notoriety by writing sharply critical letters to The Citizen targeting then-City Attorney James Webb. The tension escalated into an unprecedented libel lawsuit filed in 2000 on behalf of Webb against Brown and the newspaper. That suit was eventually dropped after The Citizen countersued, citing Georgia’s anti-SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) statute designed to protect citizens and media from intimidation.

As mayor, Brown’s abrasive leadership, inability to form partnerships, and frequent public confrontations drew criticism from many residents. His behavior and attacks on others overshadowed any accomplishments, and public dissatisfaction grew. In the 2005 mayoral election, fewer than 30% of voters supported his bid for a second term.

Later, an episode at City Hall made headlines across Georgia for its incivility. In 2011, then-Mayor Don Haddix lobbed a personal attack at his predecessor, Harold Logsdon, in an email to a staff member claiming that Logsdon “drank a lot and came to meetings drunk.” The remark was so incendiary that former Mayor Logsdon sued Haddix for libel. The saga only ended after Haddix publicly apologized and retracted his statement as part of a legal settlement​. 

Like Steve Brown, Don Haddix was voted out after a single term. They are the only Peachtree City mayors to lose re-election. 

Can Our Leaders Get Along?

Of course, it hasn’t all been conflict at City Hall. Peachtree City’s councils have seen plenty of cordial collaboration and polite discourse. Many contentious issues have been handled professionally even when opinions diverged. Longtime residents will note that most meetings proceed with polite debate, and councilmembers often preface disagreements with phrases like “With all due respect…” or express appreciation for each other’s perspectives. 

Yet, as human nature would have it, the flare-ups and feuds tend to stick in the public’s memory more than the calm discussions. The very fact that Peachtree City sought the “City of Civility” designation in the first place suggests an awareness: leaders know the public remembers their worst behaviors, and they want to hold themselves to a higher standard.

However, even the most well-crafted resolution is not a cure-all. I agree with Councilmember Brown that declaring the city a paragon of civility won’t automatically eliminate sharp tongues, personal grudges, or moments of frustration in the heat of debate. True civility requires elected officials to model the respectful behavior that voters expect every single day, not just when a pledge is on the agenda.

The upcoming April 3rd council meeting will revisit the “City of Civility” renewal, and given Councilmember Brown’s previous opposition, it may not pass unanimously—but unanimity isn’t the point. The vote is symbolic. What matters more is what follows.

Will our leaders conduct themselves civilly when the next divisive moment arises? Or will they risk creating a legacy that echoes the failures of past mayors?

11 COMMENTS

  1. “Civility Pledge”. This reminds me of something one of my old HS football coaches used to say…..”You can either talk the talk….or you can walk the walk.” Talk is cheap – but your actions speak louder than any pledge you mutter. Put this pledge in the same bucket of mularkey as a city motto……does Jonesboro adopting the “Great Community, Many Stories” theme entice you to spend time there? Maybe South Fulton’s “A City on The Rise” makes you think more highly of them? Not likely.

    Words are cheap….easy to say, and carry no commitment. Let’s cut the talk out, save the time that we waste, and just let our actions speak for themselves.

    “A well done is better than well said.” — Benjamin Franklin
    “Pay less attention to what men say. Just watch what they do.” — Dale Carnegie
    “The superior man acts before he speaks, and afterward speaks according to his actions.” — Confucius
    “The only thing that matters in the business world are deliverables. Walk the talk, and your actions will produce the respect that you desire.”
    ― Germany Kent

  2. FWIW I agree with Ms Brown in that enacting a policy of civility accomplishes very little other than saying we will try. Each member of our Council has their own strengths and for the most part, inflated egos and sometimes thin skin. Each will experience success(normally) and all will experience disappointment. All successful people do. One must enter elected office knowing compromise and consensus building, otherwise little to nothing of consequence will get done.

  3. It is my opinion our City Council has civilly acted for the most part. Perfect? No, but for the most part, yes. True civility will allow those with minority positions time to get their heads around various topics, verify or determine best courses of action, and offer consensus or gather consensus. We have no time for that. We are compelled to keep “on track.”

    I also suggest civility has no true meaning for the majority of voters in Peachtree City, Fayette County, State of Georgia and most parts of our nation. Any concept of civility was foregone as we closed in on our last general election. A pledge of civility is little more than eyewash; “Robert’s Rules of Order” keeps things moving.

  4. Mr Hamner – Rehashing examples of PTC leaders’ coarse behavior from 20+ years ago doesn’t inform readers about what’s going on with our current representatives. If we have a Council member who crosses the line consistently, The Citizen should call them out.

    I expect common decency from our representatives. If the mayor or a Council member cannot make a point without personal attacks or by not allowing others’ views, they deserve an overwhelming vote out of office.

    A civility pledge is just window dressing – – something to be listed on a re-election campaign flyer, but lacking substance or impact.

    So I agree completely with Suzanne Brown. Spend Council time on matters that affect the community, not “feel good” declarations that fail to achieve a purpose.

  5. Not going to relive that time. just a couple of points.

    Logsdon was one term.

    I apologized for sending the email to one only staff member, not the facts, who when caught on other issues one night threw his keys on the desk and disappeared.

    Harold’s nickname was Lager LOGSDON.

    a deposition was filed backing my statements by another elected.

    Fleish, Learnard and Imker attacked me for not backing the TSLOST, etc.

    Kenneth Hamner needs to get his facts straight. his diatribe dos not serve the city at all.

    EOM