Jonesboro Mayor Donya Sartor resigns
The Brief
Mayor Donya Sartor has resigned following a city council vote for a forensic audit of the city's finances, although she denies any wrongdoing.
Sartor's tenure as Jonesboro's first Black mayor, beginning in March 2023, has been marked by both community initiatives and political challenges.
Tensions between Sartor and the city council have been evident, with accusations of unprofessional conduct and racial bias, highlighting a power struggle within the city's administration.
JONESBORO, Ga. - The ongoing tension between Jonesboro Mayor Donya Sartor and the city council seems to have reached a boiling point this week.
The FOX 5 I-Team has learned that the embattled mayor has resigned during a public meeting on Thursday morning
What we know
The news came hours after a special called meeting. The only thing on the agenda was an executive session to discuss "personnel matters."
An emotional sartor told council members she's leaving, but not until a forensic audit of city finances is finished. That audit was requested by city council.
Her resignation comes amid a series of controversies and rising tensions between the mayor and council. There's been litigation between them, an internal investigation of the mayor, a g-b-i probe, and a police chief fired.
Sartor denies any wrongdoing.
Her last day is April 19.
What they're saying
"I'm rendering my resignation as the mayor of the city of Jonesboro... April 19, 2025. I specifically selected this date so I could fully cooperate with the requested forensic audit," the mayor told the council on Thursday. "Although, there have been no specific accusations against me by the council of wrongdoing."
She added that she wants her tenure to not be mired in accusations.
Timeline
Dr. Donya L. Sartor, a Georgia native and long-time resident of Jonesboro, has been leading the city as mayor since March 2023. Her tenure has been marked by both community initiatives and political turbulence.
In March 2023, Sartor made history by becoming Jonesboro's first Black mayor, securing the position with over 260 votes in a special election. A resident of the city for more than two decades, she previously served on the city council, demonstrating a commitment to public service and community development.
Sartor's tenure has not been without challenges. In late 2023, allegations surfaced accusing her of pointing a firearm at a police lieutenant during an office meeting. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation was called to examine the claims. Sartor acknowledged handling the firearm but firmly denied any threatening actions, suggesting the allegations were politically motivated. Subsequently, the GBI found insufficient evidence to charge her, and the matter was not presented to a grand jury.
Tensions between Sartor and the city council have also come to the forefront. In November 2023, a work session devolved into a heated exchange, with council members accusing the mayor of unprofessional conduct and Sartor alleging racial bias among her colleagues. The discord highlighted a broader power struggle within the city's administration, with council members and the mayor debating the city's governance structure and the formation of an ethics committee.
Late last month, Jonesboro Police Chief Todd Coyt and Assistant Chief Audrey Dunlap abruptly resigned. It remains unclear whether their resignations are related to the ongoing tensions within the city's administration.
Dig deeper
With a robust background in education spanning over 25 years, Sartor holds a Bachelor of Arts from Emory University, a Master of Arts from Clark Atlanta University, and a Doctorate in Education from Georgia State University. Her educational endeavors have informed her approach to leadership, emphasizing community involvement and support.
Sartor advocates for diversified housing, expanded internet access, and policies to protect green spaces while promoting the development of sidewalks and bike lanes. Her administration emphasizes fair and equal representation, seeking to collaborate with citizens, organizations, and businesses to foster economic development and community progress.
As mayor, Sartor has spearheaded several initiatives aimed at uplifting the community. These include organizing annual school supply giveaways, launching the "Adopt-A-Senior Citizen for the Holidays" program in collaboration with the Jonesboro Police Department, and hosting the city's inaugural Juneteenth celebration. She has also partnered with organizations such as the Atlanta Food Bank and Clayton County Public Schools to provide essential services like food distribution and housing assistance.
SEE ALSO:
Jonesboro police chief, assistant chief have resigned, officials say
Meeting meltdown: Screaming match caught on camera as Jonesboro's mayor and council battle for power
Jonesboro mayor fires police chief, effective immediately
Audit sparked by FOX 5 I-Team investigation finds city issued 1,200 false speeding tickets
Jonesboro officer claims firing was retaliation for speaking out about mayor
The Source
FOX 5 spoke with multiple sources, including members of the Jonesboro City Council. Additional details come from official council meetings. Previous FOX 5 reporting was also used.

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Politico
2 hours ago
- Politico
Newspaper death and taxes
Good Monday morning! The U.S. bombed Iran, and it's hard to start any newsletter without a nod to the nation's possible entanglement in a Middle East war whose justification involves the threat of weapons of mass destruction. But here in New Jersey we're focused on the budget. There are no budget committee meetings scheduled for today in either house, and so far not for this week. But there will have to be. Right now, it's looking like budget committees will meet Tuesday — one week before the budget is due. So we're all waiting to find out what will happen to several proposed tax increases. Of course, the budget will be accompanied by all kinds of other legislation, some of it likely controversial. And one of those bills, while sounding boring, is very important: the law on publishing legal notices. And we finally have some clarity on that. Senate President Nick Scutari on Friday introduced legislation that would cut the news media out of any mandated role in publishing legal notices for public entities. They'd be required to host the notices on their own websites by March. However, legal notices from individuals and companies — say, a notice of a person's name change — would still be required to be published in a news publication. Bills like this typically change before they gain final passage, but given that this bill is sponsored by the Senate president, whatever ultimately passes will probably at least resemble it. And this issue has to be resolved — or at least delayed again — by the end of the month. One thing that sticks out to me is that the towns would only be required to keep archives of the notices for one year. That seems particularly short. When they were published in newspapers, even if the notices were no longer archived online, you could as a last resort find the notice in an archived printed copy or microfilm. When former Gov. Chris Christie tried to do this in 2016, it was known around Trenton as the 'newspaper death bill.' Maybe it would have hastened it, but death came anyway. Still, even if politicians love to take shots at the publications owned by big companies like Gannett and Advance, the publications that will likely be most hurt are the tiny ones that still cover quite a bit of local news. FEEDBACK? 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The Hill
3 hours ago
- The Hill
Cuomo, Mamdani neck and neck in final NYC mayoral poll
New York Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani has effectively drawn even with former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) in the Democratic primary for New York City mayor and surpasses him in the final round of a ranked-choice simulation, according to a new poll released Monday. In a final survey of the race from Emerson College Polling/PIX11/The Hill, Cuomo led Mamdani 35 percent to 32 percent overall, which is within the poll's margin of error. New York City Comptroller Brad Lander came in at 13 percent, followed by City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams at 8% and former Comptroller Scott Stringer at 3 percent. Four percent of voters were undecided. But the survey also allowed respondents to rank their top choices. In the first round of voting, Cuomo led Mamdani 36 percent to 34 percent. In the eighth round of voting, once all the other candidates were eliminated, Mamdani came out on top, beating Cuomo 52 percent to 48 percent. New York City uses a ranked-choice voting system for its mayoral primary, meaning voters are able to select their top five candidates in order of preference. If no candidate surpasses 50 percent in the first round of voting, the candidate who's last is eliminated and their votes are redistributed to the other candidates according to how they ranked their other choices. The latest findings point to continued momentum for Mamdani, a democratic socialist who has emerged as the leading progressive choice in the Democratic race to succeed Mayor Eric Adams (D), who is running as an independent. In the last Emerson College Polling/PIX11/The Hill survey, taken in May, Cuomo led Mamdani 35 percent to 23 percent. 'Over five months, Mamdani's support has surged from 1% to 32%, while Cuomo finishes near where he began,' said Spencer Kimball, Emerson College Polling's executive director. 'In the ranked-choice simulation, Mamdani gains 18 points compared to Cuomo's 12, putting him ahead in the final round for the first time in an Emerson poll.' The survey is the latest to point to a close race as voters head to the polls on Tuesday. A Marist poll released last week found Cuomo leading Mamdani in the seventh round of voting, 55 percent to 45 percent. Cuomo has been the clear favorite as Democrats look to oust Adams, who was the subject of a federal corruption case that was eventually dropped by the Justice Department, drawing accusations that the mayor had sought to curry favor with President Trump. A win by Cuomo this week would represent a stunning resurgence for the former governor, who resigned from his job as the Empire State's top executive in 2021 amid sexual harassment allegations and a brewing scandal involving accusations that his administration concealed nursing home deaths during the COVID-19 pandemic. Even with his baggage, Cuomo has earned the backing of many notable figures in the Democratic Party, most recently Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.), the influential Black Congressional Caucus member. And while Mamdani has emerged as the clear progressive favorite, scoring the endorsement of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), he has also drawn criticism from the establishment. Last week, The New York Times editorial board urged voters not to support Mamdani despite pledging not to endorse in local elections. The Emerson College Polling/PIX11/The Hill survey was conducted from June 18 to June 20 with a sample size of 833 likely voters and a margin of error of plus or minus 3.3 percent. The first round of ranked-choice voting was conducted with a sample size of 800 likely voters and a margin of error of plus or minus 3.4 percent. The final round was conducted with 729 voters and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percent.


Chicago Tribune
3 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Clean energy job training offers hope to hundreds: ‘It's changed my life'
Jordan Foley ticks off what he didn't have when he started an intensive 13-week solar job training program on the West Side: money, a bed, clothes, food. The fear that the program wouldn't be able to help him was intense, but Foley, 31, pressed on, learning the math, science and construction skills needed to wire and install rooftop solar panels. He took tests, drew up blueprints and did daily physical training: pushups, jumping jacks and solar-panel carrying exercises. And in April, his hard work paid off. He landed a job as a project administrator for a clean energy company. 'It's changed my life,' Foley said of the training program. 'It's definitely changed my life for the better.' Foley is part of the first big wave of state residents to benefit from a long-awaited network of clean energy job training hubs established under Illinois' ambitious 2021 climate law, the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. The inclusion of job training was a major demand of environmentalists and their allies, who were determined to see Black and Latino communities share in the benefits of the clean energy economy. Eleven of 16 major training hubs statewide are now up and running, training hundreds of people. 'This moment is massive,' said Juliana Pino, interim co-executive director at the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization. 'It's really significant because before the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, communities had to fight very hard to even have (access to job training) be respected and understood.' There were 541 students enrolled in the workforce hub training classes in mid-May, and 94 who had already graduated, according to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. The program is state-funded, so it's not directly affected by President Donald Trump's attacks on renewable energy, but if opportunities in the field diminish, that could hurt graduates' job prospects, advocates said. Republicans in the U.S. Senate are currently working on a tax bill that would slash clean energy tax credits for businesses, homeowners and consumers. The House passed a similar measure last month. Among those eligible for the free training, which comes with a stipend and support services, are energy workers who have lost their jobs, people who have been in the foster care system, people who live in communities disproportionately burdened by pollution, and those who live in communities with high crime and incarceration rates. 'You're bringing in hundreds — and thousands — of people into the middle class,' said A.J. Patton Sr., CEO and managing partner of 548 Enterprise, the parent group to the nonprofit 548 Foundation, which runs the workforce hub where Foley trained. 'This is not just a workforce program. This is a public safety program. If I can take somebody off the corner and hand them a solar panel, I've changed their life,' Patton said. Under a sky hazy with Canadian wildfire smoke, 30 men and women in hard hats and neon construction vests pored over solar panels mounted on mock roofs they had built themselves. The students were considering wiring configurations, screwing in cables and responding to questions from solar master trainer Sam Garrard. In about a week, when the course at the 548 Foundation's West Side workforce hub at St. Agatha Catholic Church will conclude, the students will be able to install a solar array for a house, a car or a shop, Garrard said. 'Now they're just (taking) all their book knowledge and their hands-on knowledge that they've acquired and using it,' he said. The atmosphere was intense but supportive, with trainees calling craft-instructor manager Keith Lightfoot 'coach' and responding instantly on the one occasion when he sternly uttered a single word — 'Language!' — in response to an expletive. Among the challenges: Students have to do the math for solar arrays and learn the details of electrical wiring, according to graduate Cortez Heard, now a solar installer for a local clean energy company. 'It definitely did get challenging, but as a young man, you've got to understand it's going to be tough, and if you are ready for what you want to do, it's game on,' said Heard, 27, of Chicago. Such job training opportunities are the product of a long, hard fight in Illinois — one that can be traced back to the state's previous climate law, the Future Energy Jobs Act of 2016. The 2016 law was, in many ways ahead of its time, but it delivered some tough lessons to community organizers trying to make sure that Black and brown residents got their fair share of new jobs. 'We got our tails kicked by labor,' with many jobs and opportunities going to the relatively white construction trades, said Tony Pierce, co-pastor of Heaven's View Christian Fellowship church in Peoria and board president of Illinois People's Action, a multi-issue faith and community organization in Bloomington. The next climate bill, environmentalists and organizers vowed, would be different. They partnered with churches and social service organizations to hold community meetings across the state and hammer out a vision for what the clean energy economy should look like. Again and again, organizers heard the same thing from communities, Pino said: 'We don't want (clean energy) to be just a replica of other new industries that show up in our neighborhoods, don't give us meaningful access, and we ultimately don't see the benefits.' There was even a rallying cry: 'No climate, no equity, no deal.' In the end, Gov. JB Pritzker, a strong supporter of climate action, stepped in to help get the bill across the finish line, and the environmentalist coalition won big. The new law not only set a goal of 100% clean energy by 2050 but invested heavily in job training for people and communities that might otherwise be left behind. There are multiple workforce training programs under the Illinois climate law, including ones for people seeking union apprenticeships and for people in prison, but the workforce hubs program is the largest, and its progress has been closely watched. More than $30 million in climate-law funding has already been awarded to the workforce hubs, according to the state. Foley was basically homeless when a friend who works at the 548 Foundation told him about the solar job training program. He received a stipend for attending, and within a few weeks his caseworker was able to find him a small room to rent and even a brand-new bed to sleep in. 'That was a blessing,' he said. 'From there, I took full advantage of the program.' There were challenges: A relative died; not long after, another relative also died suddenly and prematurely. And then there was his fear of simply finishing the program. 'I didn't understand what could come from it,' Foley said. 'I was more afraid of, 'What happens when you have to go back to being hungry? What happens when you put in all of this energy, all of these days, and there is no (one) that wants to hire you?' I was very terrified of that.' Foley said he almost didn't take the final certification test, relenting only when Felicia Nixon-Gregory, the director of training and workforce development, sat down and talked with him. And then, when he graduated, it was into a dark December for clean energy. Winter, in general, isn't a good time to get hired for solar installer jobs in Illinois, and after President Donald Trump was elected in November, some clean energy employers took a wait-and-see approach to hiring. The 548 Foundation workforce hub solar training program initially had a job placement rate of 85%, which then dropped to about 50% and was inching back to 80% by mid-May, according to Patton. After he graduated, Foley found himself struggling to get paid what he was owed for short-term jobs. Still, he continued to work on issues he cared about, starting a youth ministry and volunteering at Prairie Guardians, an environmental nonprofit in Bloomington. And then, when he'd almost given up on a career in solar, he got a text from a case manager at his training program about a job at Atlanta's Dimension Energy with a $65,000 to $75,000 salary, a 10% sign-on bonus and unlimited PTO, or paid time off. 'I said, 'What is PTO?'' Foley recalled with a laugh. He had never heard of that. The company made him an offer, flew him to Atlanta to meet the team and put him up in a fancy hotel. He was worried that somehow the job, which is based in Chicago, wouldn't materialize, but then he got his company computer and corporate credit card. People told him, 'Don't mess this up,' he said. 'I was like, 'You're crazy if you think I'm going to mess any of this up,'' Foley recalled. There were high hopes for clean energy job training when the Illinois climate bill passed in 2021, and then there was frustration as year after year, the workforce hubs failed to materialize. 'This is one of the difficulties with having such nation-leading legislation,' said Francisco Lopez Zavala, an Illinois Environmental Council climate policy program associate. 'There was no other state in the U.S. to really model off in the efforts Illinois is leading in, with providing these trainings focused on the clean energy trade at such a scale, with the barrier reduction services that are offered,' he said. Among the issues, some state agencies didn't initially have enough staff, Lopez Zavala said, and even now, in some places 'it's still a struggle that we're continuing to work (on).' Pritzker's office did not respond to a written question about workforce hub delays but issued a statement saying in part, 'The idea for the CEJA workforce hubs originated with people from marginalized communities. The hubs are proof of the value of following environmental justice principles and ensuring impacted people have a seat at the table.' The services available to reduce barriers for workforce hub students can include child care, bus and gas cards, and assistance with housing and food. The idea is to give students the support they need to be productive and show up for class, said Crystal Overton, the 548 Foundation's director of student support services. A recent day found her buying clothes for the students' job interviews. 'I'm just thinking all the time, how are we preparing them for success?' Overton said. 'It needs to be a holistic approach, and not just education. It needs to be like Maslow's hierarchy of needs: Are they taken care of? Because if not, they're not going to come in open and receptive to the lesson.' The 11 regional workforce hubs that are already up and running include four in Chicago: the 548 Foundation hub with locations on the South and West sides, two Chicago Cook Workforce Partnership hubs on the South and West sides, and a Safer Foundation hub on the South Side. Classes vary, with the Chicago Cook Workforce Partnership focusing on job readiness training with an emphasis on soft skills as well as an introduction to career pathways and occupations in the clean energy industry. 'Ideally, someone can walk in, not knowing anything about the different career pathways, and then make a choice: OK, do I want to be a solar panel installer or do I want to work in HVAC?' said Abram Garcia, the Chicago Cook Workforce Partnership's interim associate director of program guidelines and budgets. Students can also find out which jobs they can get most quickly, he said, and for some that may be the deciding factor. Walter Alston, 35, of Chicago was drawn to construction, but at the end of his 12-week program at a Chicago Cook Workforce Partnership hub, he spread his net wider, interviewing with the electric vehicle company Rivian. He asked the questions he'd learned in the program — including ones about benefits and safety — and liked what he heard. Rivian offered him a job as a service technician, maintaining and repairing cars. He'll do five weeks of training in California, Arizona, Texas or Florida, and then move to one of those states for a permanent position. 'I thanked RW just, like, a million times,' Alston said of Revolution Workshop, the nonprofit that ran his training program. 'I thanked them, I thanked them, I thanked them.' As for Foley, he has in a sense come full circle. When he started his solar training program, talking to graduates gave him hope that this wasn't just another career dead end. Now he's the one with a job and a story to tell. During a recent video interview, Foley spoke from work, where he was on the road with some colleagues, visiting Illinois project sites. 'I'm loving it,' he said of his job. 'I'm very appreciative of where I'm at. They give me a lot of responsibility, so it's been a true life-altering experience.'