Apparently, DeKalb County CEO Vernon Jones is again talking about making all of unincorporated DeKalb a city. I remember hearing this idea floated two or three years ago, but it still seems goofy to me primarily because of how large and diverse DeKalb is. The northern and southern halves of the county are vastly different places, and the communities within those halves are just as different.

From the Dec. 8 issue of The Story:

On Monday DeKalb County CEO Vernon Jones announced he may seek to have all of unincorporated DeKalb made into the largest city in the state so that DeKalb could receive $22 million annually in utility franchise fees.

At a press conference, Jones said he would use the franchise fee revenue for infrastructure improvements. “We can’t continue to issue bonds to pay for infrastructure,” he said. Finance Director Michael Bell said the county would have to raise property taxes by 1.5 mils to gain $22 million. This would cost $120 more annually for a $200,000 home.

Eighty-five percent of its population receives services from DeKalb, Jones said, adding that the Sheriff’s Office, Public Health, and Public Safety would stay the same after incorporation. The CEO, who is in his second term, said he is not interested in running for Mayor of the new city.

Decatur Mayor Bill Floyd thinks the better solution would be for heavily-populated, unincorporated areas to follow Sandy Springs and incorporate as cities.

“It would be better to investigate letting Dunwoody, Tucker, Northlake and Soapstone incorporate. They would be much better served by local control and local government,” Floyd said. “It is awful hard for a commissioner representing south or north DeKalb to make decisions about land use at the other end of the county effectively. The same zoning and land use don’t work in all parts of the county.”

Putting the question of franchise fees aside for a second (which is a valid one, I believe), what are the advantages of incorporating a county that size? I can’t think of too many. The northern half of the county already thinks Vernon bleeds them to build infrastructure in South DeKalb. That resentment would only be fueled further if it was tougher for the theoretical cities of Dunwoody, Tucker, etc. to incorporate, which I think it would be under a City of DeKalb versus the existing DeKalb County. Plus, maps would look pretty goofy with cities like Decatur and Stone Mountain sitting in the middle of the larger City of DeKalb. Turf wars among competing agencies could only get worse. Someone tell me if I’m off base here.