Friday, December 5, 2003 |
Lease pending for Clayton State, Tennis Center By J. FRANK LYNCH Clayton State University is safe for now in the cozy space it occupies at the Peachtree City Tennis Center. City Manager Bernard McMullen said a lease agreement with the university was one of the to do items remaining in this weeks transfer of tennis center operations from the Development Authority to the city. The college has been using the city-owned space rent free and without any lease agreement for a year, a fact discovered just two weeks ago. Virgil Christian, former executive director of the Development Authority, said in August the college was leasing the space under a $1 a year agreement worked out between the DAPC, the county Chamber of Commerce and county development officials. But Christian, who stepped down from his post on Oct. 31, apparently never got around to offering finalizing the lease agreement, a fact discovered when officers of the Tourism Association requested copies of the contract for transfer. DAPC Attorney Mark Oldenburg said a lease was in the discussion stages, but was forgotten amid all the controversy in recent months. We had some drafts that we floated back and forth, Oldenburg said. They didnt like it and sent me one, I didnt like it and sent it back. My recollection is that Clayton State said, Wait a minute, were going to see how this plays out, Oldenburg said. University spokesman John Shiffert said the lack of a lease was a non-issue with university administrators. The lease situation, or lack of such, has been the same since October 2002 (when Clayton State first began utilizing the space), and were comfortable with that, he said. Shiffert said the university is not required to go into a lease agreement when it offers off-campus instruction at another location, such as at local high schools, and so didnt question the Tennis Center arrangement. Mayor Steve Brown, lead critic of the DAPCs management practices, said the situation left the city vulnerable to a lawsuit in the event of accident or injury. It would have been one thing if this had been for just two or three months, but theyve been doing this for a whole year, Brown said. The universitys vision for Fayette County remains clear, Shiffert said. Clayton States involvement in Fayette County is for us, first and foremost, a mission issue, Shiffert said. Were interested in educating people and, when we were asked to come into Fayette County, we were happy to oblige. Indeed, we have always had a very friendly arrangement with everyone in Fayette County. With the fall semester, Clayton State began offering first-year credit classes in four different subject areas at the Fayette County Higher Education Center, renovated space on the ground floor of the Tennis Centers clubhouse. A series of non-credit classes are taught at the site as well. Shiffert said school administrators are concerned that the university continue to maintain a strong presence in Fayette, which it considers a hot growth area well into the future. In his State of the University address given in September, CCSU President Thomas K. Harden said the Fayette County site needs to expand dramatically Meanwhile, the universitys spring semester classes begin in January. Shiffert said the uncertainty about who will manage the tennis center has no impact on the course schedule, at least as far as the university is concerned. Should some issue regarding our use of the space in the Peachtree City Tennis Center arise between then and now, we would simply find other space in Fayette County to hold our academic and noncredit classes, said Shiffert.
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