AthFest music festival to be held under new executive director

By Melanie Levi

Mary-Eleanor Joyce smiles in front of posters promoting previous AthFests on April 25, 2023 in her office on East Clayton Street. Joyce wants to ensure that AthFest Educates, displayed on the guitar in her hands, becomes well known by attendees. (Photo/Melanie Levi)

Mary-Eleanor Joyce sits in her brightly lit office above Mellow Mushroom on East Clayton Street. The spunky musician and Athens local sports a loud purple shirt and green pants, and her body language is open and inviting. Her infectious giggle fills the room as she introduces herself. Joyce recalls the accidental encounter that changed the course of her life forever.

“I was down here interviewing with the school of social work for grad school and didn’t know AthFest was happening,” Joyce said. “[I] walked out and one of my favorite bands from high school, Five Eight, was playing.” 

AthFest Educates is a local nonprofit organization that is devoted to assisting Athens-Clarke County schools in advancing music and arts education for students K-12. The AthFest music festival was founded in 1997, but became a part of this nonprofit in 2009 to support these endeavors. This year, however, the company has experienced a significant change in leadership.

Mary-Eleanor Joyce’s office is covered in checklists and blueprints at her East Clayton Street office on April 25, 2023. This will be Joyce’s first time organizing a music festival and a marathon. (Photo/Melanie Levi) 

Jill Helme, former executive director of AthFest Educates, stepped down after eight years of employment. In January, Joyce stepped in to take over this esteemed role.

“When we’re looking for a director of a nonprofit, we’re also looking for somebody that has major skills in planning events,” said Alicia Nickles, longtime AthFest Educates board member and Flagpole Magazine publisher. “Finding a person that knows how to do all that is a unicorn.”

Although a major change, Nickles is hopeful in Joyce’s abilities because of the new leader’s personal experience with the festival as well as nonprofits. Nickles said that Joyce’s two predecessors were either too festival-focused or nonprofit-focused, but she has the appropriate background to manage both.

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AthFest Educates donates approximately $50,000 in grants to the Athens-Clarke County School District yearly. This money is generated partially from the annual AthFest music festival and partially from its sister event, the AthHalf Half Marathon. The funds are provided to strengthen adolescents’ knowledge and participation in music and arts. 

Joyce intends to keep the festival’s central cause the same, but plans to implement new ideas to promote this charity.

“The biggest change I want to make is putting the mission first so that everyone that shows up to AthFest, everyone that goes to the AthHalf Marathon, knows this is a fundraiser for AthFest Educates,” Joyce said.

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Joyce wants to involve bands in fundraising by asking them to donate the earnings from their performance or incentivizing donations with prizes. She also intends to place banners displaying the fundraiser’s mission with QR codes that provide attendees with a direct link to donate. 

As a whole, Joyce wants to make it clear that this free festival is not exactly free; AthFest Educates has a monetary goal with a mission behind it. 

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“I’ve played AthFest and I didn’t know that it was a fundraiser for a nonprofit. That’s a huge challenge,” Joyce said.

This is the notion that she seeks to combat in the foreseeable future, but it is the challenge that enticed her to want this role of executive director. 

“I am impressed that the board waited to find who they felt would be the right person instead of just a person,” said Joyce.


Source Info –

Alicia Nickles, she/her

706-549-9523

ads@flagpole.com

Mary-Eleanor Joyce, she/her

(706) 548-1973

director@athfesteducates.org

https://www.linkedin.com/in/mary-eleanor-joyce-35544853/

Why I Wrote the Story:

I wrote this story to highlight the significant change in leadership of a festival that has been around for decades. As the only paid employee of AthFest Educates, the executive director has many major tasks to handle.

Mayor Kelly Girtz says he is ‘positive’ Georgia Square Mall redevelopment will move forward

By Melanie Levi

Kelly Girtz, mayor of Athens-Clarke County, presents his Georgia Square Mall housing initiative to students and staff at the University of Georgia. Girtz’s news conference was held on February 27, 2023, and took place at the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. (Photo courtesy/Melanie Levi)

Mayor Kelly Girtz’s proposed $189 million housing project may not ever see the light of day, despite his repeated lobbying efforts. 

The potential greenspace and affordable housing complex would take over the lot that the Georgia Square Mall currently sits on in west Athens-Clarke County. Girtz has proposed this million-dollar project at multiple meetings of public officials and area developers, but to no avail. His proposition has been postponed three times due to phasing issues and tension between developing parties, but Girtz remains hopeful that his plan will come to fruition eventually.

On March 7, Girtz will once again stand before Athens-Clarke County commissioners and present his housing initiative.

“If I walk around like Linus with my head hangin’ down, stuff tends not to happen. If I stay positive and I stay focused and I use facts, good things happen, and so right now I’m focused on March 7,” said Mayor Girtz in a news conference regarding his upcoming appeal.

During this news conference, Girtz referred to several other key points that he seeks to address with his project. 

He plans to address Athens’s housing crisis by allotting 10% of homes in this new complex to residents with income issues. Girtz claims that these rentals will be “permanently affordable for 40 years,” and potential tenants will be fully vetted by agencies like the Clarke County School District’s human resources department. He intends to integrate Athens residents of various financial backgrounds through this initiative.

Girtz also seeks to fill the area with women-owned and small local businesses in order to stimulate the local economy. As far as employees who currently work at the Georgia Square Mall are concerned, he assures that they will be given opportunities in this new development as well.

As of now, Mayor Girtz has stood before county commissioners three times with his plan. It has been rejected all three times due to what he claims to be phasing issues. On March 7, Girtz will try again to begin his long-awaited housing initiative.

“I want my 10-year-old son in 10 years or 20 years when he’s rolling around town to be able to say ‘We’ve got a valuable, magnetic, attractive, fun outdoor space to hangout at,’” said Girtz

Source Info: 

Kelly Girtz, he/him

kelly.girtz@acc.gov

706-613-3010

Twitter @kellygirtz


Why I Wrote the Story:

I wrote this story to inform the public about one of Mayor Kelly Girtz’s extreme decisions. This million-dollar initiative will affect Athens residents for decades to come, and citizens deserve to be updated on this process.