The annual State of the City Business Address once again crystalized the relationship between City Hall, the Coca-Cola Co. and the Atlanta Committee for Progress.

The evening event filled Atlanta’s Symphony Hall, complete with a welcome from Hala Moddelmog, president and CEO of the Woodruff Arts Center. It was the third consecutive time the event has been held at symphony hall.

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens at the 2026 State of the City address at Atlanta Symphony Hall. (Photo by Maria Saporta.)

“I want to congratulate Mayor Andre Dickens on his re-election,” Moddelmog said as she kicked off the event.

Coca-Cola President and chief financial officer used his introduction of the mayor to announce the company has committed $4.3 million as part of its World Cup Legacy Program. The donations included $1 million to the United Way of Greater Atlanta for its youth leadership, career readiness and workforce development initiatives and another $1 million to Partners for Home, which works with the City of Atlanta to devise homeless response strategies and provide affordable housing to the unhoused. See below for the complete list of donations.

“These grants will support wonderful causes,” said Murphy, who also endorsed the mayor’s Neighborhood Reinvestment Initiative, which he said, “is key to helping make Atlanta better for everyone.”

Kathy Waller, executive director of the Atlanta Committee for Progress, with Carlos Pagoaga, president of the Coca-Cola Foundation, at the 2026 State of the City event. (Photo by Maria Saporta.)

Murphy also said the company recently invested $6.9 million to support behavior and mental health programs at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta as well as support of the arts with donations to the Atlanta Opera and efforts to combat homelessness.

“For the mathematicians, that totals over $11.2 million, and we are very proud to be associated with all of these wonderful causes,” Murphy said. “It’s not just about the investment. Collaboration is key to driving progress. Mayor Dickens’ Neighborhood Reinvestment Initiative is about ensuring that partners throughout Atlanta share resources and opportunity.”

At last year’s State of the City event, the Coca-Cola Co. announced $5.1 million to 13 Atlanta-based nonprofits.

Carol Tomé, CEO of UPS and past chair of the Atlanta Committee for Progress, also spoke in favor of the Neighborhood Reinvestment Initiative, saying it was a moral imperative to keep moving Atlanta forward.

Philanthropist Liz Blake with former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin at the March 18th’s State of the City event. (Photo by Maria Saporta.)

Dickens told those in attendance that the state of the city is strong, and that it’s strong because the “Atlanta is a group project.” He also noted that the World Cup is only 89 days away.

After outlining several of his administration’s successes, Dickens spoke of how Atlanta is “at a moral crossroads.”

The mayor spoke of the two Atlantas where residents might be living in neighborhoods separated by only a few miles, but their access to opportunities and success were starkly divergent.

The mayor then urged for the extension of the city’s eight Tax Allocation Districts so that his administration could invest in its neighborhood strategy in the near term.

But the city will need to get the support from the Atlanta City Council, the Fulton County Commission, and most importantly the Atlanta Board of Education (which represents half of the tax revenues) to raise the anticipated $5 billion the mayor wants to allocate towards its Neighborhood Reinvestment Initiative.

Dickens then urged the people in attendance at the State of the City to call their elected officials to help his administration fulfill its promise to reinvest in seven of the city’s priority neighborhoods.

Former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young with associate Demetrius Myatt and Atlanta City Councilman Alex Wan at the State of the City event on March 18. (Photo by Maria Saporta.)
Coca-Cola’s Bea Perez and John Murphy stand with Carol Tomé of UPS (right) at the 2026 State of the City event on March 18. (Photo by Maria Saporta.)

Coca-Cola’s 2026 donations to Atlanta announced at the 2026 State of the City event:

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