by February 6, 2014 16:34 pm
Governor Nathan Deal addressed the
board of Atlanta’s Commerce Club on Thursday. In a Q&A session following
his remarks, Deal was asked to comment on the possibility of fixing some of the
transportation problems that remain in the metro Atlanta area following the
region’s rejection of the TSPLOST in 2012.
While bills have been introduced in the
legislature to allow for smaller regions and a fraction of a penny sales tax,
the Governor does not appear to favor that approach. According to a story in the Atlanta Business Chronicle, the Governor prefers a
continuation of the regional approach that was used for the TSPLOST.
According to a couple of the board
members in the room, the governor told them that some people would like to
throw out the regional transportation sales tax approach. But he said he was
not ready to do so.
There also is a new bill making its
way through the legislature that would provide a fractional sales tax and
permit two counties or two governments to pass a tax for particular projects
rather that have a regional tax.
Deal told the Commerce Club board
that he is not in favor of taking a fractionalized approach at this time.
House Bill 195, introduced by Rep. Ed Setzler of Acworth would
allow two or more counties to join together and levy a sales tax for
transportation projects. Two bills that would allow fractional sales taxes are
being considered by the House Ways and Means Committee.Comments:
Bad Deal is asking for trouble. Dalton
Mayor David Pennington looks better than ever for Governor. Regionalism is
opposed by most Georgia voters as “trickle out redistribution of wealth”.
Cities and Counties need their own
tax receipts to fix their own roads, sewers and bridges, but federal grants
promote mal-investment. Regionalism feeds federal stimulus bribes for “economic
development”, the modern equivalent of rearranging the deck chairs on the
Titanic. These grants give local politicians the incentive to avoid finally
fixing our basic infrastructure by squandering the tax dollars we need to fix
roads, sewers and bridges. Instead, politicians are encouraged by developers seeking
tax subsidies to create “cool places” for our unemployed mellennials to hang
out.
For the State, water reservoirs should
be a priority to ensure more than a sufficient supply for populations and
agricultural irrigation.
Our national economic downward spiral
needs to be stopped at the State and local level. Real wealth creation requires
production of everything we can produce and sell. In Georgia, that includes agriculture,
mining, tree harvesting and the design and manufacturing of durable goods.
Our Republican politicians really
aren’t Republicans. They ignore the Platform and the Resolutions and the State
and U.S. Constitutions. Their solution to not having tax increases approved is
to sell Bonds we don’t get to vote on.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party
Leader
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