When we
moved to Dunwoody in 1983, it was clear to me that any home abutting a main
road or main intersection could eventually lose part of its front, side or back
yard. Excessive easements signaled this
risk.
But at
the time, everything was well sized and the Atlanta Metro area had about 3
million residents. It was growing in the
1980s because of the electronics industry expansion that resulted from advances
in technology and the need for productivity increases. Atlanta metro was a major location for
electronics companies, but these companies started moving out of Atlanta metro
in 2000 and were gone by 2010.
The
entire Atlanta Metro area was built for residential neighborhoods that occupied
most of the land. Each area had its own
grocery stores, schools and strip malls.
Streets and many major roads were all 2 lane with no sidewalks.
The major
Atlanta metro “sights” like the zoo, the aquarium, Stone Mountain, the art
museum, Piedmont Park and similar attractions are spread all over town,
requiring more driving.
This town
was built for cars. However, highway
development was nonexistent. I-285 was a
circular bypass that was built too close to the city center and the need for
additional lanes was ignored. I-75 and
I-85 were routed through the center of town.
GA-400 was under construction, but there was no sign of a highway
grid. I-20 was the only highway that
crossed the metro east to west and it became a boulevard through the town
center. It was built to NOT GROW.
UN Agenda
21 implementation has removed voter control from zoning. The Dunwoody MARTA
train depot at Perimeter Mall has resulted in targeting this area as a “transit
village”, another UN Agenda 21 imposed high density requirement.
Public
schools in Dunwoody are also creating traffic problems and road expansion abuse. In the 1980s, Dunwoody had two high schools
and no middle school. Peachtree HS
closed and was replaced to Peachtree Middle school. This created more traffic for Dunwoody
HS. When the middle school took grades
it increased traffic to the middle school.
The
“neighborhood schools” that had been grades 1 through 8 lost grades 7 and 8 to
the middle school on Peachtree NE. Later
a separate “sub-middle school” lost grades 5 and 6 to another central facility
and increased traffic to that facility on Womack near the college.
What had
been Perimeter Community College became Perimeter College offering 4 year
degrees. Enrollment doubled and then
contracted. This facility impacts Womack
at Tilly Mill.
The
movement of the Braves’ stadium to I-285 and I-75 has put additional pressure
on North I-285 and Dunwoody doesn’t want any more “cut-through” traffic caused
by inadequate lanes in North I-285.
DeKalb’s
broken sewer line problem may delay development in PCID for a while, but the
Braves’ stadium traffic will commence when they open. The DeKalb school system and Perimeter
College will do whatever they want to do.
I
attended a Catholic Parish school in Maplewood Mo, a city in St. Louis County Mo. The School building was over 100 years old,
but was well maintained and regularly updated. There were 120 students in
grades 1 through 8 with about 40 to a class.
The teachers were Loreto Nuns who lived in a large convent on the
grounds. Students would walk or bike and
lived within a 10 block radius of the school. Tuition was free. The school was
supported by the Church collections, fish fries and large donations from
parishioners. The older grade kids served as Patrol Boys and playground
monitors for the younger kids. The grade
school choir sang all funerals. The education was excellent. I rode my bike to school on the streets and
sidewalks and walked my bike across boulevards with the traffic light.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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