MARTA in Gwinnett: Why the referendum failed
Continuing Coverage: Transit
Referendum, by Tyler Estep, 3/20/19. AJC.
In a crowded brewery
full of disappointed transit supporters late Tuesday, Charlotte Nash gave the
opposition — which had just killed Gwinnett’s first MARTA referendum
in three decades its due credit.
“They did a better job
of getting their message out than we did,” Gwinnett’s commission chairwoman
said.
The pro-transit campaign
— backed by business interests and comprised of multiple groups across the
political spectrum —
had hundreds of thousands of dollars at their disposal.
The opposition effort
was armed with just a few Facebook pages and an intense distrust of MARTA, local government and tax hikes.
“Very encouraging that
the pro MARTA folks spent probably over $750,000 and lost to a true grassroots
campaign!” said David Hancock, a United Tea Party of Georgia leader on Facebook
late Tuesday. “Money doesn’t always buy elections!”
So how did a MARTA
referendum fail in a county where survey after survey revealed an increased
appetite for transit, and where recent election cycles have shown a dramatic
shift toward more liberal politics that should support such efforts.
‘Bail them out’ - Many advocates have spent the hours
since Tuesday’s results blaming the timing of the election, a politically
motivated decision to call a special election rather than adding the issue to
last November’s mid-term ballots.
Initial precinct-level analysis of Tuesday’s results found that,
generally speaking, voters in areas where the most substantial transit
improvements were promised like the I-85 and Peachtree Industrial Boulevard
corridors were the most likely to support the referendum. MAP: Gwinnett voters rejected
MARTA. How did your neighbors vote?
But there weren’t enough
yes votes there on Tuesday to best the opposition in other parts of the county. Many believe the huge turnout for the mid-term would
have turned that on its head.
However, the extra sales
tax that would’ve been put in place to cover transit expansion was a difficult political
pill to swallow for some taxpayers, and the small opposition force was able to
appeal to other voters by resurrecting decades-old fears of public
transportation and MARTA’s previous fiscal woes.
“Voters remember the
long history of corruption, inefficiency and financial problems of MARTA,” said
Snellville voter Ken Higgins, “and felt Gwinnett was supposed to bail them
out.”
The folks who ran the
advocacy campaigns, Go Gwinnett, the New Georgia Project Action Fund, and Yes
To MARTA say the standalone election created an uphill battle and that an
earlier start with their campaign would’ve helped.
Go Gwinnett, the
committee with largely backed by Republicans with ties to the business
community, didn’t meet until mid-January and started from scratch financially.
That decision was largely driven by Nash, who feared voter fatigue if efforts
started too quickly after November’s contentious election season. She stood by
that decision Wednesday, saying she’s not sure how much it would’ve
accomplished.
The New Georgia Project
Action Fund and other members of an unofficial coalition also started knocking
on doors and putting out feelers to potential voters in January.
“This did serve the
purpose of beginning an in-depth and serious conversation,” Go Gwinnett
spokesman Brian Robinson said of the referendum. “And I think if there was a
shortcoming of this, it was that the conversation wasn’t long enough. The
ability to raise awareness required a little more time.”
Fred Hicks, the New
Georgia Project Action Fund’s campaign manager, said the efforts should’ve
started “no later than the day after” November’s general election.
With a complicated
contract with MARTA and the complex transit plan before voters, Robinson and
Hicks said, building a knowledge-base within an entire community is a slow
process. “It’s easier to defend the status quo than advocate for substantive
change,” Robinson said.
The overall turnout of
91,000, while just 17 percent of Gwinnett’s registered voters, was higher than
expected. The no votes took the election by about 8 points.
Despite that, the
advocacy groups largely defended the strategy behind their get out the vote
efforts, which involved targeting primarily younger, more diverse voters. Hicks
conceded that perhaps a more concerted effort to physically get people to the
polls could have helped.
The leaders of the
pro-transit groups also defended the fact that there was little coordination
among the groups.
Opponents of the MARTA
plan say the transit backers were out of touch with what voters want.
“The vote is a clear
message from Gwinnett County taxpayers that want dependable and innovative
solutions to our traffic problems now, not 20 years from now,” said Julianne
Thompson, a GOP strategist and Gwinnett resident.
Standalone election - Nash
and the county commission’s decision last August to call the referendum for
March rather than adding it to ballots during the November mid-term election drew instant criticism from Democrats and transit
advocates. They argued that a lower turnout standalone election would increase
the odds of failure.
They were right, and
they’re still not happy. “Concerns were raised, but they were ignored,” said
Rep. Pedro Marin, the Democratic leader of Gwinnett County’s state House
delegation, on Wednesday. “Politicians placed their interests before the needs
of those they serve, and the long-term interests of Gwinnett County.”
In a post-referendum
Facebook post, Gwinnett Democratic Party leader Bianca Keaton called the
decision “voter suppression.”
Nash said at the time of
the decision that it was a compromise to get the support of as many fellow
commissioners as possible. Former Commissioner John Heard recently told The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution that state Republican leaders
suggested the referendum be moved,
the presumption being that adding transit to the ballot would’ve given
Democrats more motivation to hit the polls last year.
Heard, fellow
Commissioner Lynette Howard and most of Gwinnett’s Republican state delegation
members lost their seats to Democrats anyway. Republican U.S. Congressman Rob
Woodall won re-election by just 400 votes. He later announced it would be his
final campaign.
Even after Tuesday’s
failed referendum, Nash said she wouldn’t call the timing a mistake. “But it’s
certainly a chance to look at making the right choice the next time we call
it,” she said. Nash has made it no secret that another transit referendum is
likely in the offing for Gwinnett. And while she declined to propose a specific
date, she vowed any such measure who be decided during a “big election.”
AJC ANALYSIS -
The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution’s initial precinct-level analysis of Gwinnett’s MARTA referendum
vote found a few trends. It found a bloc of “yes” voters along the I-85
corridor, where a MARTA rail station and other significant transit expansions
were planned. Precincts along the congested Peachtree Industrial Boulevard
corridor on the northern end of the county also favored approval, as did voters
in the southern tip of Gwinnett. Generally speaking, voters in the rest of the
county tended to oppose the referendum.
Staff writer Amanda Coyne contributed to this article.
Comments
I served on the
State-Wide Tea Party Committee to defeat the TSPLOST vote in 2012. We defeated
“regionalism” and dodged an $18 billion boondoggle with 66% of the vote. In the
Atlanta Metro “Region” the price tag was $6 billion. $3 billion was a MARTA expansion bail-out and
$3 billion were road jobs that didn’t connect or mitigate gridlock and the
costs were double the price.
Public Transit, parks,
green space, bike lanes and art work are not good government priorities. The priority is roads, highways and the end
of traffic gridlock. MARTA needs to double their user fees and ridership and
stop running empty buses and train cars to eliminate the tax subsidies.
Public transit can
work in high density urban cities like Manhattan Island in New York City and
Madrid Spain, but Atlanta is the least dense city on the planet.
Atlanta had been identified
as a “mega-city” under UN Agenda 21, but that failed for lots of reasons. There
are still “smart growth” groups operating, but we continue to ignore them.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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