Monday, October 7, 2019

Atlanta Metro Problems


We moved to Dunwoody GA in the heart of Atlanta Metro in 1983. Manufacturing had moved to the Atlanta Metro suburbs and we had over 100 manufacturing plants in office parks in the 4 major counties that included DeKalb, Fulton, Cobb and Gwinnett Counties. 

Most of these manufacturing plants were electronics related. This was the PC and Telecom boom that resulted from technical advances in electronics. Integrated circuits pioneered by Texas Instruments were being developed to increase functionality. CAD computer aided design was developing to allow for CIM computer integrated manufacturing, programmed robotics was ensuring consistent tight tolerance quality. The PCs capable of internet connectivity and cell phones were being developed. Everything was digitized to allow paperless records and transactions. Bar codes were used to track materials and shipments. We implemented lean strategies to deliver continuous process management to assure product quality and increase throughput. After 2000, I watched all of these electronics companies move manufacturing off-shore to China, Mexico and other countries and watched rural manufacturing companies in Georgia disappear. I hope Tariffs will return manufacturing to rural Georgia.

GDP is $425.7 billion and Atlanta Metro ranks 10th in US Metro Areas behind Boston, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Houston, Washington DC, Dallas, Chicago, Los Angeles and New York. The GDP for the State of Georgia is $602 billion.

Population is 5.9 billion and Atlanta Metro ranks 9th in US Metro Areas behind Philadelphia, Miami, Washington DC, Houston, Dallas, Chicago, Los Angeles and New York.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_metropolitan_statistical_areas. The population for the State of Georgia is 10.6 million.

Traffic is gridlocked and Atlanta Metro ranks 11th on the list of Metros with the most gridlock. Hours lost in congestion per capita: 108.  Cost of congestion per driver: $1,505. Total cost of congestion for city: $3.5 billion. 

We are competing with:
10th Portland OR,
9th Philadelphia PA
8th San Francisco CA
7th Pittsburgh PA
6th Seattle WA
5th Los Angeles CA
4th New York City NY
3rd Chicago IL
2nd Washington DC
1st Boston MA


Both I-85 and I-75 run through downtown Atlanta north and south.  The I-285 Bypass is too close to the city center. There is no effective outer bypass for interstate traffic.  There is no effective highway grid to allow easier east to west commuting. 

Atlanta Metro is decades behind and did not expand its road and highway systems enough during the 1960s to 1980s to 2020. It is playing catch-up now that the cost of this infrastructure has tripled.

Atlanta Crime - Dunwoody crime is impacted by high crime in neighboring cities and counties.

Many gangs started appearing in Georgia in the mid1980s, as a result of the crack cocaine epidemic. In 2003, there were an estimated 78 gangs in the Atlanta area alone. In 2015, Atlanta police announced that they were tracking an estimated 192 gangs. In more recent times,

Mexican drug cartels have established Atlanta as a major distribution hub for methamphetaminemarijuanacocaine, and heroin. Drug dealing is the main source of money for gang members, which has led some of the gangs to form untraditional alliances with one another. Armed robbery, commonly drug robberies, are another way in which gangs capitalize in Atlanta's open air drug market.

The well-known gangs are mainly concentrated in the West, Southwest, Southeast, and East Atlanta with many gangs with turf on the outskirts of the city and have hybrid sets that are found in smaller cities all over Georgia. Some of the gangs are nationwide, such as the Trill Gang Sureños
Tiny Rascal Gang, and MS-13 who have sent high ranking shot callers to establish local neighborhood cliques as loyal sets under the same flag.


Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader


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