We
at the Transportation Leadership Coalition (TLC) are glad to see our state
government finally addressing credible transportation projects like the
Interstate 285 and Georgia Highway 400 interchange instead of chasing billions
of dollars’ worth of low impact transit projects as were found in the
Transportation Investment Act referendum.
Yes,
indeed, the Interstate 285 and Georgia Highway 400 interchange project should
proceed, but we have little to cheer about.
The enormous cost of the interchange improvement will inhale the lion’s
share of our state transportation funds.
The commute of a majority of the metro population who do not use Georgia
Highway 400 will remain a congested drag on their lives.
The
Atlanta region now finds itself in a situation where many of the counties will
not have an opportunity to make any significant congestion relief progress at
all due to a lack of funds. Our
opportunities were squandered. The
self-indulgent special interests kept trying to convince us that overly expensive
commuter rail and non-effective light rail are substitutes for major road
improvements. We were told the Beltline,
nothing more than a local Atlanta economic development project, was worth
nearly $2 billion of our tax dollars.
We
can blame the incredibly poor project selections in the regional governance
driven Transportation Referendum which
led to its failure. We can also blame
the total lack of activity in the 2013 General Assembly pertaining to all
things transportation.
The
state needs to develop more sophisticated ways to address problems like the
Interstate 285 and Georgia Highway 400 interchange improvement. Why not create a way for the affected
counties in the area to help pay for it locally?
Representative Ed Setzler introduced House Bill 195 in 2013 that would have allowed counties to create their own special district, set their own list of projects and have their own referendum. The legislation was viewed as a positive way to maintain local control and solve problems. Unfortunately, the bill never made it out of committee.
It
is interesting that government can always justify building a new football
stadium costing over $1 billion, but they cannot be motivated to produce more
than one significant highway project out of the many we truly need.
To
commuters across metro Atlanta, the Interstate 285 and Georgia Highway 400
interchange project will stand as a symbol of how little control our citizens
have over our state government and how low our expectations should be.
This
type of situation will continue as long as we choose the wrong priorities and
chase massive multi-billion dollar projects. Some say regional governance is
the answer. We believe regionalism leads
to less local control, more unaccountability and poorer results; not to
mention, it’s unconstitutional!
Source: Field Searcy, a Cobb citizen, represents
RepealRegionalism.com an education campaign by the Transportation Leadership
Coalition, LLC which led the grassroots effort against the Regional
Transportation Tax (TSPLOST) in 2012.
Comments:
Field Searcy is absolutely
correct. I wonder how the I-285 ramp to
G-400 project cost went from $450 million on the T-SPLOST list to $20.5 million
cited in a recent newspaper article.
There is a slush fund here somewhere.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party
Leader, Transportation Leadership Coalition Member
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