Thursday, January 9, 2020

Georgia USA


Georgia continues to rank 8th among the 50 States in Nominal GDP with $640 billion in 2019 and 602 billion in 2018.

State of Georgia Government Spent $27.5 billion in 2019.
Healthcare 36%    $9.9 billion
Education 22%    $6.05 billion
Pensions 17%     $4.68 billion
Transportation 8% $2.2 billion
Welfare 5%        $1.375 billion
Protection 5%    $1.375 billion
Government 2%    $55 million
Interest 1%         $27.5 million

$9 billion for Public Schools
$2.4 billion for GA University System
$374 million for GA Technical Schools

Government Spending in Georgia
Category      Total     State  -   Local         
Education     $30.8B    $9.0B    $21.9B
Healthcare    $18.9B  $14.4B    $4.5B
Other            $11.9B    $1.5B    $10.4B
Pensions      $7.5B      $6.7B      $0.9B
Transportation $6.9B   $3.3B      $3.7B
Protection     $6.8B      $2.7B      $4.7B
Government  $4.1B     $1.0B      $3.1B
Welfare         $2.7B      $1.9B      $0.9B
Interest         $1.6B      $0.5B      $1.1B
Total            $91.4B     $40.3     $51.1B


Education and Healthcare are over-subsidized and underperforming. Pensions need to be converted to 401Ks. Public Transportation needs to be privatized.

Metro Atlanta ignored expanding roads and highways to support its population growth from 3 million in 1980 to 6 million in 2020. The cost of milling and resurfacing asphalt roads was $75,000 per lane-mile in 2010 and doubled to $150,000 per lane-mile in 2012. It is now $350,000 per lane-mile in 2020. Atlanta blamed the EPA for issuing a moratorium on road construction in the 1970s, but Jimmy Carter ignored the idiocy of this moratorium.

Metro Atlanta is a dangerous place to drive. There is no highway grid, just an overcrowded I-285 circle. There is no outer bypass, so interstate trucks crowd the highways. Highways are choked with toll-lanes and disappearing open lanes. Lane changing to exit causes daily accidents that further add to gridlock. Street addresses on the main roads are hard to see and drivers struggle to find their destinations making street travel hazardous. I-75 and I-85 run through downtown Atlanta and the I-285 bypass is a circle around the city. Atlanta Metro includes DeKalb and Fulton counties. The population of DeKalb is 752,088 and Fulton is 1,038,844. The suburban counties include Cobb 752,783 and Gwinnett 918,153. The 4 counties have a total population 3,461,868.

Atlanta GA Weather - Atlanta GA has mild Winters with Lows at night in the mid-30s and Highs in the daytime in the mid-50s. Atlanta GA has Hot, Humid Summers, but the trade-off is above average rainfall. Lawns are green and flowers bloom year-round.

Atlanta GA Average Temperatures by Season
Winter
December 37F- 54F
January 34F - 52F
February 38F- 57F
Spring
March 44F-65F
April 52F-73F
May 60F-80F
Summer
June 60F-86F
July 71F-89F
August 71F-88F
Fall
September 65F-82F
October 54F-73F
November 45F-64F


Humidity in Atlanta GA averages 68 with 82 in the morning and 52 in the afternoon. Atlanta gets moisture from the Gulf and the West. Atlanta gets colder dry air from the North and West.

Elevation in Atlanta GA is 1050 feet above sea level. There are fewer bugs, more wind and less humidity than lower elevations..

Rainfall in Atlanta averages 50 inches per year, but was 70 inches in 2018.

City of Dunwoody GA 2019 Spending - The City of Dunwoody was incorporated to provide road and storm sewer maintenance, zoning, city ordinances and police. DeKalb County provides public schools, fire protection, trash removal and water & sewer maintenance.

Dunwoody’s date of Incorporation was December 1, 2008
It included a land area of 13.2 square miles. It was formed as a City Manager form of government municipality. Total Adopted Fiscal Year 2019 Budget: $37.1 million. Expenses and Revenues in 2019 totaled $24,991,606.

Expenses 2019
Police $9,417,816
Finance Admin $3,055,368
Parks $2,790,314
Public Works $2,627,515
Community Development $1,949,073
Information Technology $1,462,502
Municipal Court $678,891
Marketing $579,546
City Manager $512,804
City Attorney $410,000
Human Resources $409,133
Economic Development $300,000
City Council $275,545
City Clerk $269,652
911 Service $125,000
Contingency $100,000
Total $24,991,606

Revenue 2019
Taxes $21,246,750
Licenses Permits $1,631,000
Fines Forfeitures $1,200,000
Charges for Services $546,250
Miscellaneous $305.606
Investment Income $50,000
Donations $12,000
Total $24,991,606

Public Works maintains 310 lane-miles of roads, 69 linear miles of sidewalks, 69 miles of stormwater pipes, 18,700 stormwater structures, 60 traffic signals and 4,000 traffic signs.

Public Works 2019 - Completed 16 lane miles of paving resulting in more than 50 percent of the city’s roads being paved since incorporation. Constructed sidewalks on Womack Road, Dunwoody Club Drive, Central Parkway and Ashford Gables Drive. Completed construction plans for Roberts Drive improvements at the new Austin Elementary School.

Public Works: - 2019 Resurfacing ($3.8 million) • Peachtree Industrial Blvd Access Road Sidewalk (Grant Match) ($50,000) • Mt. Vernon Road at Tilly Mill Road Intersection Improvements ($300,000) • Roberts Drive Improvements for New Austin Elementary ($1.85 million) • New Municipal Separate Stormwater Sewer System Permit Coordinator position.


Public Works resurfacing of roads for car and truck traffic and expanding stormwater systems should be priority items, but they aren’t.  The City has resurfaced 50% of the roads over the past 12 years and will complete resurfacing in another 12 years. The plan for 2020 is to resurface 10 lane-miles of road for $3.5 million; that’s $350,000 per lane-mile heavily subsidized by State and Federal Grants. The war on cars continues. Narrow Bike Lanes, Multi-Use Paths and MARTA buses remain empty. Drivers get a $1000 fine if they fail to maintain a 6 foot distance from bikers using their 2 foot lanes.  This requires drivers to enter the on-coming lane.  New overpriced Intersections include on-street curb hazards. Roads are not configured to prevent accidents. Like the rest of Metro Atlanta, commercial addresses are hard to see or completely missing. Commuter density continues to increase with over-development.

Failure to pay auto insurance premiums on time can result in a $1,300 fine. Installation of water heaters and other mechanical appliances requires a permit, inspection and fee.
Property owners are restricted from performing their own construction and require permits or pay fines. Minor traffic violations can result in a $300 to $500 fine. Police calls can result in arrest and incarceration. Heart attack victims require immediate CPR.

I cannot recommend that unincorporated areas would benefit much from forming a city until voters compare the relative costs of fees, fines, permits, zoning, excessive easements, ordinances and restrictions.

City Councils slavishly follow recommendations from the City Manager and City Staff. They defer to “the experts” and authorize excessive use of crony contractors and consultants.  Project re-dos to correct shoddy work are common.  Building code enforcement inspections are fraught with errors.  Voters have absolutely no say in what City Councils spend, borrow or do.

The UN Agenda 21 playbook Georgia homeowners are subjected to has no restrictions on how much local government can spend or borrow, increases invasions of privacy and diminishes property rights.

DeKalb County GA Budget 2019 - Dunwoody GA is a municipality in DeKalb County GA. Dunwoody relies on DeKalb County to provide Fire Protection, Water and Trash Removal and relies on DeKalb School System to provide public schools. Water and Sewer is billed to homeowners. Other services are billed to residents as Property Tax.  The population of DeKalb County GA is 752,088

The DeKalb County Budget for 2019 was $1.3 billion and included $112 million to pay for unfunded pensions. County employees are paid $15/hour or more.
Homeowners can receive a “Homestead Exemption” on their Property Tax worth $900 on a $250,000 home.

DeKalb offers a “Senior Discount” homeowners can apply for at age 70.5 to remove their County School Tax from their Property Tax bill and reduce their property taxes by $4,000 per year.

The DeKalb Public School System Budget was approved at $1.2 billion.

18 High Schools, 18 Middle Schools, 102 Elementary Schools. 102,000 Students, 6,000 Teachers, 14,000 Staff.
Cost per Student $11,764. The quality of these schools is completely dependent on the quality of the students who are enrolled.


Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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