Regional planners answer TSPLOST questions in Catoosa County
by Dennis Norwood
Jun 30, 2012 | 2014 views | 2 2 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print
David Kennamer (left), principal planner with the Northwest Georgia Planning Commission, and David Howerin, director. (Catoosa News photo/Dennis Norwood)
David Kennamer (left), principal planner with the Northwest Georgia Planning Commission, and David Howerin, director. (Catoosa News photo/Dennis Norwood)
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Members of the Northwest Georgia Planning Commission were on hand at the Catoosa County Colonnade in Ringgold Thursday, June 28, to answer the public's questions on the transportation special purpose local option sales tax, or TSPLOST.

According to David Howerin, director of regional planning, about 25-30 people stopped by to pick up information on how the special tax would benefit Catoosa County.

Howerin's answer was, "The tax will allow us to develop a safe transportation system for the region, as well as create jobs."

There is about $53 million earmarked for the county on the 15-county regional list, which is 75 percent of the funds to be spent in Catoosa. Another 25 percent will go to Fort Oglethorpe ($156,000 in 2013) and Ringgold ($81,000 in 2013) along with unincorporated areas in discretionary funds. These latter funds may be used at the discretion of the municipality for road construction.

Catoosa County belongs to the northwest Georgia region, which includes 14 additional counties: Bartow, Chattooga, Dade, Fannin, Floyd, Gilmer, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Pickens, Polk, Walker and Whitfield.

In 10 years, or the expected life of the tax, Fort Oglethorpe is expected to gain $1.5 million and Ringgold $800,000. The county itself is projected to gain in the neighborhood of $13 million in 10 years.

According to Howerin, the tax option must pass regionally by a 50-percent-plus-one majority to go into effect. Counties may not opt out. Should the tax effort fail in Catoosa but pass regionally, the county will still be required to participate.

Should the expected income for the tax be reached in less than the 10 years, the tax will cease at that point.

David Kennamer, principal planner for the Northwest Georgia Regional Planning Commission, said, "One of the common misconceptions is that money raised in the region will go to Atlanta to be used in other areas of the state. This is in fact a false statement. All the TSPLOST funds raised will stay right here in the northwest region."

These projects have been pre-approved for Catoosa County under the Transportation Investment Act.

· Candy Lane extension: $450,000 ($450,000 from TIA)

· Dietz Road widening: $10,675,940 ($5,300,000 from TIA)

· Mack Smith Road widening and enhancements: $19,350,000 ($18,000,000 from TIA)

· Mineral Avenue widening and enhancements: $9,650,000 ($9,650,000 from TIA)

· South Cedar Lane widening and enhancements: $5,100,000 ($5,100,000 from TIA)

· U.S. 41 widening $50,000,000: ($10,000,000 from TIA)

· U.S. 41 milling down at CSX underpass: $30,000 ($30,000 from TIA)





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snarky
|
June 30, 2012
These idiots can't manage the money they get now. No way, no how that we should give them more. T-Splost would be a giant slush fund that would build bridges and roads to nowhere and make a few roadbuilders very, very rich. Power brokers (the kind that can't be run out of office even if they are hopelessly corrupt) are down on their knees PRAYING that you will vote to pass this and give them even more power to reward their friends and repay past favors.

But don't just take my word for it. Down in Charlton county (on the Florida state line in far southeast Georgia), they're very wary of this boondoggle also. Here's a sample of the kind of opinion expressed by the local media there:

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CRAWFORD / T-SPLOST could be headed for a massive pileup

By Tom Crawford

Published:

Tuesday, June 19, 2012 10:59 AM EDT

We are little more than a month from the July 31 election when voters decide whether to impose the T-SPLOST sales tax for highway improvements and related transportation needs.

How does the road ahead look for this special tax? Right now, it appears that the T-SPLOST ballot issue could be headed for a three-car smashup that leaves everybody broken and bleeding.

In an independent poll of Metro Atlanta voters conducted recently for an Atlanta TV station, support for the transportation tax was only 32 percent. Opponents of the T-SPLOST issue, on the other hand, clocked in at 47 percent.

Keep in mind that those numbers were registered in Metro Atlanta, the region where traffic congestion is heaviest and it was thought voters would be most agreeable to paying a higher sales tax for highway and transit system upgrades.

I haven’t seen similar polls in the 11 regions outside Atlanta where T-SPLOST will be on the ballot, but if you monitor newspapers around the state, they don’t offer many reasons to feel optimistic.

You’ll see coverage of citizen groups in numerous counties that have formed to organize opposition to the highway tax: a Houston County group headed by a former county commission chairman, a Transportation Leadership Coalition in West Georgia, the Bartow Tea Party, the Cherokee County Tea Party Patriots.

The Newnan Times-Herald’s editorial page observed: “Even some strong supporters of past SPLOST votes �” namely the Newnan-Coweta Chamber of Commerce �” have stated a neutral position on T-SPLOST. Some Chamber members support it, some do not. The Chamber board voted unanimously to remain neutral on T-SPLOST . . . We suspect T-SPLOST is doomed in Coweta and the Three Rivers region.”

Although there have been many fundraisers attended by Gov. Nathan Deal and business leaders to drum up financial backing for the T-SPLOST campaign, I don’t see a similar groundswell of popular support among everyday citizens. At times, it appears the only ones speaking up for T-SPLOST are the political consultants and PR flacks who are getting paid to do so.

When you are proposing one of the biggest tax increases in Georgia history, a new tax that will generate $18 billion over the next decade, you need a lot of public enthusiasm to overcome the natural resistance people have to paying higher taxes. At this point, I don’t see that kind of support for T-SPLOST.

One of the major reasons cited for the hostility towards T-SPLOST is that voters simply do not trust their elected officials to spend the money on the list of transportation projects that was worked out in advance. They especially don’t trust their representatives to stop charging the sales tax when the 10-year period of T-SPLOST authorization expires.

I am sympathetic to those feelings, because I remember all too well the events of Sept. 24, 2010.

That was when then-governor Sonny Perdue quietly arranged for a meeting of the State Road and Tollway Authority to consider the tolls being charged for access to Georgia 400.

State officials had promised 20 years earlier that the tolls would be terminated after the bonds issued to build Georgia 400 had been paid off. That expiration date was approaching, but Perdue took it upon himself to decide that the tolls would be extended for another 10 years so that the state could float new bonds to finance additional projects in the Georgia 400 corridor.

Without holding public hearings or consulting with the taxpayers who lived in the toll road area, Perdue held a quick meeting of the Tollway Authority in his office and rammed through a 10-year extension of the tolls.

When a newspaper reporter asked him about the fact that promises made more than 20 years ago had been broken, Perdue laughed in her face. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a more brazen display of arrogance by an elected official in all the years I’ve written about Georgia politics.

If voters are suspicious that T-SPLOST money won’t be honestly spent, they have good reason to feel that way.

There are several weeks to go before we reach July 31. It could well be that a majority of the voters in Atlanta and elsewhere will decide to pass the transportation tax. If they do, that’s fine. If they don’t, I’ll understand why.

So you may want to think hard about giving the same incompetent local power brokers even more money to play with. i'm voting NO.

number6
|
July 01, 2012
This T-SPLOST is a sham. There is no direct over site and it erodes home rule. Even Mike Alexander of the Atlanta Regional Commission states "plan will not relieve congestion". Learn more why the T-SPLOST is a terrible plan.

How sad would it be if Catoosa voted no but Floyd County voted yes and carried the election. We would still be taxed on everything we buy an extra 1 percent.

Learn more about the largest proposed tax increase in Georgia history.

www.traffictruth.net
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