These are our tax dollars.
Let your voice be heard in person, by phone, or by email.
These are our tax dollars.
Let your voice be heard in person, by phone, or by email.
The MARTA Board of Directors will vote on Thursday, October 4 on how the Atlanta half-penny sales tax will be used over the next 40 years. See the full plan overview in the 9/27/18 AJC.
Here are my thoughts on this updated thoughts on MARTA’s updated funding plan:
7) The state of Georgia needs to step up their game. They benefit from everything that happens in metro Atlanta. They use all that Metro Atlanta has to offer to sell prospective companies on why they need to expand or relocate here. Yet, other than $100 million for a transit funding along GA 400, on the north side, no other funding has been allocated. Shame on you! Metro Atlantans pay state taxes. A portion of that should go to MARTA expansion to give is any chance of decreasing our ridiculous traffic woes.
And, perhaps in 2019, our legislators will introduce and pass legislation to allow for a portion of Georgia’s fuel tax to be used for MARTA… something other than expanding our roads by adding more lanes. We are among very few states who do not fund public transit from the fuel tax because this state was controlled by the auto industry for so long (they wanted people to buy cars, not take public transit.). With Ford and GM assembly plants long gone, Georgia is still operating as if those plants are still here. What’s up with that?? Being 18 years into the new millennium, what are our legislators waiting for??
Here is an updated article with thoughts from a GSU researcher, Chris Wyczalkowski on MARTA’s current funding challenges (click on the MARTA article if it does not automatically load.):
This evening Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms addressed a standing room only crowd as she and other local leaders gave the Quarterly Update on the ATL Belt Line.
Some estimates put the number of attendees at the Friendship Baptist Church at well over 500.
Members of the audience were allowed to ask questions. Many of which were tough, passionate and respectful. Questions included increasing number of affordable housing units, increasing access for seniors, actually using input from community engagement sessions, as well as equity issues and quality of the westside trails as compared to the east side trails.
The panel facilitator was excellent!! He also asked tough questions of the panel that included City Department heads and Odetta from the Transformation Alliance, a local non profit.
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