Moderated by Rick Badie
This region needs significant inroads to curb congestion, and a proposed transportation sales tax that would address the issue has garnered critics and supporters. Today, a former state representative writes that the General Assembly shirked its duties by giving the green light to a referendum that turns the state into 12 Georgias. Meanwhile, a congestion relief advocate praises the Legislature’s approach and tackles what he calls the half-truths and misrepresentations that circulate about the tax.
Legislature shirks duty on tax
By Wyc Orr
Much has been written and said about the upcoming T-SPLOST vote in Georgia on Tuesday. Voters in each of 12 regions across Georgia will vote on an additional 1 percent sales tax to be collected and to fund transportation improvements in that region only.
Most commentary has focused on the tax itself and on the transportation projects to be constructed in each region if voters approve the tax.
But largely ignored has been a more fundamental issue, one more important to the state’s future than even the transportation tax issue: What precedent will be set by balkanizing Georgia into 12 separate regions?
The ghost of Georgia’s past “two Georgias” imbroglio of two decades ago, debating whether urban and rural Georgians live in two different worlds, has reappeared as an even greater specter of divisiveness — 12 Georgias.
This “government by referendum” may seem on its face to be commendable — decentralizing government, allowing “the people” themselves to decide at the local level whether they will be taxed. But on closer inspection, it is anything but desirable. It is the antithesis of a democratic republic, a legislative evasion of responsibility.
Georgia’s Constitution plainly gives the Legislature not only the power, but implicitly the duty, to “make all laws … which it shall deem necessary and proper for the welfare of the state.”
T-SPLOST is the General Assembly’s shirking of that duty, its abdication of the constitutional responsibility to decide such issues on a comprehensive statewide basis.
Georgia is not among the “referendum states,” the 24 or so states that provide for statewide referendums in various circumstances. But if approved by voters, T-SPLOST will be a step in that direction, more in keeping with the California-style initiative and referendum system that steered that state toward what The Economist magazine described as “the ungovernable state.”
Does Georgia want to take even a first step down that road?
In today’s Internet-driven age, steps all too often turn into stampedes. Irrationality, too easily, can become public policy.
And T-SPLOST threatens an even more divisive dynamic than other states’ initiative and referendum systems. A single statewide referendum is one thing, but regional plebiscites are quite another. Twelve separate regional referendums promote separatism rather than solidarity, more like a Swiss-style canton system of semi-independent sovereigns.
And T-SPLOST is bad policy for a more immediate reason. Few if any functions of state government more clearly require coordination than transportation.
What happens, for example, if one region widens and improves its highways, but a contiguous region does not? If an expanded highway stops at a county line and funnels traffic onto the same old two-lane bottleneck, will motorists use the improved highway? Will the tax money expended be largely wasted?
Avoiding such waste is no doubt why Georgia a long time ago created a state Department of Transportation to develop a “comprehensive, state-wide, 20-year transportation plan.” T-SPLOST’s regional approach seriously detracts from such statewide comprehensiveness and coordination.
Uniform voter rejection of T-SPLOST will not delay transportation improvements in Georgia. Rather, it will send this planning duty back to where it belongs — the General Assembly — as its first item of business at the 2013 session, which begins in January, the same month the T-SPLOST tax would otherwise begin.
Voters will have sent a message to their legislators: “Do your job. Plan for Georgia — all of Georgia, as one state.”
Wyc Orr, a former state representative, is a Gainesville attorney.
Foes twist facts on T-SPLOST
By Jim Durrett
After years of attempts to work with the Atlanta region’s civic and business leadership to craft a solution to our transportation funding dilemma, the Legislature finally gave us an opportunity to do something to help ourselves address our problems: a 10-year regional T-SPLOST to fund specific projects.
Our region accepted the challenge and through its elected officials and transportation professionals, and with unprecedented public input, developed a consensus project list to start creating a transportation system that we need to prosper in the decades ahead. It was a remarkable and historic achievement: coming together as a region to address a regional problem.
We would put our own skin in the game by taxing ourselves, and the region, not the state, would decide what we would work on first. This was a fortunate turn of events because the federal government increasingly favors states and regions that step up to the plate with their own resources when prioritizing where it spends the money we send it.
I expected some people to take issue with some of the projects selected, and I expected some people to be opposed to paying a tax. But I have been astounded by the misinformation and outright falsehoods that have been spread by opponents of the upcoming regional transportation referendum. Baseless and malicious accusations, when so much is at stake, need to be exposed.
A brief sampling of what I have heard and read from opponents of the referendum:
There is a “rider” attached to the legislation that addresses abortion rights. (This is a bald-faced lie. Period.)
The Atlanta Regional Commission refuses to release the basis for its claims of congestion and economic benefits. (This is completely untrue. Go online and see.)
The T-SPLOST brazenly commits $600 million to bail out the existing MARTA system, contrary to the intention of the Legislature. (The Legislature prohibited T-SPLOST funds from being spent on the operations and maintenance of existing MARTA service, which could be called a bailout. None will be spent for that purpose.)
They say the tax will end, but no tax ever has. (It is written in the state law that this tax must end within 10 years. Then, we the people will have another decision to make, yet to be determined.)
I have no problem with differences of opinion. It is healthy, one of the spices of life. But when lies are created and spread to shape opinion, I have a big problem with that. And when factoids are cherry-picked from one context and inserted into another to “prove” a point, I have a problem with that, too.
For instance, anti-transit opponents repeatedly claim MARTA loses $500 million per year. If you read a MARTA annual report and don’t understand what depreciation expense is, or don’t understand that MARTA earns revenue in addition to fares, you can draw an incorrect conclusion and spread it, incorrectly, as fact. Here is a real fact: MARTA had an operating loss of $30.7 million in the last fiscal year, 6 percent of which has been claimed. And MARTA is working hard to find solutions to the funding/expense mismatch.
Local governments will be required to provide a 30 percent match for any local grants by the Department of Transportation if the referendum fails. If we approve the referendum, the local match will be 10 percent instead of 30 percent. In other words, vote the referendum down and less will be done than is even done today to address our transportation needs.
Now is the time to build something together instead of tearing one another down.
Jim Durrett is executive director of the Buckhead Community Improvement District and serves on MARTA’s board of directors.
43 comments Add your comment
Paul
July 25th, 2012
10:11 pm
I am voting against T-SPLOST . What does the govt ever do right ? Social Security is broke . The Postal service is broke. The US Govt is broke. Anyone visited the Dept of Motors Vehicles lately to get their drivers license renewed ? It is not a good experience !
If you do not like the traffic move closer to work. One of the reasons I like Georgia is that we have lower taxes than most large cities.
sircharles
July 25th, 2012
9:51 pm
I think all counties and those voting on July 31, 2012 have gotten the picture! All officials that is pushing this TSPLOST are making 6 figures or higher salaries; therefore, it merely hit them. When you think about this whole thing, they put it in the hands of the citizens of Georgia so when you vote for it, you can’t blame them when things go the other way because they did not force you to say YES! Like they have done over and over again for the GA-400 project that is paid for but your money his taken to use it during your commutes. So I have did my homework…..I hope you all have too. 10 plus years we are going to in deep, deep trouble because you have officials who have manage to do things their way with your money and then then you anything! Lies come back to hurt officials and hurt you and your family because we think traffic here is going to be better. It will get worse because the more you look at how it is now, it can’t get any better if the TSPLOST is passed. This is a way for GA NEW Dome to acquire some of the funding, major hotels, shopping center considering upscaled to be used to draw new business in…and you will be required to park inside of the new parking state of the art garage for all major games to be played in the new GA-Dome with the “Retractable Roof. You will still be in traffic getting to the garage, and leaving the garage, so how do you figure Untie Atlanta is going to actually be untied? They never said anything about the bad……they on preach to you about the good that you need to be thinking about paying for using your children College funds because you paycheck will get even smaller! Sorry, I see this coming and someone should have told you all about how money is earmarked when they can use it as they see fit; and they see fit to use it their way. Keeping their money and using yours. That is it!
Road Scholar
July 25th, 2012
9:50 pm
“I suspect the Gold Capped Clowns…”
We’re all Bozo’s on this bus!
J Kilgore: I know Jim and he is neither. Please provide links or references to your statistics concerning those you doubt. And sir, what type of congestion relief did you get for $400K? Not much!
Standford
July 25th, 2012
8:23 pm
I just returned from Orlando on a two business trip. From the airport, I paid 4 different tolls to go 14 miles; every road change caused another toll. I once paid a $2.25 toll to drive 3 miles and paid another $.75 toll just to exit that highway. We don’t need anything like that here or another $60 million dollar study and Lexus lanes like I-85 in Gwinnett. The details of this latest tax scam seem to be shifting depend on who is making the speech!
MC
July 25th, 2012
8:05 pm
Vote No or we will end up with more of those fantastic Hot Lanes that do ABSOLUTLEY nothing to improve traffic. In fact it has made it worse.
SAWB
July 25th, 2012
7:22 pm
I’m confused. The Legislature set this entire mess up and then I see the “Leadership” holding a news conference yesterday telling us to – VOTE NO.
I suspect the Gold Capped Clowns see this thing failing and are running like rats from a sinking ship to cover their – well you know.
Hillbilly D
July 25th, 2012
7:02 pm
I’ve never agreed with Wyc Orr on much but the man has a point here.
Hmmmmmmm
July 25th, 2012
6:55 pm
Just Vote NO!
J Kilgore
July 25th, 2012
6:06 pm
Jim Durrett is either naive or he is a complete Buffoon. To suggest that the opponents have been spreading misinformation is laughable. The Chamber and its sycophants have been saying “Georgia ranks 49th in transportation investment”, a lie, and that “Georgia’s fuel tax revenue is declining”,a lie, and that T SPLOST is “economic development”, a lie, or a “jobs bill”, another lie. What is even worse, however, is Mr. Durrett has not even read the law (HB 277). He claims that local governments will “…be required to provide a 30 percent match for any local grants by DOT if the referendum fails”. The penalty provision is applicable to ONLY one form of a grant, the Local Maintenance and Improvement Grant (LMIG), which has a statewide budget of approximately $ 100 Million. For my county, that total LMIG projects last year was $ 400,000, so our penalty would only be $ 80,000 ($ 120,000 vs. $ 40,000), but if we approve T SPLOST, we are a DONOR county, and we will be paying more than $ 11 MILLION a year to fund projects in other counties in the state. Let me think about this, $ 80,000 versus $ 11,000,000 per year. It appears Mr. Durrett would pick $ 11 Million. Okay reader, your turn.
ByteMe
July 25th, 2012
5:51 pm
Both editorials are right: the legislature — especially the “leadership” — is comprised of a bunch of weasels (sorry, weasels!) AND opponents don’t need to spread lies to defeat this. Just common sense should be enough, but that might be a bit uncommon for some.
A 10 year plan that just delays doing it right for 10 years is a bad idea. Vote NO and make the legislature do their job… or vote them out and find some candidates who will do their job.