T-SPLOST vote, finally

Last-minute thoughts on transportation tax

Moderated by Tom Sabulis

Metro Atlanta voters will cast their ballots Tuesday on the Transportation Investment Act and its proposed 1 percent sales tax to raise $8.5 billion (counting inflation) in traffic improvements. Below, leading voices on both sides of the issue weigh in on the merits and oversights of the 10-county project list, which funnels 52 percent of the money to transit and 48 percent to roads.

Commenting is open below the column by Wendell Cox.

By Tad Leithead

Every metro Atlanta resident should know by now that there is an important decision before them today. This region has the opportunity to act on a transportation referendum that would raise $8.5 billion through a 1 percent sales tax to fund 157 transportation projects across this 10-county region.

Here are some facts to consider as you go to the polls:

1. Georgia ranks 48th in the nation in transportation spending per capita, and fourth in total hours the average commuter spends on the road each day.

2. About 70 percent of the region’s existing, scheduled transportation funding for the next 30 years will be spent on just maintaining the existing network, leaving little room for expansion, without additional funding.

3. As the region grows — by some 3 million more people in the next 25 years — congestion will worsen. Meanwhile, gas tax revenues continue to decline as cars become more fuel-efficient.

4. All monies generated here by the 10-year, regional transportation referendum would stay here. Proceeds would be invested in a range of priority projects in our 10 counties, from interchange improvements at I-285 and Ga. 400, to road and safety improvements, to a new light rail line from the Lindbergh MARTA station to the Clifton Corridor.

5. The economic impact over time on the Atlanta region would be far greater than the 1996 Olympics. The referendum investment would result in a $34.8 billion increase in gross regional product in the Atlanta region by 2040. That’s a 4-to-1 return on investment.

6. Some 200,000 jobs would be created or retained through the build-out of these new transportation projects, with positive economic effects felt through several decades. That equates to approximately 7,100 jobs each year from 2013 through 2040.

7. Policies for strong small business and minority contracting and workforce development efforts have been developed and adopted by key agencies responsible for the project build-out.

8. Commuters spend an average of $924 each year due to traffic congestion. Collectively, the referendum projects would allow residents to save $9.2 billion by 2040, through time and fuel savings.

9. Travelers will enjoy a 24 percent average decrease in future travel delays on roadways improved through road widening, new construction and improved interchanges.

10. Air quality also would improve, equal to taking 72,000 vehicles off the roads daily. That’s a refreshing thought.

These are the facts. But there are personal stories behind these 10 points. This referendum is about a dad being able to get home a little faster to attend his child’s baseball game or the small businesswoman getting to her sales call on time. It’s about the student who is able to get to classes at the university, without owning a car. And it’s about the senior citizen who can’t drive anymore, but has new options to travel and live a full life.

Weigh the facts and please vote today.

Tad Leithead is chairman of the Atlanta Regional Commission.

By Wendell Cox

Everyone knows that Atlanta’s traffic congestion is unbearable. This makes Atlanta less competitive for business relocation, and retards economic growth.

Yet, in the midst of the worst economic distress in 80 years and facing billions of dollars in unfunded government-employee retirement obligations, voters are presented with a tax to reduce traffic congestion, and half the money would be spent on something else.

The tax would rehabilitate MARTA, which would not reduce traffic congestion. The tax would be spent on local bus services, which would not reduce traffic congestion.

The tax would fund the Atlanta Beltline, which would not reduce traffic congestion. This “spiffed-up,” 19th-century streetcar is much more about tax-induced real estate speculation than transportation. The proposed Cobb County-to-downtown bus line would not reduce traffic congestion, but would cost at least $5,000 annually per rider.

More than half the money would go to transit, which carries only 1 percent of travel. The tax plan must have been drafted for somewhere else, like Manhattan, Paris or Hong Kong. Transit can make a lot of sense to the largest downtown areas. But little more than one of every 20 Atlanta area jobs are downtown. Transit just takes too long to other destinations (if it’s even available).

A Brookings Institution report says that the average worker in metro Atlanta can reach only 3 percent of the jobs in 45 minutes on transit. By contrast, more than three-quarters of Atlantans actually reach their jobs by car in 45 minutes.

Atlanta is not swimming in money, and the traffic congestion is serious. Every penny of every dollar needs to be spent to reduce traffic congestion.

Fifty cents out of every dollar for traffic congestion relief just isn’t enough. An important principle was not observed — that to reduce traffic congestion you have to do things that reduce traffic congestion.

A new plan is needed that ranks projects by how much they would actually reduce traffic congestion. Projects that reduce traffic delay the most (say per million or billion dollars) should be at the top. Others shouldn’t be on the list at all. Perhaps some transit would be good enough to make the new list. They are not in this plan.

It is a disservice to spend more than half the money on projects that cannot reduce traffic congestion. It would make as much sense to offer the gas station $7 per gallon to fill up the car, rather than the posted $3.50.

So long as Atlanta’s leaders are only half-concerned about traffic congestion, streets and highways are likely to become more crowded.

Atlanta’s leadership needs to be sent a message. They should start over, and produce a plan that seriously reduces traffic congestion, without wasting money. Rejecting the tax would give Atlanta a chance to reduce traffic congestion and become more competitive, unlike the present proposal.

Wendell Cox is principal of Demographia, an international public policy firm and was appointed to three terms on the Los Angeles County Transportation Commission.


53 comments Add your comment

Richard Buerkle

July 30th, 2012
8:22 pm

How about an explanation as to what you in government will do with the T-SPLOST money? Why not tell us, “We’re going to add this, it’s going to cost this and it’s going to help us because. . .

We’ve had no specifics. I won’t vote yes and give money to legislators who promised to end the 400 toll when the road was finished. It was finished a decade ago. And now to buy our vote you promise to stop the toll— sometime in the future. I feel taken for granted by people in government.

Out by the Pond

July 30th, 2012
7:36 pm

Fund real projects

Out by the Pond

July 30th, 2012
7:34 pm

Well said Ed. The sales tax equates to a $0.035 cent per gallon temporary tax for what for the most part are ineffective projects. Dump Tsplost and lobby your state representative for a permeant gas tax that will find real projects. Get rid of Sonny incompetent cronies he placed in the GDOT, turn mass transportation over to a professional branch of GDOT and let’s move Atlanta forward.

Until mass transportation is removed from local control the region can never move forward.

middleground

July 30th, 2012
7:30 pm

Two things folks still do not understand. TSPLOST is a 1 percent total new tax, not a penny on every dollar. Thats 1 percent of all money currently in your pocket.
And Gov. Perdue mortgaged all our our transportation revenue for the next 20 years so he could get his projects done while in office. Thats where the money went……………and traffic has gotten worse?
So they want to do this again under TSLPOST.

middle of the road

July 30th, 2012
7:03 pm

“guaranteed to put money into transportation, where there is no money going right now”

So wher is our state gas tax money going? If MARTA raised its fares to $3 it would help that agency a lot.

Me

July 30th, 2012
6:53 pm

I understands everyone concerns about traffic and more so money! Which is what any bill or act is truly about anyways….. There is always going to be concerns about “where the money is going”, but more importantly we need to think about where the money is not going. Right now we have no solutions in place for traffic congestion, simply because we have mo funding for any of these suggestions. Its funny that the same people who are yelling about “far tax” are some of the same ones yelling about not wanting to incorporate this “fair tax”!?

Im not saying this is best possible solution, but it is something and its going to cost me 8 cents compared to 7 cents on every dollar I spend. If i spent $50,000 dollars a year- my contribution to this fund would be $4,000 a year oppose to $3,500 @ 7 cents?? Its guaranteed to create jobs ands guaranteed to put money into transportation, where there is no money going right now… Money will be lost and people will mis-handle some of the funds. Its simply the way things go anytime you have money on the table…… Personally I would much rather see people with jobs (construction workers) than more people without! When my car goes down and I cant afford to get if fixed right away, I depend on Marta to get me there. It may have took me waking up @ 430am in Decatur, to get to work in Alpharetta by 7 am, but the main thing is- I was able to get there. And it cost me about $30 bucks for a monthly MArta card- oppose to about $30 dollars a day, catching a cab! Every system is flawed, but so is every person….. we got do something?

Just my opinion- everyone is entiltled

middle of the road

July 30th, 2012
6:43 pm

“then every one can help pay their unemployment and keep them with food stamps thats not saving anybody money”

Then we can give them food stamps that they sell for half value in cash so they can spend on tobacco and liquor and non-essentials.

RLw

July 30th, 2012
6:21 pm

This entire TSplost should be renamed “Slush Fund Atlanta”. Look at the big names throwing out all the fancy advertising. They are only putting large money out there while looking for a multiple return. If you check out some of the specifics, ie: what does more Walking Paths in Peachtree City have to do with reducing Traffic? This thing is full of this waste. The big boys can hardly wait to get your money!!

ED

July 30th, 2012
6:13 pm

To Bryan — MARTA supporter: Extending MARTA into ajacent counties is a ship that has sailed. The counties mentioned do not want MARTA. The reason is simple – those counties would not control how their tax money would be spent. Hell, Fulton county taxpayers can’t control MARTA. MARTA hs been and is poorly managed, been a political slush fund, a make work project, and the list goes on…. My wife & I use MARTA when we can. It is not convenient, it is not timely, it is not very functional, but we are paying for it so we try to use it. We live in North Fulton. We have to drive down the very crowded GA-400 to get to the North Springs station. Wait for the train, that does not take us to where we want to go. We then have to wait for a bus, that does not take us to where we want to go. We then use a taxi to take us to our desination. Now we have to add 3 hours to our trip. Or we can get in our car and be at our destination within an hour. What do you think most people are going to do???!!!

At $7 – $10 million per mile of track, how much MARTA do you think is going to be built. Trains run where people don’t live. Trying to push rail service into the extensive suburbs of Atlanta is foolish.

Our wise politicians are determined to put a new transit terminal in the gulch downtown. Now who is going to use it. You can’t get there conveniently. This if for a train to come from Athens (The Brain Train). Again, I live in North Fulton. Am I going to take over an hour to use MARTA (which wont conveniantly connect to this Intermodel Transportation Hub) to go 25 miles south, so I can go 90 miles east. Or, am I going to get in the car and go 90 miles east. Same for going to Marietta.

Also, if MARTA was such an important cog in the transportation needs in Atlanta, you would think that spending $1.4 billion dollars on a new Internation Terminal at Hartsfield, we locals could use MARTA to get there. But our wise politicians could have cared less about the local need and stick us on 14 passenger buses to take us and all the luggage from MARTA to the Internation Terminal.

So much for the impact MARTA makes on metro Atlanta.

T-SPLOST is simply a great bunch of money that the politicians will divy up with endless studies, commissions, more agencies, etc…. mark my word.

Look at all the regional transit councils, authorties, agencies, ad hoc committees, roundtables, etc… that this state has. How do you think all those folks and their collective staff are paid & pensioned It is with the transportation tax we already pay!!!!

Tomorrow – VOTE NO on T-SPLOST!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Bill

July 30th, 2012
6:05 pm

Yea when all the people the depend on the work to feed their faimily’s lose their job then every one can help pay their unemployment and keep them with food stamps thats not saving anybody money.