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Proposed I-20 rail project fails to get additional funding

A move to increase possible sales tax funding for a proposed south DeKalb rail system failed to get the necessary approval on Oct. 11.

The amendment by DeKalb County CEO Burrell Ellis to increase funding for the I-20 corridor project by taking funding from a Ga. 400 project did not receive a second, indicating there was no support on the Atlanta Regional Transportation Roundtable for the proposal.

In 2010 Georgia’s legislature passed the Transportation Investment Act, which provides for regional referendums in 2012 on a penny-sales tax to fund various transportation projects including transit, roadway safety, and bicycle and pedestrian improvements.

In a draft list passed by executive committee of the transportation roundtable, the proposed $500 million I-20 rail project was left off. But Ellis, a roundtable member, was able to get $225 million for the project.

MARTA officials said that amount would not fund a rail system, but would pay for five park-and-ride stations at Stonecrest Mall, Fairington Road/Lithonia Industrial Boulevard, Wesley Chapel Road, Candler Road and East Atlanta. The stations would eventually be converted to high-capacity transit stations.

DeKalb County Commissioner Lee May, who has supported the I-20 rail proposal, said he was not surprised the project did not get additional support.

“We knew [Ellis] wouldn’t get a second,” said “When he placed the motion on the floor, he knew it didn’t have a chance to pass.”

May had proposed that funding for the I-20 rail project be reallocated from other DeKalb County projects. He proposed the funding for the $700 million Clifton corridor rail project be reduced to $462.5 million. Under the proposal, the I-20 project would be increased from $225 million to $462.5 million.

“That would have had overwhelming support of this regional roundtable,” May said. “No one was going to give money out of their own county’s funds.”

May said Ellis’ actions have “put DeKalb County’s vote at jeopardy.”

“The region as a whole needs DeKalb County to overwhelmingly support this in order for it to pass,” May said.

Ellis agreed that DeKalb County’s vote is needed for the regional referendum to pass.

“I think there’s a lot of work and education that will need to be done between now and the referendum date,” Ellis said. “I don’t think the referendum passes without the support of DeKalb County.”

But he also sees the $225 million allocated for the I-20 project as a success.

“At the end of the day, DeKalb County will get almost $1 billion of funding,” Ellis said. “That’s more in DeKalb County alone than we’ve seen in the region in the last 40 years. That’s significant.”

Commissioner Jeff Rader, whose district includes the Clifton rail project, said Ellis should be congratulated on “his commitment to serve in the interests to the entire county” despite not getting as much funding for the south DeKalb transit project as supporters wanted.

“Ultimately, it is short-sighted to focus only on all or nothing,” Rader said. “We need to recognize that this investment of $225 million will substantially improve the mobility options to anyone in south DeKalb.”

Rader said an express bus system “can penetrate farther in the neighborhoods and can support the commuting needs” of south DeKalb.

“I think that mobility will improve in south DeKalb,” Rader said. The proposed bus service “will meet the needs of the existing transit demand there, and it will make [the community] a much more livable place by giving people more sustainable access to jobs in metro Atlanta.”

The final roundtable vote on the proposed project list will be on Oct. 13.


Comments (5)

Eddy
Said this on 10/18/11 At 12:07 pm
Are there problems in DeKalb, especially South DeKalb? Of course there are. A big part of the problem, though, is lack of investment and lack of infrastructure by corporations, government, etc. Improve facilities and you create construction jobs, provide people with better access to jobs in downtown Atl, N. DeKalb, and other areas, plus there will be jobs associated with operating the facilities (drivers, security, maintenance, etc.). There probably will be some crime around these facilities, but should the county just concede that South DeKalb is always going to be filled with poor people, drugs, and crime?
Name One
Said this on 10/13/11 At 01:34 pm
Hey No1Safe N DeKalb, I use the East Lake station all the time, day and night. Never had a problem, never feld unsafe.
Said this on 10/12/11 At 05:08 pm
Unfortunately an inability to get funding is a huge problem right now due to the crashed economy.
No1Safe N DeKalb
Said this on 10/12/11 At 03:55 pm
The First MARTA Park & Ride Lot for DeKalb County opened in late 1979 or 1980. It was abandoned years ago and still sits empty inbetween Gresham Rd and Flat Shoals Rd in South DeKalb.

I drove a MARTA Bus from 1980 till 1990.

Everyday cars were broken into at this MARTA Park and Ride. Many cars were stolen. If DeKalb and MARTA Police could not protect the cars at DeKalb Park and Rides then, one must question how well they might perform now ?

Check out any MARTA Station on the East Line after dark and tell me how safe you feel ? Inman Park Reynoldstown = NOT - Eastlake = NOT - Edgewood Candler Park = NOT = See a pattern here ?

Unguarded Park and Rides in South DeKalb are just a Candy Store for DeKalb's Habitual Criminal Population in South DeKalb ! From Lithonia to Ellenwood, Three Dristricts AMuck in crime with no solution in sight ? And Elected Officials that could care less or their would not be so much crime " In plain sight ". Would there Larry Johnson ?
No1Safe N DeKalb
Said this on 10/12/11 At 12:47 pm
On your computer Google : Georgia State Study on DeKalb County.

Read The Report !

There is no money for this project however there is plenty of money for the Bloated Staffs of The DeKalb BOC and CEO Burrell Ellis !

Even the new Tax Increase can not cover the foolish expenses and dumbed down Mamagement of DeKalb County !

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