Quote:
Originally Posted by ATLaffinity
It's too bad so many suburbanites will decide the fate of the TIA.
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That's my frustration. I also think the way this has been publicized nationally and shed light on Atlanta's traffic problem (or perception of) will set Atlanta up for a very rough time attracting business if it fails.
A) Other cities actually have worse traffic, but everyone thinks Atlanta has the worst traffic.
B) This has been publicized as the solution and the one and only chance, and that is not exactly too far off from the truth. If it doesn't pass, business leaders around the country may think Atlanta's traffic will thus never be solved.
We're in dangerous territory, in my opinion. Atlanta just shut down a ton more schools, and the same thing is happening in other counties. There is no federal money for these fixes (and the new bill passed through Congress is really nothing to be excited about), and there is certainly no money for transportation without raising some sort of tax.
Atlanta's problem is not that there are suburbs, it is that suburbs are the vast majority of people, land and the source of many of the region's biggest problems. The city of Atlanta itself does not have a traffic problem and commute times aren't terrible. The metro has a problem, and it is almost exclusively out in the burbs. Yet the metro won't solve the problems and Atlanta as a city and the hub of the region continues to foot the bill for nearly everything. The level of unfairness in metro Atlanta is notably more severe than in other metros, and that is the frustrating part.
City of Atlanta = 1.5% of metro land area
City of Atlanta = 8.0% of metro population
Fulton + Dekalb, the 2 heavy lifting counties = ~9.9% of metro land area
Fulton + Dekalb = 30.8% of metro population
There are 28 counties in the MSA and 33 counties in the CSA.
There are 86 incorporated cities in the CSA.
Metro Atlanta is literally larger than 7, almost 10 states. I think the CSA is larger than 9 states.
Looking at the 10 counties that will vote:
County Population Land Area % Total Population % Total Land Area
Cherokee 214,346 424 5.22% 14.19%
Clayton 259,424 143 6.32% 4.78%
Cobb 688,078 340 16.75% 11.39%
Dekalb 691,893 268 16.84% 8.98%
Douglas 132,403 199 3.22% 6.67%
Fayette 106,567 197 2.59% 6.60%
South Fulton 520,581 329 12.67% 11.01%
North Fulton 400,000 200 9.74% 6.70%
Gwinnett 805,321 433 19.60% 14.49%
Henry 203,922 323 4.96% 10.81%
Rockdale 85,215 131 2.07% 4.38%
Total 4,107,750 2,985
Then factor in the city of Atlanta:
420,003 132 10.22% 4.41%
10% of the population and 4% of the land area of the 10 voting counties.
The city is really at the mercy of the metro here, when the city is in fact the hub that holds all the spokes together.