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Cobb Keeps Moving Toward Light Rail

The Board of Commissioners also hears more complaints about paratransit bus cuts.

 

We're here live with the Cobb commissioners. It's a pretty light agenda, but you never know with these folks. The commissioners are expected to award the $1.8 million "Alternatives Analysis" light-rail study to Croy Engineering as the project manager. The study will examine what kinds of mass transportation will work on the Interstate 75 and U.S. 41 corridors, how much it will cost and where it should be built.

Also, commissioners are expected to transfer $80,320 in contingency funds to the Cobb Board of Elections and Registration to cover the cost of a Sept. 20 special election for the state House seat left vacant when Republican Bobby Franklin died. Five Republicans qualified for the election last week.

7 p.m. The invocation is given, and the pledge is led by the Boy Scouts of Troop 211, Mount Bethel United Methodist Church. 

7:05 Chairman Tim Lee is talking about the budget workshop that was held this afternoon. A public hearing will be held Aug. 31 at 2 p.m. on the 2012 proposed budget.

7:08 Three Eagle Scouts are being recognized by Commissioner Bob Ott.

7:09 The board recognizes Walton alumna Michaela Grace Lackey for becoming Miss Georgia 2011. She will represent Georgia in the Miss America Pageant in 2012.

7:12 The Bus Operator of the Quarter Award goes to Bryan Brookins.

7:15 Public comment time.

Kevin Doyle, a 19-year resident of Cobb County, wants to talk about transportation. He praises the proposed TSPLOST project to run rail from Midtown Atlanta to Cobb.

7:19 Madeline Pond, a Girl Scout in Troop 263. Her family got a violation notification regarding her chickens. She explains what wonderful pets they are. She says she's speaking for all people who love chickens.

7:23 Joseph Pond speaks about the county's backyard chicken ordinance. He explains that the animals aren't livestock, but pets. They do not smell. Chicken waste makes good fertilizer, he says. Chickens do not lower the property value of surrounding properties.

7:27 Karen Jones. She is here to talk about the paratransit routes that were cut due to budget cuts. Her brother used to ride the buses that are for those who can't drive. Jones is against the cuts and wants the routes reinstated.

7:34 A new speaker is against spending so much money on the Alternatives Analysis light-rail study. She shows pictures of another study the group did and says it failed to meet standards.

7:40 The consent agenda passes.

7:41 The board approves a construction agreement with GDOT for S.R. 120/Dallas Highway Streetscapes, Phase 2.

7:43 The commissioners award the $1.8 million Alternatives Analysis light-rail study to Croy Engineering as the project manager.

The study will examine what kinds of mass transportation will work on the Interstate 75 and U.S. 41 corridors, how much it will cost, and where it should be built.

Cobb Transportation Director Faye DiMassimo said she expects the study will be done in 18 months. But that will be after voters in Cobb and nine other metro Atlanta counties vote on whether to pay a 1 percent sales tax for 10 years to finance transportation improvements.

The TSPLOST project list includes plans for a light-rail line from the Cumberland Mall area to MARTA's Arts Center Station.

7:55 The commissioners vote to authorize "requests for proposals" for a CCT advertising program.

8:10 More public comment.

The speaker is opposed to the CCT cuts and says the 600 people affected are being ignored. "Where is the leadership, Tim Lee?"

8:15 And that'll do it for tonight. We are adjourned.

Mike

12:39 pm on Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Would have loved to see a Marta line extend all the way to Kennesaw and a nice depot at Cumberland...would really help local businesses as convention center usage would rise since you could ride from the airport to Cumberland...

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Donna Short-Woodham

3:43 pm on Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Ms. Roberson, Why did you not report that BOB OTT left the board room between 7:41 and 7:43? Why did you not report that BoB Ott did not vote on the 8.1 million contract that was awarded to Croy Engineering? Why did you not report all the names of the public speakers? I commented last night. I pointed out that Tim Lee and the other commissioners are only seeing Ms.Dimassimo and Croy engineering the rest of us are invisible. Last month the commissioners unanimously voted to cut the paratransit routes. On August 1st 600 people who used the buses on the paratransit routes, became invisible to Tim Lee. Our commissioners have chosen to stop seeing or hearing us? Cobb citizens should be frightened when 600 hundred people can become invisible to our commissioners. When seniors can become invisible to our commissioners. I asked Tim Lee where is the leadership? Tim Lee should find money to reinstate these buses tomorrow, someone found money to pay Croy 1.8 million! No one bothered to include the CCT on the T-SPLOST list to receive funding. Why? How can CCT excel without funding? In the Transportation Investment Act it states, transit should be considered while developing a project list. Gwinnett County is asking 40 million from T-SPLOST to fund their express bus service. I ask again. Tim Lee where is the leadership that is needed to run Cobb County?

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Robert J.

4:51 pm on Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Most of the traffic in Cobb is coming from the northern part of the county south to office buildings in Atlanta. I don't see how a light rail line from the Cumberland Mall area to the Arts Center Station would accomplish that much. Also Croy Engineering, SPLOST, and TSPLOST need oversight.

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D. Williams

9:14 am on Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Critic says senator’s support of light rail a conflict of interest
by Jon Gillooly
jgillooly@mdjonline.com The Marietta Daily Journal
September 14, 2011 SMYRNA — State Sen. Doug Stoner (D-Smyrna) works in business development for Croy Engineering of Marietta, a company that has directly benefited from a proposal for mass transit in Cobb County, which critics say creates a conflict of interest.
Tom Maloy of the Marietta-based Georgia Tea Party believes that “doesn’t pass the smell test.”
“I haven’t talked with anyone else at the Georgia Tea Party, but personally it sounds like a conflict of interest to me, and I’d like to hear how Stoner justifies it and how he says it’s not a conflict of interest,” Maloy said.
Stoner hosted a Sept. 8 TSPLOST town hall where he argued against the belief that crime increases with the arrival of transit in a community, noting that the proposed rail line would reduce the number of cars on the road.
He told the Journal he disagrees that there’s a conflict of interest with his involvement in TSPLOST on one hand and working for Croy on the other.
Stoner went to work for Croy in May after serving as a senior business development manager since 2009 with PBS&J, which was bought by Atkins.
Maloy said the perception of a conflict is still there.
Copyright 2011 The Marietta Daily Journal. All rights reserved.

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D. Williams

9:15 am on Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Croy, Stoner, Bacon. Like peas in a pod.

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