The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Charles Miller registered to vote at the Five Points rail station last week
because it's a big election year. He might support the president in
November, but not a regional sales tax in July.
"I don't see any improvements — I just see it building more roads,"
the security guard from Decatur said of the proposed one percent tax for
transportation projects.
Other voters, ages from soon-to-be 18 to 57, from West End to Inman Park and
from north to south Atlanta, mimicked a common refrain: "We don't need
any more taxes."
They weren't tea party supporters. Those tax skeptics are MARTA riders.
"It looks a little shaky," said Nathan Scott, who was registering
voters on behalf of Local 732 of the Amalgamated Transit Union. "We got
a lot of work to do to convince folks."
MARTA announced Wednesday that it joined with "non-partisan"
volunteers such as the transit union and the League of Women voters to
register 1,186 Georgians "just in time for the July 31" general
primary election, when they will decide on a tax that would bring MARTA $600
million for capital improvements.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution interviewed two dozen MARTA patrons, some of
whom were registering to vote at booths set up in rail stations. While a
handful supported a regional transit tax, most expressed strong reluctance
or outright hostility.
Some cited MARTA's fare increases and cuts in services; others said taxpayers
in Fulton and DeKalb counties already fund MARTA, and others didn't want so
much money going to road projects. But most just opposed more taxes.
Terence Courtney, coordinator for the Atlanta Transit Riders Union, said his
group opposed the sales tax because it doesn't do enough to expand MARTA. "The
elected officials — and the so-called leaders — are trying to cajole people
into accepting this, but I think the people know better," he said.
Political scientist Kerwin Swint, a professor at Kennesaw State University,
said he was mildly surprised at the opposition by MARTA riders, especially
outside DeKalb County, where some county commissioners and activists have
opposed the proposed tax because it doesn't fund rail for south DeKalb
County.
"Maybe they think they pay enough riding MARTA," he said. "You
have to help voters understand what is in it for them."
Some like James Capers, 45, who rides MARTA from the West End to his job at
the Ritz-Carlton Atlanta, said transit riders needed to support the tax to
bolster MARTA and expand mobility to job centers and elsewhere. "I got
to vote for MARTA: I need my transit," he said.
The referendum plan includes more than $3 billion for projects, including a
new train line to the Emory University area, an Atlanta Beltline transit leg
and $600 million for MARTA upgrades and the Beltline. It also would build
highway lanes and interchanges.
Saba Long, spokeswoman for Citizens for Transportation Mobility, said that
group plans to step up its campaign to persuade voters of the benefits of
raising more than $7 billion over 10 years in the 10-county metro region.
She said that while the tax wouldn't provide money for MARTA operating costs,
as it does for suburban bus systems, its money for capital improvements and
repairs would relieve the financially strapped transit agency.
"If you are for transit, there is no reason to vote against this
referendum because you will be voting against your interests," she
said. "If you vote this down, you are going to continue to have ...
MARTA service cuts and ... fare increases."
Ashley Robbins, president of Citizens for Progressive Transit, said the
business-backed Citizens for Transportation Mobility had erred by taking
transit riders for granted. In Clayton County, which lost its bus system,
CTM ads focused on "untying" Tara Boulevard with nary a mention of
the restored bus service the tax would provide, Robbins said.
"We haven't done a good job at explaining how this will benefit people,"
she said. "We have had people walk up to us and say, 'I didn't really
know there was transit in the project list.' "
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