Rome News-Tribune

Mass transit hopes for boost

Advocates hope traffic delays caused by the I-85 collapse will spur expansion.

- By Russ Bynum and Kathleen Foody Associated Press

ATLANTA — The collapse of an interstate in the heart of Atlanta has more than 2 million metro residents sitting in even more traffic in the already congested city, and mass transit advocates hope the headaches will spur new interest in expanding rail and bus routes.

Many commuters come from surroundin­g counties that have long resisted mass transit, creating a car-centric region shaped by issues of race and class for more than four decades.

Georgia transporta­tion officials hope to reopen Interstate 85 by mid-June after a 350-foot span came crashing down March 30 amid intense heat from a fire set beneath the roadway.

Until then, 250,000 drivers who depend on that route each day are stretching the limits of Atlanta’s other highways and surface roads, or using the region’s transit system at unpreceden­ted levels. Ridership has gone up 20 percent since the collapse.

Skeptics of expanding mass transporta­tion in metro Atlanta wonder whether residents of such a sprawling region will leave their cars behind barring a crisis of this magnitude.

Georgia lawmakers created the Metropolit­an Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority in 1965, envisionin­g a system to serve the counties that made up metro Atlanta at the time.

But three of the five counties backed out of MARTA in referendum­s before its 1971 startup. On the heels of the civil rights movement, white Atlantans were fleeing to the suburbs in droves and had no interest in closing the distance between their new homes and the city’s core.

“There’s no question in my mind that since the 1960s, race has been the underlying factor in all of these attitudes against bringing MARTA into the outlying areas,” said Ronald H. Bayor, a professor emeritus of history at Georgia Tech and author of the 1996 book “Race and the Shaping of Twentieth-Century Atlanta.” “White flight was well underway. People were running away from the desegregat­ion of the Atlanta schools. Some of the opposition was from whites who worried that it would lead to the integratio­n of the suburbs.”

Long after MARTA began operating, Bayor said, whites would privately joke that its nickname stood for “Moving Africans Rapidly Through Atlanta.” Publicly, opponents were less explicit but warned that mass transit would increase crime or diminish property values in the suburbs.

Violent crimes haven’t helped MARTA’s reputation. On Thursday, a man was fatally shot on a MARTA train and three passengers were wounded in what police called a “targeted, isolated incident.” MARTA police have investigat­ed four other killings since July, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported. There were no slayings in the previous four years, though several dozen aggravated assaults and robberies were reported each year.

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