The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta made it through storm because residents heeded alerts

- Doug Turnbull Mark Arum has handed the Gridlock Guy torch to colleague Doug Turnbull, the PM drive airborne anchor for Triple Team Traffic on News 95-5 FM and AM750 WSB. Turnbull writes a traffic blog and hosts a podcast with Smilin’ Mark McKay on wsbradi

Well, Atlanta — we survived. The first great winter weather scare this season was legitimate — even conservati­ve weather models showed metro Atlanta in the cross hairs of some kind of inclement weather. Yet when many Atlantans awoke Saturday, barely a dusting of snow covered many yards.

“We overreacte­d again!” came the paraphrase­d cries of many. Northern transplant­s to north Georgia mocked us for leaving work and school early and pillaging the grocery stores over what ended up being a non-event. These criticisms, however, were wrong — it was an event.

As I covered traffic from 3-8 p.m. on WSB, the early mad rush home peaked early in the afternoon. Heavy rain fell, as air temperatur­es were just above freezing and pavement temps were closer to 40 degrees. There are some reports of sleet in this first round of weather, but nothing significan­t. After a few hours of city-wide gridlock, the roads were nearly empty by 5 or 6 p.m. and had even begun to dry.

The welcome early dinner hour ghost town on Atlanta highways allowed GDOT crews to treat the interstate­s before the next wave of precipitat­ion arrived. It did in the 7 p.m. hour and this time in the form of snow, freezing rain and rain. The northweste­rn suburbs had the lowest temperatur­es and the most snowfall and ice. But freezing rain began bringing poles, wires and trees down as far south as Dunwoody, Sandy Springs and the city of Atlanta in the late evening hours. Thousands lost power.

Callers to both Mark Arum’s talk show and mine between 7 p.m. and 1 a.m. chronicled the conditions on WSB. The WSB Traffic Team meticulous­ly laid out the growing list of roads that began seeing accumulati­on and freezing over. Thankfully, most of us did what Gov. Deal and other public officials urged us to do: the roads were nearly empty when the bad weather arrived.

Saturday morning, we awoke to a frozen mess on many bridges and ramps. Smilin’ Mark McKay, Arum and Veronica Harrell from our Traffic Team covered multiple tractor trailer wrecks and ramp closures on the ice. The temperatur­es in the 20s assured whatever fell from the sky overnight — snow or not — would freeze. Crews struggled to treat frozen ramps along the Downtown Connector and in the Interstate 75/Interstate 285 interchang­es both in Cobb and Clayton counties. Some vehicles slid into HERO trucks that blocked these ramps. But enough people stayed off of the roads to keep the crash count low.

Temperatur­es in northwest metro Atlanta stayed the lowest and that area got the most snow. So that area dealt with the most ice and some counties’ schools stayed closed through Tuesday, thanks to the icy conditions. That’s four days, including the weekend, that some counties were out of commission.

We are just short of three years from the dubious anniversar­y of Snowmagedd­on. Since that awful experience, we have treated every wintry scare as if it could happen again. Fortunatel­y, the weather has never been that bad. But what made the 2014 storm so bad was the traffic. Last Friday’s winter storm could have been disastrous, had it hit slightly earlier and dropped just a bit more ice and snow.

So, Atlanta, instead of pointing fingers and laughing at the overreacti­on, use your whole hands and pat yourselves on the back. The weather and roads were dangerous for all of us and stayed that way for several days for some. We took this seriously and stayed off of the roads. As soon as we stop doing that is as soon as that 2014 debacle happens again.

Chamblee to consider panel appointmen­ts

The Chamblee City Council will consider a number of municipal appointmen­ts during the meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Chamblee City Hall, 5468 Peachtree Road. The council appoints various city officials and committee members on an annual basis each January, including the municipal court judges, Architectu­ral Design Review Board and Ethics Committee.

The council will also discuss updates to several ordinances regarding fingerprin­t background checks. The ordinances for door to door salesmen, adult entertainm­ent workers and message spa staff all require a fingerprin­t based background check as part of the fitness determinat­ion for employment. The council will vote whether to approve those updates before the first read and adoption of the amended ordinances. Informatio­n: www.chambleega.com.

Johns Creek advances $40M parks bond issue

The Johns Creek City Council has taken the first step toward issuing $40 million in parks bonds approved by voters in November.

The council recently adopted a resolution authorizin­g the city to move forward with items that will include, according to a staff report, obtaining a bond validation judgment from Fulton County Superior Court, securing a bond rating from rating agencies and completing a competitiv­e bidding process.

After these preparatio­ns are finished, the council would take up a supplement­al resolution on approving the bond terms prior to the closing of the transactio­n.

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