The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some fear bill will cut MARTA option

Expansion into Cobb at issue with CSX lease extension; advocates want commuter provision.

- By David Wickert dwickert@ajc.com

Mass transit advocates fear legislatio­n pending in the state House of Representa­tives could slam the door on a MARTA expansion into Cobb County for half a century.

Senate Resolution 228 would authorize the State Properties Commission to negotiate a 50-year lease extension with railroad CSX Transporta­tion for the stateowned Western and Atlantic Railroad line between Atlanta and Chattanoog­a, Tenn. The current lease — which expires in 2019 — includes a provision that could allow passenger rail service along the rail line, and some transit supporters say the line would be the cheapest way to expand MARTA into Cobb.

Though the resolution itself does not grant CSX exclusive rights to the line, transit supporters fear the state could negotiate away the right to passenger service on its own rail line. They want lawmakers to amend the resolution to require a lease provision allowing commuter rail.

At a House State Properties Committee meeting Tuesday, State Property Officer Steven Stancil assured lawmakers a commuter rail provision would be included in the lease — and may be stronger than the existing language. But he’d prefer lawmakers not tie the agency’s hands by stipulatin­g that the provision be included.

That wiggle room made some transit advocates and lawmakers nervous. If the resolution passes, the lease would not come back to the General Assembly for approval.

“The lease is going to be secret until it’s signed,” Jim Dexter of Citizens for Progressiv­e Transit told the committee. “At that point, there’s nothing we can do about it for the next 50 years.”

The committee took no action on the resolution, but a vote is scheduled today.

Cobb County voters declined to join MARTA when the transit agency was formed, and

many conservati­ve residents remain adamantly opposed. But many Georgia Republican­s, long hostile to mass transit, have come to embrace it as an important economic developmen­t tool. The General Assembly is considerin­g legislatio­n that could lead to substantia­l state funding of mass transit operations.

The historic Western and Atlantic Railroad line could play a role in Georgia’s mass transit future.

According to the New Georgia Encycloped­ia, lawmakers authorized the line, completed in 1851, to open the state to trade from the Tennessee and Ohio valleys. Its southern end was at Terminus — later to become the city of Atlanta — where it joined other rail lines crisscross­ing the state.

Georgia has leased the line to CSX and its predecesso­rs for about 100 years. The state earns about $7 million annually from the current lease.

State officials and the railroad have already reached agreement on some terms of a new lease. It would run from 2020 through 2069 at an initial rent of $12.1 million a year, with the rent increasing 2.5 percent annually.

Critics are concerned the lease could grant CSX exclusive rights to the rail line, excluding MARTA or other passenger rail service at a time when they say it’s increasing­ly needed.

“Cobb County is running out of space to put roads,” Sierra Club lobbyist Neill Herring told the House State Properties Committee. “They’re going to need additional transporta­tion.”

If MARTA or something like it were ever to expand into Cobb, some say the Western and Atlantic line would be the most cost-effective route. The alternativ­e would involve building another route, likely at a cost of billions of dollars.

CSX Regional Vice President Craig Camuso told the committee the company understand­s that commuter rail may be coming to the Western and Atlantic line.

“I can assure you it’s been made very clear to us by the state that commuter rail will be a key component of the lease negotiatio­n,” Camuso said.

Still, some lawmakers are leery.

“Once we pass this out (of the General Assembly), we’ve lost control,” said state Rep. Debbie Buckner, D-Junction City. “I’m a little nervous about it.”

A spokesman for MARTA declined to comment. Cobb County Chairman Mike Boyce did not respond to a request for comment.

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