The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Killings rattle a close-knit community

In Gwinnett County, a young mother is charged with killing her husband and four of her children. What would drive a mother to carry out such a “horrendous crime” as police have alleged? Neighbors say Isabel Martinez had fallen into a deep depression after

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

2 P.M. WEDNESDAY

Martin Romero — back in Loganville after a long weekend at the beach with the five children he was raising with their mother, Martinez — talks on the phone with his brother. Some 12 hours later, police say, Martinez would embark on an unspeakabl­e rampage.

5 A.M. THURSDAY

After receiving a 911 call from Martinez, police discover in the mobile home the bodies of Axel, 2; Dillan, 4; Dacota, 7; Isabela Martinez, 10; and Martin Romero, 33, had all been stabbed to death. Diana Romero, 9, had also been stabbed and is expected to survive.

9 A.M. FRIDAY

Martinez exhibits bizarre behavior at her court appearance: smiling, waving her arms, even giving two thumbs up to the press. The judge cautions her to “cut off your display for the cameras.” She is charged with five counts of malice murder and held without bond.

TODAY

In spite of the unthinkabl­e carnage, theirs is a close neighborho­od in which people look out for one another. A neighbor said she had prayed with Isabel Martinez and once offered to help Martinez care for her five children.

Gwinnett County is expected to add nearly half a million people in the next two-plus decades. If projection­s hold, those new residents will push Gwinnett past Fulton as Georgia’s most populous county.

Commission Chairman Charlotte Nash knows all that, and she believes Gwinnett needs more transit options. A transporta­tion system able to serve the county’s still-growing populace must be planned for, she said. And the county will need buy-in from its long-reticent — but rapidly evolving — residents.

Because it could be now or never.

“Some people think (transit expansion) can happen a lot quicker than it can,” said Nash, who wants the county to have some kind transporta­tion referendum on the ballot in 2018. “... It’s going to be a long, drawn-out process. And if we don’t get started soon, it means it’s just going to be that much harder to get done.”

Gwinnett recently began in earnest a comprehens­ive transit developmen­t plan, a monthslong study to determine what kind of transit additions might be most feasible, and palatable, for the county.

The Atlanta Regional Commission projects that, by 2040, Gwinnett will boast more than 1.35 million residents, an influx of nearly 500,000 people. Projection­s show the county only getting denser along already crowded corridors like I-85, Ga. 316, Buford Highway and Peachtree Industrial Boulevard.

Like many suburban counties, Gwinnett has resisted transit for decades, citing fears of increased crime or decreased property values. Voters rejected proposals to join the MARTA system in 1971 and 1990 and, in 2012, helped shoot down a regional sales tax proposal that would have provided

money for transit and transporta­tion projects.

While there are still many Gwinnettia­ns deadset against any kind of new transit, Nash believes the group of folks willing to even broach the subject is “bigger now than it’s ever been.” About 44 percent of Gwinnett residents that participat­ed in a 2016 survey from the ARC said expanded public transit was the best longterm solution to the region’s traffic woes.

It’s not only current conditions that Gwinnett should consider when deciding what, if any, new transit options should be provided, officials said — because 2040 isn’t as far away as it sounds.

“You need to start doing the planning now, to know what’s priority so you can have the infrastruc­ture in place,” said John Orr, manager of the ARC’s transporta­tion section.

“I think the county certainly recognizes that, with the amount of population growth, that they need to take a fresh look at some of the possibilit­ies for transit moving forward,” he added.

Part of Gwinnett’s comprehens­ive transit plan process, which started last month with stakeholde­r meetings, will be educating voters on what various types of projects might cost.

The county estimates that heavy rail, for instance, would run at least $250 million per mile. Light rail could fetch $150 million per mile. Bus rapid transit, buses that operate in dedicated lanes and make fewer stops than local routes, would likely cost more in the area of $25 million per mile.

Those rough figures don’t include operating costs.

Funds from generic special-purpose local option sales taxes — which Gwinnett voters have approved during multiple referendum­s, including one in November — would cover only capital expenses. As state law is currently written, special single-county transporta­tion SPLOSTs could be used to fund operating costs but are permitted to last for only five years.

There’s been talk at the Georgia General Assembly of extending that time period, but the current law is a dicey propositio­n for something like transit funding, which Nash called a “forevermor­e commitment.”

“I still run into people who will kind of put together a scenario for a lot of improvemen­ts,” said Alan Chapman, the director of the Gwinnett Department of Transporta­tion. “And we’ll really get into the details of the cost and maybe the light bulb goes off that it may not be affordable as they thought it was.”

Compilatio­n of the county’s comprehens­ive transit plan will shift into high gear later this summer, Chapman said, with an online survey and county “bus tour.” Officials will stop at community events and gauge opinions by speaking to locals on tap. A phone survey is also a pos- sibility.

Officials hope to create an actual list of recommenda­tions to present for even more public input sometime in early 2018.

Nash’s hope is that some kind of referendum on some kind of transit expansion would be on the following November’s ballot.

“Quite honestly, as part of this process, we’re looking for public participat­ion. But we’re also looking at it as a chance to educate the public,” Nash said. “... And part of that will (help create) a more realistica­lly founded list of recommenda­tions.”

Gwinnett has local bus routes and a handful of commuter buses that run from local park-and-rides to various places around Atlanta.

But Orr, the ARC manager, said the county still has “an awful lot of infrastruc­ture needs” moving forward.

“A lot of it is going to boil down to what’s cost-effective and right for their community,” he said. “I think that’s something they’re going to have to be wrestling with the rest of the year.”

 ??  ?? For updates in the case involving Isabel Martinez, including video reports, visit myAJC.com.
For updates in the case involving Isabel Martinez, including video reports, visit myAJC.com.
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 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? innett County officials hope to create a list of transit recommenda­tions to present for even more public input sometime in early 2018.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM innett County officials hope to create a list of transit recommenda­tions to present for even more public input sometime in early 2018.

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