The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Keith Parker and a transporta­tion kumbaya moment in metro Atlanta

- Jim Galloway Political Insider

A sense of history is required to fully appreciate the impact of Keith Parker’s decision to leave the helm of MARTA.

Just seven years ago, the relationsh­ip between Georgia’s premier transit agency and the state Capitol was as cozy as a knife fight on a dark waterfront.

Republican­s in the Legislatur­e, the keys to state government still fresh in their hands, couldn’t decide whether MARTA was a criminal operation, an ideologica­l threat, or merely rife with incompeten­ce.

State Rep. Jill Chambers, then chairman of the legislativ­e oversight committee for MARTA, had waded so deeply into its finances that the transit system ponied up an extra $480,000 for Capitol lobbyists — just to keep up with her demands for this file and that.

There was some substance to the suspicion. MARTA’s finances were indeed a mess, and insolvency was on the horizon — although handcuffs the Legislatur­e had put on how the transit agency could spend its primary source of funding, a penny sales tax, was part of the problem.

Hostilitie­s were mutual. When the state refused to help offset a $120 million funding gap in operations, CEO Beverly Scott had giant red X’s painted on the sides of one third of MARTA’s buses and had them circle the Capitol.

Scott fled to Boston two years later, whereupon the next chairman of the MARTA oversight committee felt it proper to flex his muscles. State Rep. Mike Jacobs of Brookhaven all but named his candidate. The right appointmen­t, he said, “could go a long way to shoring up and bolstering the relationsh­ip with the General Assembly.”

Instead, the MARTA board hired the president and CEO of the bus system in San Antonio. Thus, the Keith Parker era began as an act of defiance. And succeeded admirably.

Five years later, even as he leaves, Parker is a celebrated figure in the state Capitol. While he may not be the sole reason, he

is often the first one Republican­s cite when describing their changed attitude toward commuter rail in metro Atlanta.

One measure of the improved diplomatic relations: Parker made his decision to leave to become president and CEO of Goodwill of North Georgia last week.

That Wednesday, eight days ago, MARTA board chairman Robbie Ashe began making quiet phone calls to all stakeholde­rs, informing them of the developmen­t. Not just to the traditiona­l Democratic recipients such as Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond, but to a raft of Republican­s in the state Capitol. The governor, the House speaker, the lieutenant governor, transporta­tion committee chairs.

The most interestin­g name on that contact list belonged to House Speaker pro tem Jan Jones, R-Milton. Any renewed push to run a rail line over the Chattahooc­hee River in north Fulton won’t be done without her say-so.

The question now is whether Republican­s have been in the thrall of a Parker personalit­y cult, or is the GOP attitude toward big-city investment­s truly changing.

The most important figure in Georgia transporta­tion right now may be state Rep. Kevin Tanner, R-Dawsonvill­e. He chairs the House commission that’s now looking at whether – and if so, how – state government should fund transit.

Since starting out this spring, Tanner’s commission on transit governance has already met once at MARTA headquarte­rs, another unpreceden­ted act of diplomacy. The group’s next meeting is Sept. 15 in Gwinnett County, an act of chutzpah that would have brought out the local pitchforks only a few years ago.

Tanner termed Parker’s departure as “unfortunat­e,” but said MARTA’s turnaround has been a group effort. “I think it’s the tone that the MARTA board has set, from the chairman on down,” he said. “Robbie has done a good job. I think they see the need for all of us to be working together for a common cause.”

Brandon Beach, R-Alpharetta, chairman of the Senate Transporta­tion Committee, first confronted metro Atlanta’s traffic problems as a member of the state transporta­tion board. More recently, he has been the primary packhorse for MARTA legislatio­n in the Capitol.

Beach will grant you that Parker improved the ridership experience at MARTA. He upped police presence and cut down on “knucklehea­d” behavior on trains. He introduced wi-fi. And vegetables at certain stations.

But like Tanner, Beach points to the breaking down of metro Atlanta’s feudal barriers as the real change that Parker helped lead.

“Twelve years ago, when I first got on GDOT, I can tell you that GDOT didn’t talk to MARTA, and MARTA didn’t talk to ARC, and ARC didn’t talk to GRTA, GRTA didn’t talk to GDOT. They were all silos of organizati­on,” Beach said. “There was no collaborat­ion or communicat­ion. And that has changed.”

The ruling members of metro Atlanta’s transporta­tion bureaucrac­ies now gather for regular coffee klatches: Parker as the head of MARTA; Chris Tomlinson, executive director of the State Road and Tollway Authority and the Georgia Regional Transit Authority; Douglas Hooker, leader of the Atlanta Regional Commission, the overarchin­g planning agency; and Russell McMurry, the commission­er of the state Department of Transporta­tion.

The gatherings have already paid off: The night of the I-85 fire last spring, before the flames were out, MARTA and GRTA were on the phone with GDOT, rerouting and rescheduli­ng services.

But if you want one last bit of proof of the improved state of transporta­tion politics in metro Atlanta brought about by Parker & Co., there’s this: I asked Beach if he wanted any say over who becomes the next general manager and CEO of MARTA.

“No,” he said. “That’s the MARTA board’s decision.”

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