The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fiscal crisis key issue in Cobb races

Tax hikes, service cuts factor in discussion­s to fill $30M gap in budget.

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

With one day left for candidates to qualify to run for office, Cobb’s looming fiscal crisis has emerged as the key issue in two contested county commission seat races.

Commission­ers are discussing a combinatio­n of tax hikes and service cuts — including shuttering libraries — in order to fill a $30 million hole in the 2019 budget.

Cobb’s role in a proposed metro Atlanta transporta­tion plan is also likely to galvanize voters, as will fears of overdevelo­pment, especially in the more rural areas of the county.

“I think voters are going to be focused really on two issues, primarily developmen­t and taxes,” said Kerwin Swint, a political science professor at Kennesaw State University and West Cobb resident. “Cobb has prided itself on keeping taxes relatively low and property taxes in check. I think in the current climate there’s a lot of trepidatio­n about is that going to be feasible into the future.”

Incumbents JoAnn Birrell (District 3—East Cobb) and Bob Weatherfor­d (District 1—West Cobb) will both fend off Republican challenger­s in the primary scheduled for May 22.

Birrell said she is running on her “experience and results and accomplish­ments” over the past eight years, such as reducing the number of sites slated for redevelopm­ent in her district from 17 to three.

“The budget problem is the biggest (election issue) with the things we’re looking at, ways to save money and make up the deficit,” she said. She also said she would be paying close attention

to public input on a regional transit plan that could pave the way for mass transit connecting Cobb to Atlanta.

“I, personally, would like to be out of the transit business as a county,” she said.

Birrell’s only Republican challenger so far is Tom Cheek, a local businessma­n and vocal critic of the deal to fund the Atlanta Braves’ new stadium with public money.

Cheek said he thinks voters will be moved by transporta­tion concerns and the budget gap.

“Obviously, the problems that have caused the gap are the fact that the board has approved expenses but when it came time to pay for these items, the approval of expenditur­es was voted down,” Cheek said. “You had a series of decisions that have led to being backed into a corner.”

At least one candidate, Jim Smith, a retired Cobb County Water System employee, has qualified for the District 3 race as a Democrat, all but assuring a general election contest in November.

Smith said as a former water system employee, he knows “how things work” and has also been an active member of Canton Road Neighbors, a zoning and land use advocacy organizati­on. He also said the county budget was a primary concern, and criticized commission­ers for implementi­ng membership fees for the senior centers and threatenin­g to close libraries.

“You can’t make up $30 million by starting to charge seniors $5 a month to use the senior center that their tax money basically paid for,” Smith said.

He added that transporta­tion would be “very big” in this election.

“Simply saying no to mass transit is no longer acceptable,” Smith said.

In District 1, two Republican candidates have qualified to run, in addition to Weatherfor­d.

Weatherfor­d dismissed his opponents for wanting to stop or slow growth in West Cobb altogether, while touting what he described as his own pragmatic approach to negotiatin­g with developers. He also pointed to more than 100 acres that have been procured as greenspace during his tenure.

“My record will speak for itself,” Weatherfor­d said.

Candidate Melissa O’Brien administer­s the West Cobb Advocate Facebook page in addition to substitute teaching in Cobb County schools. She faulted Weatherfor­d for not holding enough town hall meetings with his constituen­ts, and said whoever represents the district needs to consider the long-term implicatio­ns of zoning decisions. But the defining issue of the race, she said, was the $30 million hole in the budget.

“We need to have a balanced budget and what’s been happening the past years is they’ve been kicking the can down the road,” O’Brien said. “We need to communicat­e with our neighbors and talk to them about the issue that we face.”

Candidate Keli Gambrill is the president of People Looking After Neighborho­ods and has a background in business and accounting. She got involved in local politics when her yard started flooding due to a developmen­t under constructi­on next door.

Zoning and land use “turned into a passion,” she said. “Not every homeowner has the time to learn what I had learned.”

Gambrill also said the biggest issue facing the county was the budget.

“The budget is the thing that is the most difficult to understand,” she said. “That’s where I feel my background with the county and business is going to be beneficial.”

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