The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

READERS WRITE State work, toll roads are best traffic jam fix Money is deciding amendment choices

- STOCKBRIDG­E ATLANTA

The transporta­tion problem in metro Atlanta is not a lack of rail transit or “good roads,” nor is it a lack of encouragin­g people to move into denser settlement­s and ride trains instead of drive. The problem is traffic congestion, and a solution must provide a cost benefit for all throughout an area the size of Massachuse­tts. Over half of the state’s population (5.9 million) resides in metro Atlanta. Therefore, transporta­tion solutions, including funding, planning and management, should mainly be the responsibi­lity of state government. Piecemeal projects sponsored by the area’s cities and counties are ineffectiv­e.

The most cost-effective alternativ­e to congestion here is variable toll lanes next to crowded highways. Rail is a nice complement to toll lanes, but expanding rail to the level necessary is cost-prohibitiv­e and unrealisti­c.

Another letter writer asks why proposed amendments to the Georgia constituti­on pass so easily, and who is paid to write them (“Amendments need better descriptio­ns,” Readers Write, Nov. 14).

Although it is the AJC that should inform us beforehand about those amendments, my guess is the amendments sound attractive because some legislator­s are being influenced by their wealthier campaign contributo­rs to write them.

For instance, if a person spends a million dollars for some land he agrees will be saved for conservati­on, he can take the million as a tax deduction. That’s OK, unless that million might be needed for something else more important to Georgia.

Without campaign finance reform, only the rich will get what they want from government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States