The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Johns Creek mayor vetoes road widening project.

- By Amanda C. Coyne Amanda.Coyne@ajc.com

Johns Creek Mayor Mike Bodker vetoed a TSPLOST project that could have converted Jones Bridge Road to three lanes, saying it could violate city law.

The city council attempted to overturn the veto Monday night but was unsuccessf­ul, with a vote of 4-3. Five votes are needed to overturn a mayor’s veto in Johns Creek.

Now, council members must work to find another solution to the often-con- gested stretch of road that sees regular rear-end collisions, Councilman Chris Coughlin said.

This is only the second time Bodker has used his veto power in 12 years as mayor.

The plan, approved by Johns Creek City Council on Nov. 26, was to study options to expand Jones Bridge Road between Waters and State Bridge roads. That plan included a study of a three-lane option for Jones Bridge Road, according to a news release from the city. The plan also included an option for an expansion to four lanes, according to a letter Bodker addressed to city residents.

Bodker vetoed the plan Dec. 7 because he believes it will not sufficient­ly relieve congestion on the road. Johns Creek’s 2016 TSPLOST (trans- portation special purpose local option sales tax) referendum specifical­ly called for funds to be dedicated to transporta­tion improvemen­t and congestion relief.

Before the city voted to approve a TSPLOST, the city said publicly Jones Bridge Road would be widened to four lanes, not three as proposed in the vetoed plan, Bodker said in the letter. The three-lane study would cost more than $100,000, and city staff had previously told the council “anything short of four lanes will not resolve the road’s worsening overcapaci­ty,” Bodker said in the letter.

Coughlin was one of the members who attempted to override the veto. Coughlin believes more options aside from the four-lane expansion should be considered, he said in a statement. Expand- ing the street to four lanes would only be a “temporary respite” and increased traf- fic flow would again cause congestion in the future, Coughlin argued.

“Widening this road is like loosening your belt to lose weight,” Coughlin said in the statement.

Bodker also believed the three-lane plan would present a legal issue. Because of the way the city’s TSPLOST ordinance is written, it may have required the three-lane plan to be implemente­d. Because the three-lane plan would not have sufficient­ly relieved congestion, that would go against the legal purpose of using TSPLOST funds, Bodker said in the letter.

Coughlin rebutted that argument, saying a city attorney had told council it was “acceptable to look at all options” at a Nov. 5 work session.

Because the veto was not overridden, the city council will have to develop a new plan to alleviate traffic congestion on the two-mile stretch of road.

 ??  ?? Mike Bodker is mayor of Johns Creek.
Mike Bodker is mayor of Johns Creek.

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