The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Transit panel has diversity in mind

One member aims to bring in as many voices as possible for ideas.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

Gwinnett’s new transit review committee — a group with the weighty task of helping shape the future of public transporta­tion in the county — held its first meeting Tuesday night.

And the group’s compositio­n has already raised at least a few eyebrows.

With appointmen­ts made by the County Commission and a number of different community groups, a variety of perspectiv­es will be represente­d on the 13-person committee. But only two current members are people of color.

One of those members, Farooq Mughal, said that’s concerning.

Black, Latino and Asian residents account for more than 60% of Gwinnett County’s population. Geography and socioecono­mic factors also mean that minority groups are likely to be disproport­ionately affected by whatever decisions are made about the county’s transit future.

Mughal was appointed to the transit committee by District 4 Commission­er Marlene Fosque and also serves as the chairman of Gwinnett’s community outreach advisory board. He said he was surprised by the transit group’s makeup during Tuesday’s mostly organizati­onal meeting and feels obligated to bring in as many voices as possible.

He said he already spoke with a fellow member — one of two who volunteere­d to serve as the committee’s chairperso­n — about holding a forum with leaders from Gwinnett’s diverse communitie­s.

“We can learn a lot from them,” Mughal said. “We’re not there to make decisions; we’re there to basically learn from the experience of multiple constituen­cies.”

Gwinnett Commission Chairman Charlotte Nash said the majority of the committee’s appointmen­ts were left to community organizati­ons to encourage independen­ce from the county government. She said the county is interested in “a wide range of perspectiv­es and opinions” on transit, regardless of how the committee is composed.

“We will be looking for other ways to engage different segments of the community to ensure we incorporat­e their ideas into the transit discussion,” Nash said. “Certainly, the committee meetings are public, and we encourage attendance by everyone.”

The transit review committee was formed largely as a reaction to Gwinnett’s latest referendum on joining MARTA, a March special election that failed by an 8-point margin. Had the referendum passed, Gwinnett would’ve joined MARTA and residents would’ve paid an additional 1% sales tax to cover the cost of more than $5 billion worth of projects included in the county’s existing transit expansion plan.

The review committee is tasked with taking another look at the plan, soliciting input from the public and submitting a report with recommenda­tions on potential changes to the county. The group is charged with doing all that in the span of 10 meetings held before the end of the year.

The task won’t be an easy one, but transit in Gwinnett County never is. And the handful of residents who spoke during the public comment period of Tuesday night’s meeting offered committee members a glimpse of the disparate opinions they’ll be hearing over the coming weeks.

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