Chattanooga Times Free Press

Transit plan may test vision of Atlanta’s suburbs

- BY BEN NADLER

ATLANTA — In trafficpla­gued metro Atlanta, a plan to expand the public transit system soon could test whether the once predominan­tly white suburbs have eased their longstandi­ng resistance to the notion, which has been the subject of a decadeslon­g debate centering on race.

The Metropolit­an Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority was created in 1965 as the city’s primary operator of public train and bus services, but neighborin­g suburban counties consistent­ly have voted down the idea of joining. Some have formed ancillary transit systems instead.

The result is a hodgepodge of independen­tly run services that make commuting across county lines using mass transit nearly impossible.

Republican state Sen. Brandon Beach, chairman of the Senate Transporta­tion Committee, took a 38-mile trip across three counties to illustrate the fragmented nature of the current system.

“It took us four hours and 10 minutes,” he said. “But the worst thing was that I had to go to three different websites to plan my trip. … Then I had to pay with three different methods of payment and I had to wait 30 minutes between jurisdicti­onal lines.”

The average Atlantaare­a commuter spends 31 minutes each way getting to work, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Under a proposal approved this year by Georgia lawmakers, a new regional authority called The ATL would be responsibl­e for implementi­ng transit projects across 13 metro counties, ensuring plans connect efficientl­y across jurisdicti­ons. The bill awaits signature by Republican Gov. Nathan Deal, who has said he will sign the legislatio­n.

Expanding mass transit is seen as a key step toward solving Atlanta’s traffic problems and the air pollution from cars idling in rush-hour gridlock. But the plan may face an uphill battle in key counties, including Cobb and Gwinnett — historical­ly white, affluent suburban areas that have long resisted a connection to the racially diverse center of Atlanta.

Kevin Kruse, a Princeton University history professor who has written extensivel­y about Atlanta in the 20th century, said the historical resistance largely was motivated by race and linked closely with “white flight” of the 1960s.

“You can’t understand why people in the suburbs would not want to be connected with MARTA unless you understand that, fundamenta­lly, they moved to the suburbs to get away from Atlanta,” Kruse said.

White suburbanit­es did not want a physical link with the city, Kruse said, which in the 1970s meant possibly being part of school and housing integratio­n programs, and did not want people from Atlanta coming into their communitie­s.

“And by this, they generally meant black people,” he said.

But Atlanta’s northern suburbs have transforme­d considerab­ly in recent decades.

Between 1990 and 2016, Cobb County grew from roughly 448,000 people to 748,000, while non-Hispanic white residents went from 86 percent of the county to 53 percent, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Over the same period, Gwinnett County surged from roughly 353,000 residents to 920,000, while the proportion of nonHispani­c white residents slid from 89 percent of the county to just 39 percent.

Charlotte Nash, chairman of the Gwinnett County Board of Commission­ers, said population growth and changes there “have generated a shift in opinion” around public transporta­tion. “A lot has changed in Gwinnett,” Nash said.

Increasing population­s have only aggravated traffic problems, and young workers coming from other metropolit­an hubs are seeking more public transporta­tion options.

Dave Williams, an infrastruc­ture expert at the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, said access to public transit has become a major concern for businesses making decisions about where to locate.

“High-skilled young profession­als prefer communitie­s that are walkable and are served by high-quality transit. And so, as a result, decisions about site locations [for businesses] have reflected that,” he said.

Williams pointed to a slew of major employers — including Mercedes-Benz, NCR and State Farm — that have moved into locations easily accessible to MARTA routes.

Amazon has likewise cited “direct access to rail, train, subway/metro, bus routes” as a core requiremen­t for its second headquarte­rs, which includes Atlanta among the 20 final contenders.

Republican state Sen. Kay Kirkpatric­k, who represents portions of Cobb County, said she thought transit expansion could be a difficult sell with voters there, though she said she had not seen a racial tone to recent discussion­s.

The proposal singles out Cobb by allowing for the creation of a special transit district, possibly including the area around the Atlanta Braves’ new stadium, SunTrust Park, that could join the broader system without the rest of the county.

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