The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sandy Spring, Clayton win $100k transit grants

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com

Clayton County and the city of Sandy Springs are getting help from Georgia Tech and MARTA to address traffic and infrastruc­ture issues.

The two municipali­ties are winners of Tech’s 2020 Georgia Smart Communitie­s Challenge, which comes with $100,000 grants and help from engineers and network researcher­s. Others who participat­e in sponsoring the challenge include Georgia Power, Atlanta Regional Commission and the Associatio­n County Commission­ers of Georgia.

Clayton will use the money to study traffic patterns and the need for more sidewalks. Sandy Springs will work on software that will make it easier for buses to maintain green lights so they can move through them and improve traffic efficiency.

“We are excited to work with

GA Tech and in collaborat­ion with MARTA and the city of Dunwoody in exploring opportunit­ies to maximize current software to generate more efficienci­es along our roadways, and at the same time enhance the benefits of using public transit,” Sandy Springs MayorRusty Paul said in an email. “It’s a program with potential to provide benefits throughout the region. “

Clayton County Commission Chairman Jeff Turner said the funding will help address deadly traffic on the seven-mile-long Tara Boulevard, one of the south metro Atlanta community’s main streets.

“We’ve had a problem with pedestrian­s getting hit, hurt and killed on Tara Boulevard, Flint River Road and some of our other busy thoroughfa­res,” said Turner, who credited Clayton Chief Operating Officer Detrick Stanford and the county’s transporta­tion department with winning the grant.

“This grant will go a long way in helping us study those traffic flows,” Turner said. “We can also look at where sidewalks and other amenities could benefit the county when it comes to pedestrian safety.”

MARTA said it plans to work with Sandy Springs to enable technology on buses to alert an intersecti­on that a bus is approachin­g. The technology, which will be used on Route 5 around Roswell Road, Johnson Ferry and Hammond Drive, allows a bus to request longer green lights or shorter red lights in heavy traffic, the transit agency said.

MARTA said it is still determinin­g its role in Clayton County’s plans. “MARTA looks forward to partnering with Sandy Springs and Clayton County on these important studies that use innovative technology to improve transit service reliabilit­y and the walkabilit­y of our communitie­s,” MARTA CEO Jeffrey Parker said.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Clayton County and the city of Sandy Springs have each won $100,000 grants from Georgia Tech’s Georgia Smart Communitie­s Challenge to study traffic issues in their communitie­s.
AJC FILE Clayton County and the city of Sandy Springs have each won $100,000 grants from Georgia Tech’s Georgia Smart Communitie­s Challenge to study traffic issues in their communitie­s.

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