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Fayette County Issues Tea Party MonthlyMeeting Feb 4, 2014

Fayette County Issues Tea Party

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Fayette County Issues Tea Party. MonthlyMeeting Feb 4 , 2014. Finding Our Way In Regional Government Fayette County Steve Brown Board of Commissioners. Sex and Age Fayette County. Sex and Age Mature: ages 35-69 Fayette County. Sex and Age Atlanta Region 20 Counties. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Fayette County Issues Tea Party

MonthlyMeetingFeb 4, 2014

Page 2: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Finding Our WayIn Regional Government

Fayette County

Steve BrownBoard of Commissioners

Page 3: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Sex and Age

Fayette County

Page 4: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Sex and Age

Mature: ages 35-69Fayette County

Page 5: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Sex and Age

Atlanta Region20 Counties

Page 6: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Race and Hispanic Origin

Fayette County

Page 7: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Race and Hispanic Origin

Atlanta Region20 Counties--------------------50% Minority

Page 8: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Single Households

Fayette County--------------------Single Parent14%

Married Households

Fayette County--------------------Married Parent66%2010 Census

Page 9: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Single Households

Atlanta Region20 Counties--------------------Single Parent20%

Married Households

Atlanta Region20 Counties--------------------Married Parent49%2010 Census

Page 10: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Close in size by land mass:

DeKalbPopulation: 691,893(2553 people per square mile)

FayettePopulation: 106,567(535 people per square mile)

2010 Census

Page 11: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Counties With Highest Percentage of Population Living in Cities

1. Fulton County 90.3%

Page 12: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Counties With Highest Percentage of Population Living in Cities

1. Fulton County 90.3%2. Fayette County 53.8%3. Henry County 29.3%4. Douglas County 28.1%…7. Cobb County 26.0%8. Gwinnett County 24.5%

Page 13: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

How do you classify “region”?

Page 14: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

According to the Federal Government, our “Metropolitan Statistical Area” is made of 28 counties.

Page 15: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

The Atlanta Regional Commission (ARC) is the regional planning and intergovernmental coordination agency for the 10-county Atlanta area, including Cherokee, Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Douglas, Fayette, Fulton, Gwinnett, Henry and Rockdale counties(20 counties for air quality issues)

Page 16: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Urban Core Counties

COBB GWINNETT

FULTON

DEKALB

CLAYTON

Deve

lopm

ent M

ater

ializ

ed

Page 17: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

10-County Atlanta Regional Commission

CHEROKEECOBB GWINNETT

FULTON

DOUGLAS ROCKDALEDEKALB

FAYETTE HENRYCLAYTON

Emer

ging

Gro

wth

Page 18: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Big $$$ Problems There is no funding to maintain the dysfunctional

growth of the Core Urban Counties.

There is no funding to make the needed road improvements for the Emerging Growth Counties.

Mass transit has low ridership and is not cost efficient.

Page 19: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

The First Look at Regional Taxation and Governance

Transportation Investment Act (a.k.a. “TSPLOST”)

63% Opposed(A horrible project list – little attention to traffic congestion)

Page 20: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

TSPLOST: A Moving Target

First: “Untie the traffic knot” (relieve traffic congestion)

Next: “Save the development industry”

Last ditch appeal: “It’s about creating jobs”

Page 21: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

HB 195A Flexible Solution

(Heading in the right direction)

Rep. Ed Setzler

Page 22: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Reminder: There is nothing wrong with regional cooperation.

Fayette has been a key collaborative partner in the region.

Page 23: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

“A man’s got to know his limitations.” - Clint Eastwood as Inspector Harry Callahan,

Magnum Force (1973)

Where do we draw the line on regionalism?

Page 24: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

The Pitfalls of Regional Governance and Taxation Serious lack of accountability to the citizen taxpayers

Disparity among various counties

Parochial interests create a conflicting regional vision

Influence of outside special development interests

Lack of a decent regional planning mechanism

Gwinnett vs. Fayette

Atlanta Beltline and light rail trains

Page 25: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Atlanta Regional Commission

16 of the 39 Board Members are NOT elected by the citizens of any jurisdiction.

The past and current ARC Chairmen are non-elected officials in real estate development who are with Community

Improvement Districts, competing for transportation dollars within the region.

Page 26: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Georgia Regional Transportation Authority GRTA

All 15 Members on the Board of Directors are appointed by the Governor.

Only 3 are elected officials and nearly all the others are related to the real estate development industry.

Page 27: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

“With the [Federal] Highway Trust Fund forecast to go bankrupt next year [2015] and the current two-year transportation bill set to expire Oct. 1, Congress faces a struggle to find funds for a new long-term transportation bill.” - Congress to face dilemma in funding long-term transportation bill, 1/15/2014 - Washington Post

Congress is stealing funds from the general fund to prop-up the Highway Trust Fund.

Page 28: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

We need to stop funding transit from the [Federal] Highway Trust Fund.

Motor fuel taxes pay for the fund and it should be used to pay for improvements to roads and bridges.

Transit is a huge financial black hole and will never come close to paying for itself. Yet regional leaders urge the continued construction of expensive transit projects, further eroding the Fed Trust Fund.

Page 29: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

“ [Metro Atlanta should] spend 50% of our transportation funds on transit rail.”- Christopher Leinberger, Atlanta Regional Commission’s State of the Region Breakfast, November 1, 2013 (Created the Atlanta Walk-UP study)

Road maintenance?

Low ridership?Reality check?

Ultra expensive?

Page 30: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Instead of giving State Powerbrokers, Appointed Officials and Real Estate Developers the keys to our local governments, it might be better to change the locks. Paraphrase of a quote from Doug Larson

Page 31: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Accomplishments

Moved transportation focus to “sub-regional”

Leveling the playing field between Urban Core and Emerging counties

Incorporating opposing points of view

Page 32: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Where to Focus Create accountability to the citizen taxpayers Demand protection of “home rule” Get out of “one-size-fits-all” solutions Do not allow forced mandatory regional taxation Develop rational metrics for transit projects Insist attention be given to Southern Crescent

counties (transportation and economic development)

Page 33: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

The New Federal View of Regionalism“Obamaregionomics”

(Go look at the Board of Directors for Building One America)

https://buildingoneamerica.org

The unraveling of America’s suburbs.

Page 34: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Young Professor Obamaon

Race and Regionalism

Page 35: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

The Agenda of Building One America

• Force new development in cities and prohibit growth in suburbs and beyond. Build a transit-oriented society.

• Impose economic integration, income housing quotas, loss of local control of zoning and land use.

• Tax sharing to reduce “fiscal disparities” among local governments. One county paying for another’s needs (Think Metro Atlanta T-SPLOST).

Page 36: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Myron Orfield

Described as "the most influential social demographer in America's burgeoning regional movement," wrote Neal Peirce in his nationally distributed column in spring 2002.

Page 37: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Orfield Believes …

“Local approaches to growth and economic development create competition that ultimately hurts all parts of the region. Instead, localities should work together to advocate new regional, state and federal policies such as: greater fiscal equity to equalize resources among local governments, smarter growth management to support more sustainable development practices, and accountable metropolitan governance to improve regional transportation and land-use planning.”http://citistates.com/wp-content/uploads/legacy/assocspeakers/m_orfield.html

Page 38: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Megaregions

Piedmont Atlantic Megaregion (PAM)

Jacksonville to Nashville, Raleigh to Birmingham

34 million people

12% of total U.S. population

Gross Regional Product: $1.1 trillion

http://www.cqgrd.gatech.edu/research/megaregions/piedmont-atlantic-megaregion

“Develop a conceptual framework that incorporates the megaregion concept into existing policy and governance processes.”

Page 39: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party
Page 40: Fayette County  Issues Tea  Party

Thank You

Steve Brown, ChairmanFayette County Board of Comm.(404) 798-0587