Chambers announce public support of transportation tax
by ABBEY LENNON
Jul 31, 2012 | 1523 views | 5 5 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Gordon County Chamber member Bill Thompson addresses a crowd at the press conference Wednesday, endorsing the T-SPLOST tax.
Gordon County Chamber member Bill Thompson addresses a crowd at the press conference Wednesday, endorsing the T-SPLOST tax.
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Members of the Gordon County Chamber of Commerce joined members from the chambers of Greater Rome and Cartersville-Bartow, to publicly endorse the Transportation Special Project Local Option Sales Tax (TSPLOST) going to vote on the primary ballot July 31.

At the polls, Gordon County voters will be asked to vote yes or no: Shall Gordon County’s transportation system and the transportation network in this region and the state be improved by providing a one percent special district transportation sales and use tax for the purpose of transportation projects and programs for a period of ten years.

The tax, if passed, will add a one percent sales tax over 10 years to improve transportation in Georgia.

In an effort to endorse the tax, the three counties chamber members publicly announced their endorsement of the tax in Adairsville Wednesday, July 25, at the intersection of Highway 41 and Highway 140, in what was called a “monumental occasion,” by Greater-Rome Chamber Chair Angie Lewis.

Gordon County Chamber of Commerce member Bill Thompson, an attorney at law in Calhoun, and Committee Chair for the Development Authority with the chamber spoke on behalf of Gordon County explaining the tax would help make the Union Grove interchange a reality after 20 years.

“Shaw and Mohawk are located on both sides of that project that I mentioned I had started working on in 1993,” said Thompson. “The project being built now will be built with a bypass around my community that will drive, not only those industries, but international industries that have already located in my community, that transportation access will give us a competitive advantage.”

According to a press release regarding the press conference, the TSPLOST tax will be collected over a 10-year period and raise approximately $1.49 billion for transportation projects and generate close to 40,175 jobs.

Though the tri-county support of the tax was voiced, Lewis said she expects voter turnout to be low in her area and that every “yes” vote was vital.



Comments
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rt_elms
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August 01, 2012
What the “public” has expressed in this election smack down is they are finally awake to the political class’ manipulation of its power to tax the citizenry. A penny here, a penny there, hey its just a penny right? But it’s for the children! Or this time, a penny to fix Atlanta’s traffic mess (their problem not ours) Honestly, I did not read the entire proposition, so consider me uneducated prior to forming my strong opinion. I did read enough and listened to others who did read it all to know there was a great deal of pork in this deal; all going to the pockets of the political class and their buddies, with millions going to projects unrelated to traffic solutions! It’s well past time for government Federal, State and Local to live within their means. To all who voted NO, THANK YOU!!! But don’t dare sleep, for like Arnold, they’ll be back!
BeKind
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August 01, 2012
For those of you who opposed this tax I completely understand but there would have been several jobs created by this going into affect not to mention several jobs saved. There was a company campaigning for this to pass because they had already done an assessment of how many lay offs they would have to do if this should not pass. It is a shame that the public don't really try to educated themselves on something before forming such strong opinions.
cynicist
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August 01, 2012
Only a liberal would think we can tax ourselves into prosperity.

Unbelievable!!!
cynicist
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August 01, 2012
This article is a stellar example that clearly shows once again just how absurdly far out of touch civic leaders really are with common folk.
SKIPPY48
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July 31, 2012
I can't figure out why everyone wants the citizens of Gordon County and Calhoun to foot the bill for improvements to transportation when the benefits are going to be mainly for the huge industries on or near Union Grove Road. Let them pay for the improvements. Don't tell me that it could mean more jobs. These companies are going to continue to hire foreigners with questionable credentials. All they have to say is DREAM-they cannot be challenged to prove anything about their legal status in the US.
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