By Maria Saporta
It’s time to move on.
That message is directed to state Rep. Jill Chambers (R-Dunwoody), who chairs the legislature’s MARTA Oversight Committee (MARTOC).
Chambers has turned beating up on MARTA an intramural sport, calling on a host of investigations of the agency and accusing MARTA of mismanagement and fiscal irresponsibility.
Chambers had asked the state auditors to do a thorough investigation into MARTA’s finances, hoping to find evidence to back her accusations.
Well, on Monday, the Georgia Department of Audits and Accounts — State Government Division released its audit, giving MARTA a clean bill of health. See story that appeared on the Atlanta Business Chronicle website.
This audit review should be enough to silence Chambers once and for all. She has made MARTA and the state jump through time-consuming hoops on her witch hunt for evil and wrongdoing.
And now it’s time for her to stop.
MARTA is facing enough challenges with declining sales tax revenues and increasing operating expenses without having to defend itself at every turn from a Chambers’ attack.
In fact, for the life of me, I don’t even understand why MARTOC exists in this day and age. Remember, the state of Georgia does not have any money in the game.
Unlike all the other major transit agencies in the country, the state shamefully does not contribute to MARTA’s operations, which puts our transit system at a major disadvantage.
Worst than that, the state won’t even give MARTA the flexibility to use the sales tax that it collects in Fulton and DeKalb counties on where it’s most needed.
When the MARTA act was created nearly 40 years ago, the state required the agency to spend half of its sales tax revenue on capital and half on operations. That worked when the system was expanding, but it is now an albatross around MARTA’s neck. Yet the state legislature has failed to remedy this inequity.
Again, no other major transit agency in the country has to deal with this kind of constraint.
The state audit now should change the tune at the state legislature. Perhaps our state can start looking for solutions to help MARTA survive these tough economic times rather than using the agency for target practice.







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[...] Below is a short excerpt, but please read the full column here. [...]
[...] that day, longtime business columnist and smart growth champion Maria Saporta told state Rep. Jill Chambers, R-Dunwoody, to stop making MARTA “jump through time-consuming hoops [...]
[...] it the way everyone including whackadoodle Jill Chambers knows it, as has been decided by the MARTA audit coming up fine and dandy. Chambers has turned beating up on MARTA an intramural sport, calling on a host of investigations of [...]
[...] adore). She is known for constantly bullying and berating MARTA, the board, and CEO Dr. Scott and has hunted for discrepencies and corruption to fuel her fire and found none. Rep. Chambers was also quoted as saying something along the lines that MARTA keeps crying [...]