Posted inGuest Column

Metro Atlanta could not survive or prosper without MARTA

By Guest Columnist MICHAEL WALLS, chairman of MARTA’s board of directors

For more than three decades, metro Atlanta has awakened every morning secure in the knowledge that MARTA trains, buses and para-transit vehicles were up and running.

Day after day after day, year after year, MARTA has provided safe, reliable and affordable transportation to millions of people who have come to depend on the critical services we provide. As chairman of the MARTA Board of Directors, I can’t tell you how proud I am of the fact that we carry 500,000 passengers daily.

Lately, however, some sadly misinformed detractors of mass transit in general, and MARTA in particular, have questioned the vital importance of the service to our customers and to the broader community. For those

Posted inMaria's Metro

Washington D.C. is watching as Georgia continues to lag behind on transit and rail

If it weren’t so sad, it would be funny.

Georgia is being ridiculed in Washington for failing to move forward with transit and rail. In fact, Georgia is moving in reverse.

How else can one interpret the reorganization of the Georgia Department of Transportation, being proposed by Commissioner Vance Smith, that will downgrade its “Intermodal” Division (which includes transit) into a program under the Engineering Division.

It was only a year ago when GDOT created the Intermodal Division as a way to demonstrate its commitment to transit. But that commitment appears to have been short-lived.

Next, we’ve got State Rep. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody) proposing a state takeover of MARTA, the largest transit agency in the Southeast, and putting it under the control of GDOT.

Posted inGuest Column

Looking for work in this new age of communications,

By Guest Columnist MIKE KLEIN, former CNN & Georgia Public Broadcasting executive whose online column is written at www.mikekleinonline.com.

This past Sunday morning we jumped into the minivan and took off down the road toward one of those large discount stores that sells everything for less. The young man standing outside our neighborhood entrance held aloft his sign that said “Will do any Work. Family Depends on Me.”

He is a reminder that unemployment is personal. It matters little that 90 percent of the working eligible population has a job if you are in the 10 percent that needs a job. Even those numbers are artificial. Americans who exhaust jobless benefits no longer appear in government reports. Hundreds of thousands try to cover living expenses with multiple part-time positions. Some quit looking.

Posted inMaria's Metro

Upcoming city elections will show how Atlanta is undergoing profound changes

The Atlanta elections of 2009 will go down in history as turning point for our city.

This is our generation’s version of the 1969 election when for voters broke rank and defeated the candidate of the business community in favor of Sam Massell, a Jewish businessman.

Up until Massell’s election, it had been customary for the mayor of the city of Atlanta to become an honorary member of the Piedmont Driving Club. But that offer was not extended to Massell.

And by 1973, when Atlanta’s first black mayor — Maynard Jackson — was elected, the transition was complete. The predominantly white business community no longer had a hold

Posted inGuest Column

Teaching art in schools helps makes students more successful

By Guest Columnist ANNE OSTHOLTHOFF, founder and CEO of ArtsNOW/Creating Pride.

We want our young people to think critically, creatively and demonstrate an ability to solve problems and communicate effectively in today’s workplace. To achieve that goal, then all school leaders should take note, assess their priorities and make sure the arts are central to their school improvement plans for student success.

The reasons are twofold: First, educational research in school reform proves over and over again that students who are engaged in the arts outperform students who are not. Secondly, it is a relatively low-cost first step for school administrators and faculty in helping teachers provide engaging work in the classroom that captures the attention of students.

Posted inMaria's Metro

Mayoral candidates need to quit criticizing Franklin and begin offering hope for Atlanta

Sometimes it feels as though Atlanta is living two different realities.

Our schizophrenia is surfacing during this mayoral election, and it’s not a healthy situation for our city or the next mayor.

Take last Wednesday. The top four mayoral candidates were part of a forum at the Temple. Listening to them, you would have thought the city has been at the brink of disaster for the past eight years and that it’s all doom and gloom. (In all fairness, City Council President Lisa Borders was far less negative than the others).

Then on Thursday, the Council for Quality Growth held its annual Four Pillars Award where it was honoring Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin for her distinguished leadership of the city for the past eight years.

Posted inGuest Column

Living among trees essential for our city’s quality of life

By Guest Columnist SPENCE ROSENFELD, founder and president of Arborguard Tree Specialists

Maybe I was particularly vulnerable to the irresistable nature of trees. From a very young age I just had to climb them. Later I built a treehouse and lived among the branches of a giant Black Cherry for most of my High School summers. In college I decided my career would be to work with people and trees.

Finally, I took the bold step of starting a special kind of tree care business designed to bring people and trees close together. Looking back now at nearly 60 years of age, I feel like one of the most fortunate people in the

Posted inMaria's Metro

Looking back with appreciation to friendships formed at Grady High School 41 years ago

It’s not like me to go to a horror movie at the Plaza Theatre at 11 on a Friday night.

In fact, it’s not like me to go to horror movies at all.

But there I was on Friday night going to see “The Commune,” an independent psychological thriller written and directed by Elisabeth Fies. The horror movie festival crowd was mixed in with the eclectic “Rocky Horror Picture Show” crowd, who were going to see the cult classic in the larger downstairs theater.

I was there for only one reason — to see Adrian Lee, who starred in “The Commune” as an earthy, twisted stepmother called Rhea.

Adrian and I met at Grady High School when we were both entering 8th grade. It was through Adrian that I met Francie

Posted inGuest Column

Shirley Franklin will leave the city in good shape for next mayor

By Guest Columnist JOHN AHMANN, executive director of the Atlanta Committee for Progress and owner of a public policy communications firm.

With the transition of the City of Atlanta’s Mayor and City Council just around the corner, what can we expect to find as our newly elected leaders turn their focus from running for office to running the City?

These new leaders will walk in the door armed with not only accurate information about the City’s cash flows and projected revenues and expenses for the coming fiscal year, but for the first time, financial projections for the next five years. Catching up with technology investments the private sector made years ago, the City recently completed the launch of an enterprise resource planning system. Akin to the quantum leap

Posted inMaria's Metro

State of Georgia is stuck in the mud while Atlanta region moves forward on transit

What a week.

It started off with U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood telling Georgia that it needs to get its act together when it comes to high-speed rail and transit.

Although LaHood didn’t tell us anything we didn’t already know, it’s always reaffirming to have the most powerful transportation official in the country tell state leaders that they’ve been asleep at the switch.

“There has to be a commitment by state government that transit is important,” LaHood, one of the key Republicans in President Barack Obama’s administration, said in an interview with Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Jay Bookman.

As we all know, the state of Georgia does not invest in MARTA,

Posted inMaria's Metro

Investing in the arts and the Woodruff Arts Center vital to Georgia’s economic future

When making the case for future investment in Atlanta’s cultural institutions, Joe Bankoff brings out the pictures.

Bankoff, president of the Woodruff Arts Center, shows a picture of MIdtown in 1968 soon after the $8 million Memorial Arts Center building was developed along Peachtree Street between 15th and 16th streets.

The photo shows the arts center located in a low-rise community surrounded by low-rise buildings and single-family homes. The first high-rise in the community came a year later — the first Colony Square tower.

And then Bankoff shows off his photos of Midtown today. It shows a cluster of skyscrapers all encircling the Woodruff Arts

Posted inGuest Column

Atlanta’s East Lake community shows what’s possible

By Guest Columnist MADELYN R. ADAMS, executive director of the East Lake Foundation

This week, golf fans all over the nation will focus their attention on Atlanta. Our own East Lake Golf Club will once again host THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola, the season-ending tournament for the PGA TOUR’s top 30 players.

While television viewers watch the world’s best golfers compete, they may also catch a glimpse of the neighborhood surrounding the historic golf club. They might notice East Lake’s new housing options, gleaming charter school and award-winning public golf course. What they may not know, though, is that there’s a lot more to East Lake than new buildings and green fairways.

Not all that long ago, the stories coming out of East

Posted inMaria's Metro

The building blocks for the Atlanta region begins with all our neighborhoods

The Atlanta region is really a mosaic of neighborhoods.

That was the underlying theme of the first annual Regional Neighborhood Summit held on Saturday at the Loudermilk Conference Center and put on by the Civic League for Regional Atlanta.

Surprisingly, nearly 500 people came on a beautiful Saturday to spend several hours indoors to meet their counterparts from throughout the region and exchange ideas on how to improve their communities.

“Where the action is these days is at the local neighborhood level and at the regional level,” said Myles Greene Smith, executive director of the Civic League. “We are trying to get

Posted inGuest Column

This Land is Our Land: Seeking Diversity in the Great Outdoors

By Guest Columnist AUDREY PETERMAN, president and co-founder of Earthwise Productions Inc., a consulting and publishing company. For 13 years, Audrey and her husband, Frank, have published the travel and environmental periodical: “Pickup & Go.”

“There is so much that can, and must be accomplished when we know what is happening to our environment and its direct impact on each of our lives. No one person, group or organization can bring about complete awareness and comprehensive change alone. . .”

That statement was made in 2006 in a letter sent to me, and my husband Frank by the Rev. Gerald Durley, a prominent Atlanta pastor.

Rev. Durley was explaining what inspired him to become “a missionary for the environment” after seeing

Posted inMaria's Metro

Dear state leaders: Half a penny for metro transportation just not worth the trouble

Just when you think it can’t get any worse…

For years, metro Atlanta has been seeking new funding for transportation. The last couple of years, the Atlanta region has been begging the state legislature for the right to pass a one-cent sales tax on itself to tackle its transportation problems.
But for the last two years, a proposed transportation funding bill has died in the last few hours of the session. This past session, it failed because the Senate favored a regional approach while the House favored a statewide sales tax, and the two houses couldn’t resolve their differences.

Such inaction infuriated metro Atlanta’s leaders. The business community even went so far as telling legislators that if they

Posted inGuest Column

Atlanta’s Non-teachable Moment; no leadership on race

By Guest Columnist JEREMY C. GARLINGTON, an Atlanta-based leadership consultant and publisher of “The Garlington Report.”

Call it the summer of racially tinged brew-ha-has.

The first featured a new president, a cop from Cambridge, Mass and an angry Harvard professor drinking beers in the Rose Garden and presenting an iconic image of a “teachable moment.”

After a sip or two, all seemed well again.

The local installment, which to date represents a “non-teachable moment,” is an incendiary memo that threatens to blow the cover off of Atlanta’s mayoral

Posted inMaria's Metro

Mayoral candidates can rise above racial tensions that have divided Atlanta in the past

For the past couple of months, I’ve been talking to the top candidates for Atlanta mayor about my concern that this could be the most divisive mayoral campaign in the past three decades.

I thought that a likely run-off election that is almost sure to include City Councilwoman Mary Norwood, who is white, and any of her opponents, all of whom are all black; that race would raise its ugly head.

Little did I expect that a major racial blow-up would happen several months before the general election on Nov. 3.

But that’s what happened this week when a position statement

Posted inMaria's Metro

AJC’s move from downtown to Dunwoody leaves more questions than answers

Sometimes being a journalist is a frustrating experience.

The goal is to find the answers to questions until a story makes sense.

But it’s not always easy getting answers. And even when answers are provided, some stories still leave more questions than answers.

Such a story is the recent news that the Atlanta Journal-Constitution is leaving downtown, its home for more than140 years, to move to a Dunwoody office building at 223 Perimeter Center Parkway, the former Southeast headquarters for Macy’s

Posted inGuest Column

Not quite “shovel ready” projects also need to be considered

By Guest Columnist HARRY WEST, professor of Practice for Georgia Tech’s Center for Quality Growth and Regional Development.

Appropriately so, both the term and measurement “shovel ready” has been applied to the selection of projects funded in the first round of federal stimulus spending. Getting the program underway with projects that could be implemented quickly had to be a priority.

As additional projects and programs are taken into account, time is available to consider other measurements in establishing selection priority. I am compelled to advocate funding the steps necessary to bring other needed projects to the point of being “shovel ready”.

Posted inMaria's Metro

Sorry Gov. Barnes; Our transit funds too precious to waste on elevated light rail

Finding the right transportation solution for metro Atlanta is getting harder by the day.

Take what former Gov. Roy Barnes told real estate agents last week. (I actually emailed the governor to make sure he was quoted accurately. Yes he was).

As Political Insider Jim Galloway reported in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Barnes said that MARTA should be preserved, but not expanded. Instead, the state should shift to a network of elevated light-rail lines that would run above metro Atlanta’s interstate system.

What has happened to our “smart growth” governor?

Gift this article