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The Ashe Advocate – January 11, 2008

Water, transportation, taxes top legislative agenda

By Rep. Kathy Ashe

This is my 17th session in the state House of Representatives, serving the City of Atlanta. It is a great honor and privilege to represent you at the State Capitol.

On Monday, January 14, members of the Georgia General Assembly will reconvene for our 2008 legislative session, with some very big issues to be addressed. Three of the issues that have dominated the news in the past several months are water, taxes and transportation.

Water. It is a shame that it has taken record drought conditions for our state government to get serious about the necessary steps to ensure we have an adequate water supply now and in the future. This crisis has shown that the metropolitan Atlanta area, with a population of 5 million, cannot depend on its current source of water under such conditions without dramatic conservation efforts. Water is already a very contentious issue between Georgia and our neighboring states of Alabama and Florida, and when the debate reaches the legislature, it is certain to pit various geographic areas of the state against one another. For more information, please visit the Georgia Water Council web site at www.georgiawatercouncil.org.

Taxes. House Speaker Glenn Richardson is proposing a drastic change in Georgia’s tax code, which would eliminate some property taxes at the state and local levels while levying a sales tax on many goods, services and transactions that are not presently taxed. Under the Speaker’s proposal, known as Georgia’s Repeal of Every Ad Valorem Tax (GREAT) Plan, the state government would then dole out revenues to local school boards, city and county governments to make up for lost property tax proceeds. This is a very controversial proposal that would require a constitutional amendment. For more information on the Speaker’s plan, visit www.thegreatplanforgeorgia.com and for an opposing view, visit www.gmanet.com/taxreform/.

Transportation. Georgia is facing a $20 billion funding shortfall for transportation projects that have already been approved over the next six years, according to the recent findings of a legislative study committee. That means the state must address this funding crisis simply to catch up with the maintenance and construction projects already scheduled across the state, many of which are vital to the metro Atlanta area, before we can talk seriously about any meaningful improvements to our transportation system. Unfortunately, the executive branch of state government has been asleep at the wheel on the transportation issue for the past five years while the situation has continued to worsen. For more on the severity of the transportation funding situation, visit www.gatransfunding.com.

Of course, there will be many other issues on our 2008 legislative agenda, and I hope to hear from you on these matters throughout the session.  Keep in touch!

  • Rep. Kathy Ashe (D-Atlanta) represents the 56th District (Fulton County) in the Georgia House of Representatives. Contact her at 409 Coverdell Office Building, Atlanta, GA  30334; by phone at 404-656-0116 or by e-mail at kathyashe56@mindspring.com.

 

 

 

 

Phone Numbers

Capitol: 404-656-0116

Fax: 404-463-2665
District: 404-892-6406
Fax: 404-875-0548

Capitol Address
409 Coverdell Office Building
Atlanta, GA 30334
District Address
82 Westminster Drive, NE
Atlanta, GA 30309-3329
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