Tag Archives: LAKE
T-SPLOST Referendum in 2012 —Corey Hull (Part 6)
OK, so
the regional executive committee selects from the T-SPLOST lists
submitted by the local jurisdications and boomaranged through GDOT.
Then what?
Corey Hull of VLMPO says:
Public meetings will be held in August and September before the regional transportation roundtable meets before October 15th; that’s what their deadline is to vote….Here’s the video:The referendum will be in the summer of 2012 … July or August 2012….
Then the tax begins January 2013.
Corey Hull of the Valdosta-Lowndes County Metropolitan Planning Organization (VLMPO)
explains T-SPLOST (HB 277) and the Transportation Investment Act of 2010
at the monthly meeting of the Lowndes County Democratic Party (LCDP),
Gretchen Quarterman (Chair), Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia.
Video by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
- Part 1: T-SPLOST Explained —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP
- Part 2: T-SPLOST Business plan —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP
- Part 3: T-SPLOST Project Lists —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP
- Part 4: T-SPLOST Penalties and LMIG —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP
- Part 5: T-SPLOST Projects to GDOT —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP
- Part 6: T-SPLOST Referendum in 2012 —Corey Hull
Next: Ashley Paulk talks about the T-SPLOST executive committee.
-jsq
T-SPLOST Projects to GDOT —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP (Part 5)
Corey Hull of VLMPO explains that next they go to GDOT and then back.
Here’s the video:On April 13th we have to turn those projects in to the Georgia Department of Transportation.
…
On June 1st or thereabouts, the executive committee that Chairman Paulk is on is gonna receive the unconstrained project list. It won’t be … constrained to the amount of money the economists say we will receive.
…
It is that executive committee’s responsibility to go through and select projects and select the projects off that we can afford for the region.
Corey Hull of the Valdosta-Lowndes County Metropolitan Planning Organization (VLMPO)
explains T-SPLOST (HB 277) and the Transportation Investment Act of 2010
at the monthly meeting of the Lowndes County Democratic Party (LCDP),
Gretchen Quarterman (Chair), Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia.
Video by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
Next: Referendum in 2012.
-jsq
T-SPLOST Penalties and LMIG —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP (Part 4)
That’s Local Maintenance and Improvement Grant Program (LMIG). So if they get $100,000 from LMIG they’ll have to match that with $50,000. This will affect smaller communities the most, since they use the most LMIG funds proportionally. And the most likely way to raise the funds to match is to raise property taxes.If the regional transportation roundtable does not agree on a list to present to the voters by October 15th of 2011, then each jurisdiction in this region must match their Local Maintenance and Improvement Grant … at a rate of 50%.
So what if there is a list on the ballot but the voters vote it down? Continue reading
Concerned for the community and get up and leave in the middle of the meeting? –Scott Orenstein
There’s more, but I’m not going to transcribe it all; listen for yourself:…spirit of concern and participation in the community. I’d just like the videographer to pan around and see how many people are still here at the conclusion of the meeting. And then talk about their true concern for the community. Are they really concerned when they get up and leave in the middle of the meeting?
Regular monthly meeting of the Valdosta City Council (VCC),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 7 April 2011,
Videos by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
The mayor re-opened Citizens to Be Heard at the end of the meeting so Continue reading
What happens at the end of a Valdosta City Council meeting?
Regular monthly meeting of the Valdosta City Council (VCC),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 7 April 2011,
Videos by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
Adjournment!
Little joke there.
But adjournment is not the end of interacting with the city government at a city council meeting.
For example,
Council Deidra White stopped on the steps of City Hall
to talk to people.
Three people were there.
All of us lived in the county outside Valdosta.
Not a single person who lives in Valdosta stayed
to talk to her.
Among other things, she said she thought she made clear at the end of the last Council meeting that the mayor didn’t speak for her. That was at the end of the meeting, in the “Council Comments” item on the agenda. However, apparently nobody stayed to hear that, either.
-jsq
T-SPLOST Project Lists —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP (Part 3)
The 75% pot of T-SPLOST funds is what the project lists recently
submitted by Lowndes County
and the City of Valdosta are about,
according to
Corey Hull, continuing his presentation on T-SPLOST at the Lowndes County
Democratic Party (LCDP) meeting.
Those are projects of regional significance that the local jurisdictions want the voters to actually vote on that project.The other 25% goes to local jurisdictions, like this:
| $1,300,000 | Lowndes County (unincorporated portion) |
| $600,000 | Valdosta |
| $30,000 | Hahira |
| $5,000 | Dasher |
| $14,000 | Lake Park |
| $9,000 | Remerton |
Here’s the video:
Corey Hull of the Valdosta-Lowndes County Metropolitan Planning Organization (VLMPO)
explains T-SPLOST (HB 277) and the Transportation Investment Act of 2010
at the monthly meeting of the Lowndes County Democratic Party (LCDP),
Gretchen Quarterman (Chair), Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia.
Video by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
Next: penalties if the voters don’t approve.
-jsq
Continuing:
You might be surprised how many other people think this plant will
never be built.
Ashley Paulk told me
Continue reading
My opinion is
the same as I posted last month:
“Black and white, young and old, conservative and liberal, college professors and unemployed”.
Come see for yourself
today outside Valdosta City Hall starting at 5PM.
-jsq
T-SPLOST Business plan —Corey Hull of VLMPO at LCDP (Part 2)
Corey Hull continued
his presentation on T-SPLOST at the Lowndes County
Democratic Party (LCDP) meeting by talking about
the statewide business plan for the state of Georgia.
It is not a project list; it’s estimates of how much money is needed
and how much money can be raised.
The plan identifies
$35 billion to meet the needs in Georgia today.
However, $72 billion are needed to meet the transportation
needs to sustain Georgia’s economy into the future.
Of course, that’s according to the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT),
which notoriously is not interested in trains or other mass transit:
if it’s not a road or a road bridge, forget it.
And $1 billion is needed here in Lowndes County.
Lowndes County’s transportation plan through the
Metropolitan Planning Organization
has about a billion dollars in projects.
A billion dollars right here in Lowndes County?
Continue reading
When the biomass plant is cancelled —John S. Quarterman
I applaud the activism of
the many and varied biomass opponents!
Let me repeat my prediction: the biomass plant will never be built.
That’s no reason to stop doing what you’re doing.
You know opposition is having an effect when
VLCIA repeatedly denies it.
Let’s see these “many” biomass opponents
With no pro-biomass demonstrators anywhere to be seen.
Sure, a few people show up at government meetings to speak for the
biomass plant, but by my tally they are indeed very few,
and most of them are either former employees or board members
of the Industrial Authority.
Yes, LAKE has posted videos of
them, as well:
Ken Garren,
Nolen Cox.
Crawford Powell.
Or watch the people at the microphones during the
6 December 2011 VLCIA biomass “forum”
and see what you think the ratio is.
at the 23 February 2011 Wiregrass Solar groundbreaking:
“Biomass no, solar yes” —Kathryn Grant
at the
15 March 2011 VLCIA board meeting:
“We’re here to protest against biomass. We wish Brad Lofton well in his new job, but we want biomass to go as well.” —Michael Noll
at the
24 March 2011 Valdosta City Council meeting.
“Ban the Burn; Go 100% Solar” —Jack Pruden


