Gov. Nathan Deal sought Wednesday to cast a hopeful tone over the future of transportation. The current reality is grim. For starters, starting June 1, Georgia is facing a $367.2 million shortfall in necessary federal transportation funds in the
“We are currently operating at a rate that requires over 50 years to resurface every state road in Georgia. If your road is paved when you graduate high school, by the time it is paved again you will be eligible for Social Security. federal fiscal year that ends Oct. 1, the state’s chief engineer told GRTA’s board of directors.
In his State of the State address, Deal suggested the state become less dependent on federal funds to pay for its transportation infrastructure. The governor didn’t mention a source for these new funds.
Deal’s prepared text outlines the transportation funding situation in terms aimed at every Georgian:
Georgia will fix and improve transportation infrastructure by raising its own money for projects, the governor said – as opposed to continuing to rely on federal assistance. From the prepared speech:
Other than saying Georgia should raise more of its own transportation funds, this was as close as the governor came to recommending how the state can come even close to raising the $1 billion or so, per year, that a consultant reported is needed to begin addressing the state’s transportation woes.
As Deal was delivering his remarks at the state Capitol, the GRTA board was receiving a detailed report on federal funding woes as presented by Meg Pirkle, chief engineer for Georgia Department of Transportation.
Pirkle described the federal funding process and concluded with information on the impact on Georgia of the congressional impasse on transportation funding.
The country is now operating with a federal transportation funding program that expires May 31.
Congress has disagreed for years on a way to pay for transportation infrastructure. The latest showdown ended in July 2014 with a short-term resolution that allotted nearly $11 billion.
President Obama has delivered a $302 billion proposal that would extend four years. Congress can’t agree on Obama’s source of transportation funding – corporate tax reform – and deferred a decision until after the 2014 elections.
Georgia has new reason to hope the state’s affairs will get more attention in Congress, according to Matt Markham, GRTA’s chief of external affairs.
Markham noted that U.S. Rep. Rob Woodall (R-Ga.) was appointed in December to the House Transportation Committee. Woodall serves the 7th District, which covers portions of Gwinnett and Forsyth counties, from Norcross to Cumming to Dacula.
“Having a Georgian on the federal Transportation Committee … will be a very valuable asset for Georgia,” Markham told the GRTA board. “There are a lot of important issues and topics that it’s important for our voice to be heard on.”
Woodall has not yet been assigned to a subcommittee, according to the Transportation Committee’s website. Subcommittee chairmen were announced Tuesday.
Woodall’s communications director did not return a phone call seeking comment. The Transportation Committee did not respond to an email seeking comment.