By Taylor Anderson, PE on May 24, 2009
It seems the timing on my first infrastructure post was impeccable. GDOT announced on Thursday that it would seek federal funding for rail. It even cleared up my question, to a degree, on where the missing link from Louisville to Atlanta was. Well, President Obama’s plan has it missing, but apparently the various state DOTs [...]
Posted in public | Tagged georgia dot, infrastructure, rail, transportation
By Taylor Anderson, PE on May 18, 2009
Metro-Atlanta was not geographically located very well for the now 5.7+ million inhabitants that call it home. First, the only major water source is the Chattahoochee River, a very small river by drainage basin standards, especially where it feeds metro-Atlanta’s primary drinking source – Lake Lanier. The topography is extreme for a large city – [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, balancing law, georgia dot, infrastructure, rail, transportation
By Taylor Anderson, PE on December 15, 2008
As with many things that government does, laws with good intentions often have very bad consequences. Such was the case of Georgia’s “Balancing Law” – the law which requires that equal amounts of Georgia Department of Transportation’s budget be spent equally among the states 13 congressional districts.
Taking a look at Georgia’s congressional district map, you [...]
Posted in public | Tagged atlanta, balancing law, georgia dot, infrastructure