That’s how opponents of the statewide one-cent sales tax have branded the bill. If passed and approved by voters on the 2010 ballot, the tax could generate an estimated $25 billion over the next 10 years for a list of transportation projects that include oodles of sure-to-become-congested-in-five-minutes roads.
Dick Pettys of Insider Advantage reports:
The proposed constitutional amendment, to be voted on at the November 2010 ballot, needed 120 votes to pass, and easily cleared that mark 151-15. It now goes to the Senate, which prefers and has passed a counter proposal to allow regions to propose and seek to pass local option sales taxes for transportation.
Tuesday’s vote marked the first time in the two-year struggle to pass a new transportation funding mechanism by the Legislature that the statewide concept, backed strongly by House leaders, had come to a vote. Last session, a similar measure also was proposed but GOP leaders lacked the votes and did not put it to the floor.
Now, House and Senate leaders are positioned to try to determine anew if they can settle the long-standing debate over whether to pass the House-preferred statewide sales tax or the Senate-favored local option, regional approach.
Pettys has much more information on the bill’s passage, including the rundown on amendments tacked on at the last minute. Jim Galloway of the AJC says one of those amendments could turn into a political mess. Galloway, who says he’s no lawyer (LIES!), thinks one amendment spells out where the House stands on Gov. Sonny Perdue’s plan to gut the Georgia Department of Transportation.
Regardless, if lawmakers fail to agree on something, we’ll all still be stuck in traffic and wishing for better transit. And that’s what this issue’s about.