Trimmel Gomes
04 Aug 2022, 15:29 GMT+10
President Joe Biden's bipartisan infrastructure law will disburse up to $239 million to help Georgia improve the resilience of transportation infrastructure.
Environmental groups are urging state leaders to focus on rural communities, beyond Atlanta. Severe weather events in recent years, like flooding in the southeastern part of the state and Hurricane Zeta, are evidence enough that infrastructure funding should include climate preparedness, says Marsha Gosier with the E-D-F Action Fund, part of the Environmental Defense Fund. She says she's most concerned about rural and coastal areas.
"Our submerging lowlands throughout Georgia, the coastal flooding that could occur in particular areas like Hudson Hill and Savannah, Georgia - money should definitely be placed for that in preparation, making sure that those communities are prepared," Gosier said Wednesday
Before the federal dollars were released, Republicans bristled over restrictions. They wanted more flexibility for using the funding, instead of the Biden administration's focus on improving existing infrastructure over creating new. The Atlanta Regional Commission is set to host the Connect A-T-L summit on Tuesday, August 23rd, at the Georgia Tech Hotel and Conference Center. The topic will be making the city's transportation network smarter, better connected and electric.
Gosier says she'd like to see the kind of focus happening in Atlanta in more rural areas, and is calling on state leaders to support local towns and counties to be just as innovative. But, she quips, many rural Georgians also need the basics - like clean running water - as well as electric vehicle charging stations.
"When we think about lead pipes needing to be replaced in communities, you know, it's not just impacting Flint, Michigan. This is something that is an issue all throughout the state of Georgia, and especially in rural areas," she said.
The new PROTECT Formula program funding - short for Promoting Resilient Operations for Transformative, Efficient, and Cost-Saving Transportation - is available to states over five years. The Atlanta Regional Commission plans to use it's $45 million to pay for electric buses and charging stations, upgrades to transit infrastructure in Cobb and Clayton counties, and road improvements.
Source: Georgia News Connection
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