Politics & Government

Gwinnett Wants 2014 SPLOST to Be 70-75% for Transportation

Three- or five-year durations are considered. Final decisions would be made in July.

Gwinnett County wants a 2014 SPLOST program to be devoted 70-75 percent to transportation projects, and estimates that a five-year program could generate as much as $889 million, officials said Tuesday.

At a special city-county meeting to formally begin the process, Commission Chairman Charlotte Nash said a timetable for calling for a public vote would be July 16 -- the Board of Commissioners' final meeting that month. By that time, county and city officials could have an agreement in place.

A vote on whether the public wants to renew the current 1 percent Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax which expires in 2013, would be Nov. 5.

Find out what's happening in Loganville-Graysonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

However, the length of the new tax still is up in the air. County Finance Director Maria Woods said a three-year tax would put the county on the presidential election cycle. A five-year tax would put Gwinnett on the Georgia gubernatorial election cycle.

A three-year tax could generate up to $498 million, Woods estimated.

Find out what's happening in Loganville-Graysonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

No matter what, Nash knows that county and city officials have a selling job to do with voters.

"In my 35 years with county government ... I've never seen quite as much of a negative attitude toward government as I'm seeing now," Nash told representatives of Gwinnett cities who attended the meeting at Gwinnett Justice and Administration Center in Lawrenceville.

-- Patch will have more information on a potential 2014 SPLOST vote for Gwinnett.

Do you favor a new SPLOST for Gwinnett? Three or five years?

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