12/12/07, Knoxville News Sentinel
DOE
incinerator down as waste concerns go up
12/7/07,
The Daily News Journal
Europe should
handle its own nuclear waste
10/19/07
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
The
profit-hungry in Ga. soon might thirst
9/20/07
Towns County Herald
Letter from Paul Broun, US Rep, 10th District, GA
9/11/07
Columbia County News-Times
Comments
omitted sponsorship of CLEAR Act, 'could mislead' on I-3
From U.S. Rep. Paul C. Broun
8/28/07
The Northeast Georgian
Come Together Now to Stop a Potential
Disaster
8/24/07
Winston-Salem Journal
Transportation
Crisis
08/16/07
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Commuter
rail part of solution
6/2/07
Many reasons, one message: "Leave
Our Mountains Alone!"
1/12/07
The Northeast Georgian
Highway 17 is a treasure and should
be preserved
11/20/06
Metro Pulse (Knoxville)
North
Shore Road, I-3 are "Nowhere"
10/11/06
Cherokee Sentinel
Interstate
3: Not dead yet
1/26/06
White County News-Telegraph
Billy Jenkins' I-3 route? Horrible
1/26/06
White County News-Telegraph
I-3 is all about ... Chinese
imports?
1/26/06
White County News-Telegraph
Protests might alter I-3 route
12/20/05 - Athens Banner-Herald
Proposed
Interstate 3 would hinder growth
10/17/05
The Gainesville Times
Rebuild
for the residents, not political pork, profits
10/18/05
The Northeast Georgian
Time to rechannel money
10/16/05
Interstate-3: The Impact on Our Neotropical
Migratory Birds
10/8/05
White County News-Telegraph
Spend some of gas tax money on
economically viable projects
10/8/05
White County News-Telegraph
Do interstates really bring new
business?
10/8/05
White County News-Telegraph
Save mountains for future generations
to enjoy
10/4/05
The Northeast Georgian
Use I-3 money to help Gulf Coast
9/29/05
Towns County Sentinel
Letter to the Editor
9/16/05
The Northeast Georgian
Who wants proposed interstate and
why?
9/7/05
White County News-Telegraph
Reasons for interstate are not justified
9/5/05
The Gainesville Times
Do not shift nuclear transit to
other highways
8/22/05
Biker Outraged
7/7/05
The Clayton Tibune
Our True Wealth
7/5/05
The Northeast Georgian
Pull together to defeat I-3
6/24/05
The Northeast Georgian
Use I-3 money to address safety
6/24/05
The Northeast Georgian
Interstate will increase pollution
and traffic
6/23/05
White County News-Telegraph
Stop 1-3 Before It Gets Started
6/10/05
The Northeast Georgian
I-3: Just say "no"
6/10/05
The Northeast Georgian
Interstate 3 is unneeded, unwanted
6/10/05
The Northeast Georgian
Don't let interstate rip through
county
6/7/05
The Northeast Georgian
Why spoil a good thing?
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I-3:
Just say 'no'
by Jenée Wilde, The
Northeast Georgian
June 10, 2005
Reactions have been consistent from people I've spoken with
about the federal government's proposal to build an interstate
freeway along Highway 17: First they're shocked, then they're
dismayed.
While officials in Georgia's economically-depressed flatlands
may thrill at the prospect of commerce and jobs brought by
a freeway route, I shudder at the thought of our quiet mountain
lifestyle destroyed.
Yes, Interstate 3 would bring economic development to the
area, but at what cost?
Studies have shown that 80 percent of jobs in America are
located within five miles of an interstate. Think about it.
That's a ten-mile swath through the county guaranteed to collect
shopping malls, convenience stores, hotels and warehouses
(not to mention congestion, noise and pollution). Ballooning
out from that, don't forget, are the subdivisions, grocery
stores, pharmacies, and additional convenience stores that
serve all the busy workers that serve the interstate. Call
it a 20 mile-wide stain of "economic progress."
Now, imagine that morass of densely-packed development overlaid
on our quiet country Highway 17 as it meanders through quaint
Clarkesville and picturesque Nacoochee Valley. Starting to
get the picture?
For more than a decade, the thrust of Habersham's land use
planning has been this: high-intensity industry and commerce
in the south end; land conservation and low-intensity development
in the north. Can you imagine what a lugwrench in the works
of our land use plan this interstate will be? If the feasibility
study determines the freeway should follow Highway 17 in the
north, our county's land use regulations will be rendered
useless, trampled on by the interests of giant-sized business
and politics. They don't care about our county; they only
want to get the goods from the port of Savannah to the Midwest
without Atlanta's traffic hassle.
What makes Habersham – indeed, all our Northeast Georgia
counties – unique is our quality of life. We have the
beauty and quiet of mountain living unspoiled by congestion
and sprawl. We want economic development to support our inevitable
growth, but we want it our way – planned, controlled;
not forced on us by Brobdingnagian corporations and politicians
so focused on stepping over the Appalachians they can't hear
the squeals of the Lilliputions they squash along the way.
Our county government's motto calls Habersham the "Heart
of the Georgia Mountains." Our two major arteries –
Highways 365 and 441 – have open access, allowing freedom
of movement to other roads and lanes like veins and capillaries
in that heart.
Interstate 3 will sever those capillaries, dividing north
from south and ending our freedom of movement. Local traffic
will be squeezed through overpasses like constricted valves.
Land developers will fatten on a commercial feeding frenzy
while the life slowly suffocates from the area. By consuming
this "windfall" of economic development, the county
will become a wheezing, lumbering, unhealthy step-child of
metropolitan Atlanta. In very little time, heart disease will
kill the "Heart of the Georgia Mountains."If you
don't believe me, just look south to where the giants have
already had their way.Unless conserned citizens make known
very soon their disagreement with the proposed interstate,
momentum alone with carry it through. Funding for the feasibility
study has passed both the House and the Senate; President
Bush should see it on his desk by July. Once signed, it's
as good as done. Look for bulldozers in your back yard in
about five years.If you want our county to have a say in its
future, call or write State Rep. Ben Bridges, State Sen. Nancy
Schaefer, U.S. Congressman Charlie Norwood and U.S. Sen. Saxby
Chambliss and tell them what you think. Encourage our elected
officials let their voices be heard, as well. After all, the
Lilliputians did manage to vote Gulliver off the island.
Jenée Wilde is a staff reporter for The Northeast
Georgian.
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