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December 21, 2005
Stop I-3 partners with SAFC
December 14, 2005
Stop I-3 Petition Drive Underway
September 7, 2005
Stop I-3 Coalition calls on Congress to redirect
highway money to Gulf reconstruction
August 24, 2005
Mountain residents raise common-sense questions
and concerns about Interstate
August 8, 2005
Norwood goes into "neutral" on I-3 for
constituents in Georgia mountains
August 4, 2005
White County Commissioners Take Strong Stand, Oppose
Interstate 3
July 27, 2005
Federal studies cast doubt on economic benefit of
Interstates
July 26, 2005
Mountain communities organize to fight new interstate
highway
July 9, 2005
Rabun commissioners declare unanimous opposition
to Interstate
July 4, 2005
Rabun residents form Stop I-3 chapter,
Urge large turn-out at board meet Thursday
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For immediate release, August 24, 2005
Mountain residents raise common-sense questions
and concerns about Interstate
About
600 area residents recently attended public meetings in Murphy,
North Carolina, and Cleveland, Georgia, to raise questions
and learn more about the proposed Interstate highway that
would cut through the mountains of Southern Appalachia.
Big turnouts are testament to the deep concern
the proposed Interstate 3 is generating in this area, said
Elizabeth Wells, chairperson of the Stop I-3 Coalition.
These are our neighbors and friends, hard-working,
salt-of-the-earth kind of people who do not understand why
our government wants to push such a huge, destructive roadway
through areas that neither want nor need it, she said.
The proposed I-3 would cut through the mountains, inevitably,
on its way from Savannah to Knoxville.
The
program in Cleveland Tuesday evening, for example, included
testimony from a panel of southeastern residents and experts
on the environmental, economic, archeological and nuclear
transport impacts of the proposed road, which would clear-cut
a swath of Southern Appalachia about three and one-third football
fields wide.
Elected state representatives at both meetings, State Sen.
John Snow in North Carolina and Rep. Charles Jenkins in Georgia,
also voiced strong opposition to the road.
Tharon Johnson, representing U.S. Rep. John Barrow from
Georgias 12th District, was the only Congressional representative
at the meeting in Cleveland on Tuesday. By contrast, North
Carolinas two U.S. Senators and Rep. Charles Taylor
sent spokesmen to the meeting in Hayesville.
Barrow supports construction of I-3 from Savannah to Augusta,
but not north of Augusta, Johnson said. Barrow clearly understands
the difficulties of trying to put an Interstate through the
Blue Ridge and Smoky Mountains, he said. Barrow won election
last year over Max Burns, who, along with former U.S. Sen.
Zell Miller, was the original architect of the I-3 plans.
The Georgia Congressmen pushing the hardest for the road,
Rep. Charlie Norwood, and U.S. Sens. Saxby Chambliss and Johnny
Isakson, were not to be seen at either meeting. Isakson did
respond with a letter read to the assembled crowd in Cleveland.
Dr. Wells explained that Congressman Barrows
office has by far been the most cooperative in sharing information
and working with us on the I-3 issue. I look forward to being
able to establish similar relationships with other senators
and representatives.
By contrast, one of the main proponents pushing for this
road, U.S. Rep. Charlie Norwood, is going before small groups,
as he did with Habersham County officials last week, alleging
that unnamed fringe groups were out there
scaring your constituents with misinformation.
From
the beginning, the Stop I-3 Coalition has organized to educate
ourselves and the public on the numerous issues surrounding
this project, Wells said. If Mr. Norwood feels
that citizens of a free nation examining the environmental,
economic, cultural, historical and archaeological impacts
as well as the nuclear transport issues of an interstate through
the Blue Ridge and Smoky Mountains is inappropriate or designed
to scare people, we have a long way to go to find grounds
for dialogue.
We wonder why Mr. Norwood views the likes of the Appalachian
Trail Conservancy, the Clayton Womans Club and the Upper
Chattahoochee Riverkeeper as out of the mainstream,
she added. These groups are among the more than 16 community
and conservation groups that have come forward in support
of the Stop I-3 Coalition. (Click
here for a complete list of supporting organizations)
The hundreds of people in attendance at the public hearings
in Murphy and Cleveland included farmers, veterans, business
owners, retirees, preachers, professionals, builders and many
homeowners who do not want to see the mountains ruined.
Wells concluded: The two real questions to be asked
are: Who wants this interstate and why? How can the democratic
process possibly work unless everyone involved is willing
to come to the table to listen and share information? Especially
someone who has been elected to the title of U.S. Representative.
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