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SENATE BILL 5 IS A
STINKER
Alpharetta Republican
State Senator Dan Moody is either smarter than the average bear, or he has
a serious political death wish. Since I come in contact with a lot of
bears around Big Canoe and have developed a keen sense of their IQ, I must
assume the latter — that Moody is looking to get out of politics and
into the private sector as quickly as possible. He is riding just the
horse that will help him do that. It is called Senate Bill 5.
Moody is the sponsor,
along with State Senate President Pro-Tem Eric Johnson of Savannah, of the
grandly titled Georgia Public/Private Infrastructure Act, which they say
will expand public-private partnerships to deal with water, transportation
and other infrastructure issues without putting the burden on the
taxpayers of Georgia. Alas, the bill has caused an uproar that can be
heard from Tybee Light to Rabun Gap.
I don’t believe this
is what Gov. Sonny Perdue and House Speaker Glenn Richardson had in mind
when they said that this session of the General Assembly — the first under
Republican control since Reconstruction — was going to be a quiet affair.
Conduct a little business, approve the budget, have a couple of soda pops
and get out of town. I think somebody got caught trying to sneak a sunrise
by a rooster.
Johnson says Senate
Bill 5 “proposes a sensible way to meet the needs of the citizens of
Georgia in coming years without having to implement tax increases at the
state and local levels.” The bill is designed to interest private
developers to get involved in public projects — like toll roads, jail
houses, sewage plants, etc. The government provides the land. The
developer builds and operates the project until it has made its money back
and then turns it over to the government.
Maybe it is what the
senators don’t say that is causing such a ruckus. In order for private
enterprise to develop a project, the government can use its powers of
eminent domain to seize our property and then turn it over to the
developers. And did I mention that the government is not required to
select the lowest bidder and that negotiations with the developers do not
have to be made public until a deal has already been reached? I don’t know
about you, but I like to know what is going on in government while it is
going on, not after the fact.
Sam Griffin, publisher
of the Bainbridge Post-Searchlight, can turn a phrase better than Emeril
can turn a pot roast. Griffin calls the bill “the most outrageously
repugnant piece of legislative claptrap since the Yazoo Land Fraud. If
Gov. Perdue and responsible Republican leadership do not immediately
repudiate, quash and bury forever this travesty, folks will soon be
hunting down the Georgia GOP with dogs.”
The Savannah Morning
News, the hometown paper of Sen. Johnson, says, “This bill is so far
removed from responsible, conservative government that it makes one wonder
if a project is already in the works but needs eminent domain to succeed.
It’s odd to see Mr. Johnson take the lead on a measure that would allow
such government intrusion.”
Johnson Moody et al.
are telling us to trust government to do the right thing for us. Sorry,
guys. No can do. Not when you are meeting behind closed doors. That is why
we have Sunshine Laws and Open Records Laws: to ensure that government
does the public’s business in public. How do I know that some developer
won’t be dropping a few coins in some official’s pocket to grease a
project? And what is wrong with picking the lowest bidder?
Hopefully, Sens. Moody
and Johnson are up to taking some friendly advice from a bystander: From
what I can tell, you either have a good bill that you have totally
fumbled, or you have a bad bill that is nothing more than a sop to a bunch
of developer buddies. Either way, if it looks like a skunk and smells like
a skunk, it is definitely a skunk. There is no question that Senate Bill 5
is a stinker.
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