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Midtown Neighbors’ Association – Do You Really Know What’s Going On in Your Neighborhood?

July 1, 2011 by Thom Abbott

Midtown Neighbors AssociationThis post is inspired on a number of fronts. I’ve always been one to be involved. I was President of my 4-H club in high school. I was the school store manager in high school. In college I was involved in Gourmet Night, a huge event the students hosted each year, one year as the Controller managing the $18,000 budget for the event and another year as Director of Marketing, handling all those aspects, including the coveted guest list and seating arrangements. (Kinda like seating for the Academy Awards I guess…)

As of late, I’ve been involved in my community, Midtown Atlanta. I was on the Board of Directors for almost 3 years until I needed a break and had to step away. I did that this past December. Last night (June 30) was my first opportunity to return to a Board Meeting. Wow. What an eye-opening experience it was to be in the audience and watch what I use to participate in with vigor.

Mind you, except for one Land Use applicant, I was the only person in the audience.

Which brings me to the question, Do You Really Know What’s Going On in Your Neighborhood?

During my time on the MNA Board, I was often very frustrated at the lack of interest in residents of the neighborhood to become involved in any form or fashion with what was going on in the neighborhood. Yet, later when a special event is held the complaints roll in. Ah….and you were WHERE when this application was being considered? But, that leads to yet another question…Did you even KNOW what was being proposed?

I listed to Board Members whom are not even property owners (yep, you can be on the Board of the association, make decisions that affect the quality of life yet not have to own property) talk about special event applications with little regard for the residents which will be most directly affected. Two condominium communities that will be directly affected by a proposed event have not even been contacted by the association OR the event planners themselves. I raised this very question and it was kind of like…”whatever….”

It might be kind of hard to know what’s going on if the information is not forthcoming.

The neighborhood association maintains a website, but it can be lacking in information, or at least require some serious digging to find out what may be happening. A visit to the website this morning did find the most recent approved minutes on the website. At least this is a source for residents to get information, but keep in mind, it’s almost a month old. (May meeting minutes were just approved last night, so not sure when they will appear on the website, but they are already 30 days old.)

Guy with a QuestionSo, I wonder why people don’t become involved in their community? I noticed this not only in the entire community, but inside the condominium communities as well. Remember, each condo building has it’s one “organizational structure” with a Board, Property Manager, etc.

I often wonder the results a community would see if more of its residents became involved in the process.

Do You Really Know What’s Going On in Your Neighborhood?

Filed Under: Midtown Atlanta News and Events, Random Topics Tagged With: Midtown Neighbors' Association, News, odds and ends

Midtown Neighbors' Association – Do You Really Know What's Going On in Your Neighborhood?

July 1, 2011 by Thom Abbott

Midtown Neighbors AssociationThis post is inspired on a number of fronts. I’ve always been one to be involved. I was President of my 4-H club in high school. I was the school store manager in high school. In college I was involved in Gourmet Night, a huge event the students hosted each year, one year as the Controller managing the $18,000 budget for the event and another year as Director of Marketing, handling all those aspects, including the coveted guest list and seating arrangements. (Kinda like seating for the Academy Awards I guess…)

As of late, I’ve been involved in my community, Midtown Atlanta. I was on the Board of Directors for almost 3 years until I needed a break and had to step away. I did that this past December. Last night (June 30) was my first opportunity to return to a Board Meeting. Wow. What an eye-opening experience it was to be in the audience and watch what I use to participate in with vigor.

Mind you, except for one Land Use applicant, I was the only person in the audience.

Which brings me to the question, Do You Really Know What’s Going On in Your Neighborhood?

During my time on the MNA Board, I was often very frustrated at the lack of interest in residents of the neighborhood to become involved in any form or fashion with what was going on in the neighborhood. Yet, later when a special event is held the complaints roll in. Ah….and you were WHERE when this application was being considered? But, that leads to yet another question…Did you even KNOW what was being proposed?

I listed to Board Members whom are not even property owners (yep, you can be on the Board of the association, make decisions that affect the quality of life yet not have to own property) talk about special event applications with little regard for the residents which will be most directly affected. Two condominium communities that will be directly affected by a proposed event have not even been contacted by the association OR the event planners themselves. I raised this very question and it was kind of like…”whatever….”

It might be kind of hard to know what’s going on if the information is not forthcoming.

The neighborhood association maintains a website, but it can be lacking in information, or at least require some serious digging to find out what may be happening. A visit to the website this morning did find the most recent approved minutes on the website. At least this is a source for residents to get information, but keep in mind, it’s almost a month old. (May meeting minutes were just approved last night, so not sure when they will appear on the website, but they are already 30 days old.)

Guy with a QuestionSo, I wonder why people don’t become involved in their community? I noticed this not only in the entire community, but inside the condominium communities as well. Remember, each condo building has it’s one “organizational structure” with a Board, Property Manager, etc.

I often wonder the results a community would see if more of its residents became involved in the process.

Do You Really Know What’s Going On in Your Neighborhood?

Filed Under: Midtown Atlanta News and Events, Random Topics Tagged With: Midtown Neighbors' Association, News, odds and ends

$5.6 Million Meant for Atlanta's Streetcars Already Spent

June 2, 2011 by Thom Abbott

Oh yeah…and just where IS that missing $6M going to come from to build this streetcar from Downtown to the King Center. Many already questioned the construction of the line, since it will do absolutely NOTHING to ease the grid-lock traffic that Atlanta is experiencing. I’ll be following this story for sure! ~~~Thom Abbott

$5.6 Million Meant for Atlanta’s Streetcars Already Spent

Updated: Wednesday, 01 Jun 2011, 7:33 PM EDT
Published : Wednesday, 01 Jun 2011, 7:33 PM EDT

  • Aungelique ProctorAungelique
    Proctor

By MYFOXATLANTA STAFF/myfoxatlanta

Atlanta Streetcar Example
Streetcar in Portland, OR

ATLANTA, Ga. – The highly-anticipated downtown Atlanta streetcar project is having trouble getting off the ground. The city was supposed to come up with nearly $6 million toward the project, but that money is long gone.

Council Member Felicia Moore told FOX 5’s Aungelique Proctor that the $5.6 million that was supposed to go to the streetcar project was instead spent two years ago by former Mayor Shirley Franklin. Moore says it was used in 2009 for public safety purposes to close the budget gap.

The city is launching two investigations into how the mistake could have occurred. One is being conducted by the auditors, and another by the law department.

The federal government has already given the city $47 million in federal stimulus money for the streetcar project, and now the mayor’s office is left scrambling to find the money they need somewhere else. A representative from the mayor’s office tells FOX 5 they do have a plan, and that they hope to sell some prime real estate in midtown in order to come up with the money needed to fund their portion of the streetcar project.

The project is supposed to be completed in the summer of 2012. The planned 2.6 mile line would run from The King Center to Centennial Olympic Park, and it would bring 2,000 jobs with it.

Councilman C.T. Martin says he looks forward to finding out how the mistake was made.

 

via myfoxatlanta.com

 

Filed Under: Interesting Stories, Midtown Atlanta News and Events Tagged With: atlanta traffic, News, odds and ends

Atlanta at Heart of Area’s Transit Issues  

May 24, 2011 by Thom Abbott

 

This article appeared in the AJC on Sunday, May 22.

A good point is made….Will Atlanta and the surrounding 10 metro counties that have to vote to approve the transportation referendum in 2012 have a clear understanding of what the money is going to do and how it’s going to help them and improve Atlanta’s quality of life as well as keep us competitive as a place to draw more people and corporate headquarters to?

Thom Abbott

 

By Ernie Suggs — The Atlanta Journa-Constitution

The Downtown Connector I-75/85

Every day, Atlanta’s population more than doubles to more than 1.2 million people as workers, shoppers and entertainment seekers pour into the city in cars or via mass transit, according to city officials.

In many ways, Atlanta — where three major interstates and two major railroad networks converge — lies at the heart of the region’s traffic grid. It has always struggled to maintain and expand interstate and transit systems that link the metro counties and move their residents.

Officials in the capital city are banking on the money raised by the 2012 transportation referendum’s 1-cent tax, if the 10-county region passes it, to pump millions of dollars into the MARTA system, to fix bridges and roads, to accelerate the completion of the Atlanta Beltline. Of course, how many of Atlanta’s suggestions make it to a final project list has yet to be seen.

Other people question whether Atlanta voters who already are paying a 1-cent MARTA tax will want to spend more. Atlanta has an 8 percent sales tax, one of the highest in the state. If the referendum passes, that would jump to 9 percent.

For the rest of the AJC article, please click here.

Filed Under: Midtown Atlanta News and Events Tagged With: News

Planned GA400 Interchange Wins Neighborhood Approval

April 30, 2011 by Thom Abbott

Have you ever tried to navigate the Lenox Road/Buford Highway/Sidney Marcus “triangle” on any given weekday morning or afternoon?

How about the Lindbergh/LaVista/Cheshire Bridge intersection? Does the term gridlock, crazy or avoid at all costs come to mind? Then you know exactly what it’s like to try and get from I-85 Southbound to GA400 Northbound or just the opposite!

Well, help is on the way! The Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) held another public meeting this past week, and the neighbors who once threatened to fight to stop this proposed exit ramps have now given their blessing. After years and years of dealing with the congested streets and cars zipping through their neighborhood trying to dodge the mess, GDOT will begin construction of the two ramps.

I had always wondered what bozo designed this intersection and left these ramps off. But having spent a bit more time learning the history of GA400 and its construction (and the fights against it slicing right through Buckhead) I now understand why they focused more on just getting the road built and not so much on these ramps. That said, I think GDOT, and any other organization, past or present, have done some lame planning on the growth of Atlanta and did not have the foresight to see this need. But, that’s water under the bridge and also the subject of another post another time.

For now, we will soon (define soon as a few years of highway construction) we will no longer have to be dancing in the streets as we will be off them and on freeway exit ramps instead. Now, they built the I-85/GA316 interchange in like record time. Ya think you could do the same here?

For more about this story, read about it at the Buckhead Patch.

Filed Under: Interesting Stories, Midtown Atlanta News and Events Tagged With: atlanta traffic, automobiles, News, So You Know

Totally Awesome at Piedmont park

April 16, 2011 by Thom Abbott

Imag0346
This was the Dogwood Festival 2011 at Piedmont Park! It was such a site to see. As was the $200 in Georgia Lotto tickets that I won!

Sent from Yahoo! Mail on Android

Filed Under: Midtown Atlanta News and Events

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Thom Abbott

Associate Broker, REALTOR(R)
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Atlanta, Georgia 30309
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