Politics & Government

Cobb Commissioners Preview 2012 Budget & Other Government News

Cobb commissioners will take a look at the 2012 budget at their afternoon worksession today.

The new congressional district maps have been approved. For South Cobb, the districts would remain unchanged with the area being served by District 13, the seat currently held by Rep. David Scott.

On Tuesday, the Senate is expected to vote on redrawn maps of the 180 districts of the state House, and on Wednesday, tthe House could approve state Senate lines.

Also Tuesday, the will get a first look at the 2012 budget during a work session this afternoon. 

Find out what's happening in South Cobbwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Chairman Tim Lee said Friday that the county's 2012 budget will be about $8 million less than the $317 million 2011 budget, the Marietta Daily Journal is reporting.

Lee also told the MDJ he does not expect any layoffs or furloughs of the county's 4,200 employees in the new budget year. Since May 1, county employees have been forced to take five unpaid days off to help balance the current year's budget.

The Cobb County Board of Commissioners voted 3-2 last month in favor of raising taxes to make up a possible $33 million deficit in the 2012 fiscal year.

Find out what's happening in South Cobbwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Commissioners Bob Ott and JoAnn Birrell voted against the proposal.

The county raised the rate from a total of 9.6 mills to 11.11 mills for the year that ends Sept. 30. Tax bills went out in mid-August.

On a $140,000 to $160,000 house, the increase averages $82.67 more per year. On a $190,000 to $210,000 home, the increase averages $111.66 per year.

At the board's regularly scheduled 7 p.m. meeting, commissioners are expected to award the $1.8 million "Alternatives Analysis" light-rail study to Croy Engineering as the project manager.

The study will examine what kinds of mass transportation will work on the Interstate 75 and U.S. 41 corridors, how much it will cost and where it should be built.

Cobb Transportation Director Faye DiMassimo said she expects the study will be done in 18 months. But that will be after voters in Cobb and other metro Atlanta counties vote on whether to pay a 1 percent sales tax for 10 years to finance transportation improvements.

The TSPLOST project list includes plans for a light-rail line from the Cumberland Mall area to MARTA's Arts Center Station.

Today’s meetings come a day after the commissioners joined the for a lunch meeting with the county’s legislative delegation in Atlanta to discuss new county voting districts and the Transportation SPLOST. According to the Marietta Daily Journal, East Cobb school board member David Banks took a lot of heat during that meeting for pushing instead of working with the rest of the board on .


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here