Update 2020-11-18:
Landslide Yes on Georgia Amendment 1 to dedicate trust funds!
Update 2020-10-07:
On Steve Nichols radio show, with video.
Don’t you think taxes and fees charged by a state should go to the purposes the state said they would?
Well, in Georgia, many such funds have been mostly diverted to the general fund, and then who knows where.
You can vote in this election to stop that:
vote Yes on Amendment 1.
Six cities and counties for Amendment 1: Adel, Hahira, and Valdosta, Atkinson, Lanier, and Lowndes Counties.
For example, the state of Georgia charges a fee on every tire sold, with funds supposed to go to cleaning up old tires and other waste management.
Yet more than $50 million of those funds have been diverted to other purposes.
It’s not just tires. Other examples of diverted funds include ones for indigent defense and judicial programs, peace officer training, and teen driver training.
There is no organized opposition to Amendment 1.
Pretty much the only opposition stated during passage of the authorizing bill
was about being able to use funds during an emergency.
The bill explicitly allows that.
The bill passed the Georgia Senate unanimously and
the House with only one vote against.
Organized support for Amendment 1 includes six cities and counties
in the Suwannee River Basin:
the cities of Hahira, Valdosta, Adel, and Atkinson, Lanier, and Lowndes Counties, each of which passed a resolution in January 2019 in support of the bill that authorized putting Amendment 1 on the ballot for 2020.
Also, the Valdosta Daily Times supported it in an editorial.
WWALS supports Amendment 1, as do, so far as we know, all the Riverkeepers of Georgia.
This is how Amendment 1 appears on the ballot:
Shall the Constitution of Georgia be amended so as to authorize the General Assembly to dedicate revenues derived from fees or taxes to the public purpose for which such fees or taxes were intended?
( ) YES
( ) NO
Please vote YES.
Below is the text that Amendment 1, when approved, will add to subparagraph (r)(1) to paragraph VI in section 9 of Article III of the Georgia state constitution: Continue reading →