Comments: Nobody Asked For Dunwoody...

Dan Weber is a fool for doing this. When everyone's property taxes in Dunwoody go up, he and Fran Millar will be to blame. That should help turn those districts that much quicker.

This seems to be nothing more than shallow aping of the Sandy Springs movement. Weber's problem is that there is no movement pushing for his bill and he hasn't made any effort to sell it to his constituents. That means he gets all of the bad of doing this (blame for higher property taxes resulting from the cost of creating a new layer of local government) and none of the good (people who are dissatisfied with local services and want to improve them, even if it costs them money).

Posted by GetReal at February 23, 2006 03:51 PM

Let me get this straight.. The boundary will go as far east as the decidedly un-Dunwoody-like Peachtree Industrial, but not as far north as to include the Dunwoody Country Club? All the zigzagging around on the east side is a bit confusing, especially at Tilly Mill & Peachtree Industrial.

Eva G would be smart to reach across county lines and annex some of that area. The tax revenues coming from the Perimeter area would be worth the trouble for Sandy Springs, even if that means they would have to rename the city, "Sandy-Woody."

Posted by Joe at February 28, 2006 07:31 AM

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