Americans for Prosperity – Tennessee Urges Nashville Mayor to Cut City Budget, Protect Residents from Property Tax Hikes Amid $3.1 Billion Transit Plan

Freddie O'Connell

Americans for Prosperity – Tennessee (AFP-TN) released a statement Thursday in response to Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell’s proposed $3.1 billion transit referendum that will be presented to Davidson County voters on the November ballot.

AFP-TN State Director Tori Venable, noting how Nashville voters rejected then-Mayor Megan Barry’s $9 billion transit plan six years ago, acknowledged the dramatic cost difference in O’Connell’s plan while also pointing out the half-cent increase in the city’s sales tax that will be used to fund the plan.

“Six years ago, the Nashville taxpayers won by roundly rejecting the Transit Tax via referendum. Thanks to the hard work of our volunteers and Stop The Train partners, we were able to reject the ill-conceived boondoggle that would have given Nashville the highest sales tax in the nation without solving our traffic woes,” Venable said.

“At $3 billion dollars, Mayor O’Connell’s new transit tax plan is a third of the initial cost of the 2018 plan. It’s up to his office to make the case for a higher sales tax to fund more bus services, improved lights, and better city crosswalks. Ultimately, Nashville will decide if the transit services & improvements are worth the tax hike,” Venable added.

Venable further encouraged O’Connell to “continue looking to slash the budget and protect Nashville taxpayers from property tax hikes that are just down the pike.”

O’Connell unveiled his $3.1 billion transit plan, called “Choose How You Move: An All-Access Pass to Sidewalks, Signals, Service, and Safety,” last month. The mayor’s plan includes miles of new sidewalks, bus stops, transit centers, parking facilities, and upgraded traffic signals.

The mayor argues that the half-cent increase in the city’s sales tax as the funding source for the plan is warranted under the IMPROVE Act, which passed the Tennessee General Assembly in 2017.

Ben Cunningham, founder of the Nashville Tea Party, has argued otherwise, saying that the transit plan appears to be illegal under the IMPROVE Act as the legislation only allows for the increase of taxes through a voter referendum for a mass transit system such as bus routes – not for the installation of simple projects such as sidewalks and traffic signals.

Cunningham has also pointed out that the transit plan will “inevitably lead to property tax increases” as the mayor attempts to leverage federal funding to fund portions of the proposed projects.

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Kaitlin Housler is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Follow Kaitlin on X / Twitter.
Photo “Freddie O’Connell” by Freddie O’Connell. 

 

 

 

 

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4 Thoughts to “Americans for Prosperity – Tennessee Urges Nashville Mayor to Cut City Budget, Protect Residents from Property Tax Hikes Amid $3.1 Billion Transit Plan”

  1. Sigmund Jung

    So we’ve had record inflation, everything costs more, but O’Connell’s plan is a third the cost of Barry’s?

    Excuse me for thinking his numbers are “Just the Tip-ism”. In for $3B penny, in for a pound.

    He told WKRN last week that he intends to raise property taxes with the next assessment, thereby making Nashville more affordable. /s

    O’Connell will look at a camera and lie with a straight face, or whatever kind of rat face he has, to get what he wants because there is no one in local media who will grill him about the whole city becoming a dangerous hsithole on his watch. He is truly the banality of evil. An angry leftwing podcaster, raised in the seat of privilege , who’s contempt for anyone whose contempt for everyone is masked by his flat affect and monotone drlivery.

  2. Joe Blow

    So why does Freddie think he is so much wiser those the past leaders of Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, etc. Who declared that they could overcome the traffic congestion caused by their insatiable appetite for uncontrolled growth? It ain’t going to happen in Nashville either.

  3. Randall Davidson

    We Go bus routes are being altered today because of Morgan Wallen Concert. Bus routes will be inconsistent at best and are not a solution for transit problems.

  4. Cannoneertwo

    All that’s needed is a widening of I-65 from Franklin to downtown to 18 lanes, with yearly repaving… everyone else can fend for themselves…

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