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Nix 526
-Almost 40 (38.53) acres of wetlands destroyed.
-Almost 50 (46.75) acres of James Island County Park taken.
-92 parcel takings/direct impacts (22 relocations, of which 15 are residential)
-The route would run right through communities (many of which are historic black communities such as Ferguson Village and Cross-Cut on James Island)
-Impacts to the Fenwick Hall Historic District
-There were 39 alternatives analyzed and the one selected disproportionately impacts people of color.
-The 526 extension is the only priority project listed on the ordinance, taking up over 30% of allocated funding, with the inclusion of the debt services it’s close to 50% of the whole tax. As the only priority project, this means the other proposed projects will be considered only after the 526-extension funding is allocated and likely will not have funding leftover for other projects.
-The percentage of greenbelt funding has continued to be cut each tax referendum. From 17% in 2004, to 10% in 2016, to now 8%. We should be expanding our greenbelt funding, not lessening it.
-We still have two half-cent sales taxes in place. The one from 2024 is set to run out in 2027. This tax we are voting on would not go into effect until then, so why are voting for it now? (The answer is to secure funding for 526)
-This tax would run for 25 years or until 5.4 billion is reached. What else could we do with that money that does not include an overpriced, outdated, and destructive road project?
-The 526 extension would not fix the traffic problem on Johns Island, but rather inflame the current traffic issues. It would increase suburban sprawl on the rural island, adding more cars to our roads.
The last two questions on the ballot in Charleston address this issue. Vote NO on questions 1 & 2.