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  • 2011-03-16 (xsd:date)
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  • Atlanta Streetcar projected to be jobs boon (en)
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  • Atlanta leaders heralded the city’s planned streetcar as a boon to downtown. Starting in 2013, the streetcar would ferry passengers from Centennial Olympic Park through the historic Sweet Auburn neighborhood and to Ebenezer Baptist Church, the heart of the civil rights movement. Even better, it would create jobs, according to a newsletter to constituents from U.S. Rep. John Lewis. Under the header New jobs created by the Streetcar project, it said the line would generate 1,399 jobs to build and run it, and an additional 4,204 when it spurs economic development in surrounding neighborhoods. Sounds like a nice deal. But is that what experts really projected? We took a closer look. The $72 million streetcar project is part of an ambitious plan to modernize the city’s transit infrastructure, boost tourism and help a downtown core that has suffered since the Downtown Connector was built. Critics contend it’s a boondoggle and won’t reduce traffic congestion. Lewis, Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and a coalition of local leaders won a major victory in October when they scored a $47.6 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation to build it. Construction is scheduled to begin in 2012, but there’s no guarantee. Last month, Republicans in Congress threatened to yank the project’s funding. A spokeswoman for Lewis said the newsletter relied on a projection from groups that applied for the Department of Transportation grant. Since it was created by experts and vetted by civil service professionals at the Department of Transportation, Lewis believed it was credible. We called MARTA, which played a major role in generating the figures. Spokesman Lyle Harris initially declined to explain how the numbers were derived, so we gathered documents from Atlanta Journal-Constitution transportation reporter Ariel Hart, placed a public information request for more documentation and sent written questions, some of which MARTA answered. Our reporting turned up enough information to evaluate figures for building and running the streetcar, but not for economic development. So we will analyze the projected 1,399 construction and operations jobs. We found that the job-creation figures are not for actual positions. The Department of Transportation advised grant applicants to use a measure called job years. Job years means one job lasting for one year. That means that if a single position lasts five years, it counts as five job years. Or as the newsletter put it, jobs. The job years measure has critics. George Mason University professor Stephen Fuller told us it can be confusing or give an inflated impression of the number of jobs a project creates. They [officials] want to make people understand that what appears to be a small project will have a big impact over its lifetime, Fuller said. But it does have merits, economists told us. A project should get credit for creating jobs that last many years instead of one. And the measure helps planners tally positions such as construction jobs that rise and fall over the course of a project, said James Horney, a top fiscal policy expert at the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. So even though the newsletter said that running the streetcar would create 460 jobs, that doesn’t mean transit officials plan to fill 460 full-time positions to run it. That’s the number of job years over a 20-year period. The actual estimate is 23 new employees. And 23 multiplied by 20 is 460. Brian Riedl, the lead budget analyst for the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, said there’s a better way to communicate job impact. Just list jobs and job length separately. So you could say running the streetcar would create 23 jobs that would last 20 years. (Or longer. The line would be built to last.) Now, let’s look at the claim that the project would create 939 jobs during construction. These jobs are expected to last for one year, so for this phase, one job year equals one job. But that doesn’t mean 939 people are projected to build the streetcar line, and they won’t all be jobs for Atlantans. The newsletter used the project’s total employment figure, which means the number of people who would be employed for construction, plus two other types of jobs created by the project: those to make materials such as steel or rebar to construct the line, and those created when workers spend their earnings on things such as a roast beef sandwich or a new pair of tube socks. The project’s economist estimated this job number using a standard method developed by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis. Many of those jobs won’t be local because a portion of the materials and products purchased would be made outside the Atlanta area. Planners expect to employ 467 workers for streetcar construction. The rest would be making rebar, sandwiches and the like. So did Lewis get his job creation figures right? Lewis accurately cited numbers reviewed by government agencies and experts, but in the end, that vetting wasn’t enough. He used figures that would give a typical person the impression that those projected 1,399 job years are actual jobs. That understanding would be correct for the construction phase, but it would be 20 times higher than the actual number of positions needed to run the streetcar. Since the figures experts gave Lewis would give a typical person a false impression, we rule his statement False. (en)
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