Several tri-county officials support ballot measure
“The map which has been circulating is not set in stone. This is just a roundtable discussion, not a public hearing.”
Ware County Clerk Melinda Brooks made the statement Monday morning (December 1) as concerned citizens piled into the Ware County Commission meeting room for the 10 a.m. start.
The statement would be echoed several times by several different Ware County officials and Georgia House Representative for District 176 James Burchett At different points over the next hour Ware County Manager James Shubert, Ware County Commission Chairman Elmer Thrift, Burchett and others all sought to clarify this was a tri-county discussion to which the public was entitled to attend, but for which there was no provision for public comment.
The Monday morning meeting of a tricounty group of Pierce, Ware and Brantley County officials to discuss ideas for a proposed bypass around Waycross drew a crowd set not on observing but on demanding answers — sometimes in very loud voices.
Little progress was made and those whose homes and property might be impacted by the bypass left with few if any reassurances.
Seats for the public were already nearly full before the start with many others filing into the meeting room. Many lined up along walls or took seats on the floor.
Some of the confusion stemmed from public comment forms from the last Ware County Commission meeting having been left on a table outside the entrance. More than one member of the public had already filled out a public comment form, thinking they were meant for the Monday morning conference.
Scheduled or not, public comment was going to happen.
After a few false starts, with those stuck in the hallway outside yelling that they could not hear and one gentleman loudly suggesting the meeting be moved to a courtroom downstairs, extra room was made in the council chambers as even more people piled into the confined space.
A young man arrived with armfuls of “No bypass’ signs and passed them out to the crowd. One audience member murmured to themselves the room was beyond its safe capacity and had become a fire hazard.
Nevertheless, the gathered officials pressed on. Ware County Commissioner Jon Tindall delivered the invocation and the room fairly vibrated to the sound of approximately 300 or more people saying the Pledge of Allegiance in unison.
There the unity ended. What followed can only be described as controlled chaos.
Originally meant as a chance for Pierce, Ware and Brantley officials to confer about the viability of a proposed bypass road around Waycross, and to consult with members of Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) and state senators and state house representatives, the bulk of the meeting was spent engaging with and attempting to mollify a crowd which demanded to be heard, sometimes all at once.
At times, there was laughter and amusement, often toward the reluctance of some officials to wade into the verbal fray, but tempers ran more toward anger and confusion than they did jolliness.
In response to the announcement there would be no public comment, one member of the public angrily demanded, “Then why did you invite us?”
Some in the crowd accused Chairman Thrift of looking to personally profit from the bypass project.
“Of course you aren’t against it,” one voice rang out, “You own an asphalt company!”
Explanations the maps and images of the bypass currently circulating were just one of many were met with skepticism and calls to know just how many different bypass plans there were to choose from.
At one point, perhaps for lack of a gavel, Ware County Manager James Shubert pounded his open palm on the table and yelled for order.
Another time, he singled out one lady in the audience, saying, “If you interrupt me one more time, I’m going to ask you to leave. I’m tired of your mouth.”
One older resident of Pierce County reminded those present of the checkered history of cooperation with Ware County, recalling a sewage treatment facility landing in the Hacklebarney community and disputes over trash pickup.
He finished with , “If you got a problem in Ware County, you need to solve it in Ware County. We would like to help you any way we can, but stay out of Pierce.”
Another younger gentlemen opined, “There is no traffic in Midway where this bypass comes through. I don’t want to raise my kids on a four lane.”
Porter Johns of Ware County said, “They’ve been talking about a bypass since I moved here in ‘88. I ain’t seen it or an overpass yet.”
David Lowman, commissioner for Pierce County’s fourth district, said votes, not phone calls would make his decision for him. He would vote the way the taxpayers decided on the ballot.
Brantley County Commissioner Rand Davison said he had already been against the idea and had heard nothing to change his mind, which was met with applause.
State House Representatives John Corbett and Stephen Meeks along with state Senator Russ Goodman all expressed approval for putting a referendum to be voted upon by the public.
In the end, little actual exchange of ideas or fine tuning of plans for the proposed project occurred.
Those gathered to witness the meeting, protest the bypass or both, extracted various promises from elected officials of all three counties to support a ballot measure in the coming year placing the decision to move forward in the hands of the taxpayers.








