Came across this today and thought I'd share. The state legislature is working on its big
transportation bill for this year, and tucked away among those changes (on
pages 53-54) is one with what seems like pretty big implications for JTA.
In a nutshell, this bill would shift the JTA Board from consisting of 6 Duval residents (3 each appointed by the Mayor and Governor) plus the FDOT District Secretary, to one in which the Governor will appoint
4 members (removing the Secretary outright), which (save for one that must live in Jacksonville proper) could come from Duval, Clay, or St. Johns counties.
What immediately stands out to me is that this bill does not appear to explicitly empower JTA to provide its services outside of Duval County, nor does it lay out any expectation of Clay or St. Johns contributing to the authority they would be gaining substantial influence over. On top of that, I'm mystified by the exclusion of Nassau County.
I'm actually all for JTA becoming more of a regional transportation agency, and a change in the nature of its leadership would be a big part of that, but I'm unsure about this being the ideal way to go about it. Would it be a good thing for a new board member from St. Johns County suddenly being able to decry the Emerald Trail, or TOD and Complete Street projects in Jacksonville? If efforts to develop better regional transit systems continue, is it ideal for board members from Clay or St. Johns to push Duval taxes towards planning investment in their counties without any corresponding expectation of those counties helping? If the makeup of the board ought to change, should there still be only seven members as opposed to perhaps something like nine members, with six of those from Duval plus three from the surrounding counties?