The Atlanta Lawyer May 2014 | Page 4

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE GETTING ON THE TRANSPORTATION TRAIN “ By Wade H. Watson III Caldwell & Watson LLP “Venting about traffic jams on Facebook is unlikely to get the job done; it will take well-planned interaction with public officials, especially state legislators.” I was having lunch in the Ravinia Three café, when I noticed that there were cars lined up on Ravinia Drive, bumper to bumper, and they were not moving. I had heard there might be some snow in the afternoon, but I did not see much coming down. I asked the guy next to me what was going on. He did not know, but thought that many offices were closing and sending people home. They could not get out of the complex onto Ashford-Dunwoody Rd. That’s really strange, at least at lunchtime, I thought. Returning to the office, I found everyone in a state of excitement. Our partner brain trust conferred and decided to close for the day. The staff left. Some attorneys left too; some stayed. One called me about 45 minutes later and said she was still sitting in her car in the parking deck unable to move. Wow. I could see I-285 from my office. It was not moving in either direction. I checked news reports. Yes, it was true. The Great Atlanta Traffic Apocalypse of 2014 had begun. 4 THE ATLANTA LAWYER May 2014 Thinking I could waste my time sitting in my office equally as well as I could in the snow jam, I decided to wait in the office. The remaining lawyers trickled out the rest of the afternoon and early evening. One came back about 6:00 p.m. His suit was soaked and he was shaking with cold. He had been forced to abandon his car some distance away after hours of frustration, and walked back. About an hour later, there seemed to be a break in the snow, and it looked like I had an opening because I was headed south to Midtown, rather than north. I called my lovely wife Betty and told her I was driving home. “No you’re not,” she said, and I knew from her tone that she was not open to a fair and balanced discussion of the issue. “Well what am I going to do?” I asked. “Walk to the Dunwoody MARTA station and take the train to Arts Center Station; I’ll pick you up.” “But I don’t want to have to walk to the Dunwoody Station in the cold and ice, and it’s dark out there,” I protested. “Well,” she The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association