The Atlanta Lawyer May 2014 | Page 5

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE said, “then you can spend the night in the office.” “MARTA it is,” I replied. Resentfully, I bundled up and headed out. I made it to the Dunwoody Station in a few minutes, figured out how to buy a Breeze Card, walked upstairs to the platform where I joined many other riders, and boarded the train after less than 10 minutes waiting. My attitude improved. I gazed smugly at the cars strewn about all over Georgia 400 and I-85 as we zoomed smoothly to Midtown. “Why didn’t those people just ride the train?” I thought. When I got to the Arts Center Station, Betty called and said she could not get out of the neighborhood. I walked home with no problems. The whole trip took less than an hour. Most of the rest of the folks in my firm were not so lucky. You know the horror stories because they happened to many of you. One spent the night in the office; one abandoned her car after midnight and was taken in by a stranger; one slept in her car in the Kroger parking lot; one got home at 3:00 a.m.; and one walked home some seven miles in dress shoes with plastic bags over his socks to keep the snow out. One other person took MARTA, but that was only because he got stuck in traffic for over an hour in front of the Dunwoody Station before he thought of it. I have two takeaways from this experience. First, listening to my wife worked out so well that I am thinking about doing it again. Second, we all need to get on the transportation train. By this I mean that we as lawyers, as leaders, and as citizens of Atlanta need to become advocates for transportation and the public and private investment that it requires. The reason Atlanta is here is first and foremost because of transportation. In 1836, a railroad engineer determined Atlanta’s location because he thought it was the best place for a train to stop, and “Terminus,” the first name of our city, was born. From the beginning, people came to Atlanta because of the railroads, and because it was a crossroads for this region and the nation. Our tradition from the beginning was to welcome all visitors, with one notable exception in 1864, but even General Sherman came here much for the same reason as everyone else. The railroads crossed here. made airport expansion, especially for international flights, a priority. Atlanta would not be the economic center of Georgia and the southeast if not for the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. The third advance of transp