Congress provided earmarks of nearly $2 million to make it happen. But about 10 years later, the buses serving the small, prosperous city of Falls Church aren't electric, their usage has leveled off at half of what was projected, and the city is considering scrapping the system.
Taxpayers subsidize the service at a whopping $8 per ride, in most cases enough to pay for a cab ride.
The GEORGE system has become another demonstration of the risks of congressional earmarks
- spending provisions in the law that doles out money for specific projects in their home states or districts.
"That little earmark is a microcosm of the problem," said Leslie Paige, spokesman for Citizens Against Government Waste.
After two contractors failed to provide suitable clean-running electric buses for the system, the city ended up with diesel buses
- albeit ones equipped to reduce emissions.
And at many points on the route, the GEORGE bus stops overlap or are less than a block away from regional bus routes that also connect to Metrorail, the Washington area's large subway system.
Earmarks have become a particularly contentious part of the federal budget process. President Obama campaigned against earmark spending, but last month signed a $410 billion spending package that included 8,000 earmarks costing $5.5 billion.
Transportation projects are an earmarking favorite. A 2007 report from the Transportation Department's inspector general found that in 2006, Congress had taken an $847 million federal program for bus funding and earmarked $814 million of it for pet projects, leaving almost nothing to be allocated under the traditional merit-based funding formula.
Meanwhile, Falls Church is deciding whether to continue the GEORGE service. A city of about 12,000 inside the Capital Beltway, it would have to pay as much as $600,000 to maintain service next year, according to city manager Wyatt Shields. Bus systems in the nearby suburbs of Fairfax, Alexandria and Arlington provide an average subsidy of $2 per ride or less. Shields recommends eliminating the service.
But the system still has supporters, and the city council is looking at ways to make the system more efficient.
Its biggest booster, city councilman David Snyder, said the earmarks will only waste taxpayer money if the city gives up on GEORGE. "It's up to us (on the city council) now to make sure the earmark isn't wasted," he said.
The idea for GEORGE came from a former mayor in the 1990s who was impressed by electric buses he rode in Chattanooga, Tenn.