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Facing Funding Shortfalls and Protest, Better Rail for Boston Region is Delayed
from the Transport Politic blog:
Facing Funding Shortfalls and Protest, Better Rail for Boston Region is Delayed
December 11th, 2011
Just northwest of Boston, Cambridge and Somerville are some of the nations exemplar cities when it comes to promoting transportation alternatives. In Somerville, 48% of the population rides transit, walks, or bikes to work; in Cambridge, 57% do. The explanation likely comes down to a strong commitment to livable streets in both cities, a large student population, high residential densities, community activism against limited-access highways, and big concentrations of jobs both in the traditional office center of Downtown Boston but also in the walkable Kendall Square-MIT and Harvard Square areas, both along the Red Line rapid transit corridor.
Yet, with the exception of the Red Line extended north of Harvard Square in the early 1980s reliable transit access in the two cities is limited. Buses crisscross the area, but they are stuck in traffic at all periods of the day due to the lack of reserved lanes. Commuter rail lines that extend through the area only stop once, at the Porter Square Red Line station. These limitations have strained the Red Line, which now suffers from overcrowding at peak hours, and limited the potential for growth. In addition, partially because of the penury of transit stations around which to build up, the Boston region is one of the nations most expensive housing markets.
For years, plans for transit access improvements, clearly merited considering the areas demographics and potential, have been under development by the Boston-area transit agency, MBTA. A circumferential bus rapid transit line, the Urban Ring, would have allowed commuters from Cambridge and Somerville to get to Bostons jobs-heavy Longwood Medical Area or Logan Airport without passing through congested downtown but it was put on indefinite hold last year due to a funding shortfall. Now, an extension of the Green Line light rail line into Somerville is threatened by similar concerns. And the reactivation of the Grand Junction commuter rail corridor through Cambridge has been put off by community resistance.
The Green Line extension is one of the most promising transit projects in the country. It is expected to carry about 45,000 daily riders along its four-mile, two-pronged route, with termini in Somervilles active Union Square neighborhood and Tufts University, just across the Somerville city line in Medford (see map below of the green dotted line), following two existing commuter rail corridors in a fully separated right-of-way. The state has previously said it plans to begin construction at the end of next year, with the opening of the first stations planned for 2016. The program is expensive about $1 billion for its completion. .............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2011/12/11/facing-funding-shortfalls-and-protest-better-rail-for-boston-region-is-delayed/
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Facing Funding Shortfalls and Protest, Better Rail for Boston Region is Delayed (Original Post)
marmar
Dec 2011
OP
Cassandra
(9,694 posts)1. When I go out to Wellesley, I have to take a commuter rail...
because the Woodland station no longer has bus service. Thank God for the commuter rail!