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You will probably say this is irrelevant, but do you remember our recent adventures with one Ms. Barbara Byrd-Bennett? I wouldn't trust anyone in City Government about anything as far as I could throw the last Green Hornet #4391. |
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For those who say the MED couldn't be used as rapid-transit, check this Video; same 1/2 mile station spacings as the 'L', high-acceleration AC powered equipment, close CTA bus connections: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wc9pplGpFNk (Video Thanks to Amtrak fan 90368) |
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DH |
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1. Find a way to use the facility in a more profitable way for the benefit of the operating Agencies, AND the Communities along the Line. 2. Abandon the Line because of the low-ridership, and leave the entire SE Quadrant of the City solely dependant on bus transit (very effective during extreme weather, like the winter snow blizzards that can bring EVERYTHING to a standstill, sometimes for days) I also notice the big difference in how the North Side's rail transit facilities MUST be improved (most especially the Flyover), or the entire North Side will dramatically Wither and Die!! Meanwhile the South Side should have it's existing rapid-transit system torn-up; and be made completely dependant on road-based transit on high-traffic roads; great transit planning -- is it the demographics? |
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Simple question..Why should the CTA agree to accept responsibility of the $64 million yearly deficit operations of the Metra Electric? DH |
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1. Mass transit is not a money making endeavor, it is a service 2. Have you considered that if the MED actually upgraded to full, CTA style rapid transit service it could see a vast uptick in ridership? Especially if the city did the unthinkable and promoted dense development around its newly created L stations |
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DH |
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He said yes, the CTA should accept an operation deficit because transit is supposed to be a service rather than a money making endeavour, but that the deficit wouldn't be as high if there was an increase in ridership brought on by service improvements an accompanying urban development. |
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But when YOU ask a "simple question" - YOU are initiating yet another debate. There is nothing more to debate, it's all been discussed a zillion times -- and nobody is changing their goals or actions. Do you actually expect us all to say "never mind" like Roseann Rosanadanna on Saturday Night Live? |
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So you're saying that all these people (not dummies) don't know or understand what their own communities need? The reasons for that lack of understanding? And these folks have everything to do with the Metra Electric. |
CTA Red Line In The Median Of The Dan Ryan Expressway.
Enjoy the pictures.
http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s...f/P1140302.jpg[/URL][/IMG] CTA Red Line showing a southbound at 59th St. shown from a passing Green Line train. http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s...f/P1130272.jpg CTA Red Line action in-between 69th St. and 63rd St. stations next to the Chicago Skyway. |
Transit TIFs
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Union Station Transit Center
July 6, 2016
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Design team chosen for phase one of Union Station project
From today's Sun-Times
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Cool, but waiting for Federal money is like waiting for the Ice Age. My grandkids will be 90 when this happens
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^ Who said anything about Federal? As of last week, the city has a new TIF tool that can raise large sums of money specifically for transit projects including Union Station. It's a 1/2-mile radius around the station, which includes mo$t of downtown.
It's interesting that in the article, Emanuel seems to downplay this. I wonder what his rationale for that could be? |
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Emanuel is probably downplaying this, IMO, because of the whole "Mayor 1%" business. It would look better politically to talk about extending the red line south |
Yeah, I thought the assumption is that this is a nice way of earning the local dollars to use as a match for federal without having to deal with the city or especially the state to come through.
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As to the red line extension, political motives aside, its advantage is that it can be done with bupkis in land costs. The thing about infrastructure is that if you wait for the demand to be there before you invest, you are already too late. You'll get more bang for the buck if you invest in transit where demand is low and costs are low. Then you lever that investment to create demand. |
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With our credit rating?
No thanks. |
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This page helps to explain the loans and process involved. Quote:
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(I could be totally off here, I'm not an expert on this by any stretch) |
^ Aren't property taxes one of the foundations of the city's budget anyhow?
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TIFs divert current revenue from new sources away from the general fund, schools and parks and into a discretionary fund. Although, the schools are supposed to get theirs under the Transit TIF. |
I'm not sure RRIF loans could be used for the CTA network, it's really meant for mainline railroads. Union Station would certainly qualify though.
I don't know if it's kosher to use a Federal loan, backed by local property tax revenue, as the local match for a Federal grant. That seems like two bites at the apple. That being said, if there is a way to bend the rules, this is the ideal time to do it with a Chicagoan in the White House, Emanuel on the fifth floor and a former Emanuel staffer heading up FRA. Federal matching is nice and all, but A) you're competing with cities around the country for a fixed pot of money, which is itself vulnerable to the mood of Congress, and B) the endless layers of Federal red tape you have to wade through add years to the project schedule, and in the world of construction cost inflation, years of delay could mean hundreds of millions of dollars. Construction costs often don't scale with inflation, so the longer you wait, the less buying power you get from your tax receipts. |
Chicago also has going for it at the federal level both Dick Durbin and Mark Kirk on the transportation committee, Durbin is very good at steering funds our way. Also, the possible future president was born and raised not to far from here.
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^ Park Ridge very much counts as Chicago. But disappointingly its famous former resident has practically disavowed, or at least downplayed, any ties to us. She definitely has a Chicagoan-ness in her persona though, and it would be nice in the future if she would be proud of and even emphasize those links. For example, a potential future presidential library would probably go to NY, even though that would be based largely just on three years in New Haven and eight carpetbagging years as senator in her fifties; this slightly feels like a stab in the back. (I'm doubting Arkansas would be a finalist in such a competition.) Edit: Come to think of it a library in DC would kind of make sense though, as she would have marked a significant first in two and a half centuries.
Anyway, to be back OT here, we could guilt her into emphasizing transportation infrastructure in Chicago. |
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Nice goin', Kirk and Durbin :rolleyes: If Illinois is going to be taxed so heavily and put a bunch of crooks in office, then damn it, act like crooks and bring home the chowder! |
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Remember, Ronald Reagan was also born in Illinois, and Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky... good for a highway sign and not much else.* Plus, Illinois is about as blue as it gets. Hillary will owe the state of Illinois absolutely nothing if she wins. * = Apocryphally, Reagan was responsible for the Orange Line getting Federal funding, but I believe that was more about Bill Lipinski's vote for sending aid to the Contras in Nicaragua than about any fondness Reagan might have had for Illinois... |
CTA, Metra are unworthy 'social engineering,' GOP says .....
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http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/o...721-story.html |
Wow, I guess this happened at UIC today during the storms
https://twitter.com/islesoferin/stat...64207859986432 |
Local, rail officials won't $110 million for South Side projects
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^ Nice going again, Dick and Mark :rolleyes:
Illinois--corruption without the benefits |
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Durbin was able to steer money the CTAs way through the Core Capacity program. So the corruption paid off a little bit at least. 8)
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^ Not enough. Transport is vital to Chicago's economy. More than any other metro
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^The cars aren't holding up the freight trains. The trains are blocking the streets.
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Plus, Congress no longer allows earmarks, so legislators have much less influence over grant awards than they used to. Bureaucrats are now firmly in the driver's seat on this type of stuff, and in lieu of earmarks they often have vague directives from Congress to "direct resources to rural areas" or "increase access to underserved communities". As a result, USDOT just allocated $3B in Fastlane grants, explicitly for freight movement, and Illinois got nothing. On the other hand, as another commenter noted, Durbin was able to "steer" funds to Chicago by creating a new grant program that's basically tailor-made to CTA's needs, and then tipping off CTA so they could be first in line. But that's way harder to do than an earmark, and only possible because Durbin is the #2 Democrat in the Senate (and possible Majority Leader after November). |
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http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s...XgAAydA--1.jpg
http://i155.photobucket.com/albums/s...58974930_n.jpg The CTA is using its 8-car 2400 Series Boeing Historical Fleet in special service serving the Chicagoland Baseball Classic. The cars ran on Monday. Today, Wednesday, train will leave 95th around 4:52pm, getting downtown around 5:15pm and to Addison about 5:35pm. I'm surprised we haven't seen photos. The door chain signboard will be different. Photos: CTA. |
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Durbin, Emanuel, Members Of Illinois Delegation Announce $25 Million TIGER Grant For Garfield Green Line Gateway Quote:
https://s32.postimg.org/8snt9ei2t/TI...t_Project1.jpg http://www.durbin.senate.gov/newsroo...n-line-gateway |
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