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Texans for True Mobility Oppose METRO's Plan for Light Rail in Houston
Texans for True Mobility ^ | 9/25/03 | Chris Begala

Posted on 10/02/2003 10:47:55 AM PDT by Frapster

What's wrong with METRO's Plan?

Costs too much and does not relieve congestion:

By METRO’s own calculations, the initial 22 mile light rail component of this referendum will cost over $2.6 billion. The total 72.8 miles of METRO’s rail component found on the ballot will cost over $8 billion and move less than 1% of the trips in the Metro Service Area*.

 
Light rail may actually increase area congestion:
The rail could well add to congestion because it runs at street level, stops traffic and removes many lanes of roadway from our current system because most of the light rail is being built in the existing roadway.
 
It consumes funds needed to implement true congestion relief:

According to the Houston Galveston Area Council, METRO is currently scheduled to consume 48% of area transportation dollars through the year 2022 while moving about 2% of our traffic. Under METRO’s own light rail proposal, this imbalance would only get worse. We cannot afford to waste these precious public tax dollars.

 
We will not lose matching federal funding
if the light rail is not built:

The federal match of capital to be allegedly spent "on rail" can still be received if the money is spent on roads, technology, express streets, grade separation, bus expansion, commuter rail, or even (better planned) light rail.

 
Dallas already tried this experiment, and it has not worked:

Dallas has 44 miles of light rail, 34 miles of commuter rail, and a bus system, yet only 2% are riding all of this combined. Also, they are facing a $37M shortfall and have asked for federal assistance. Dallas has spent billions on three light rail lines, a commuter line, and an expanded bus sytem, and the census shows that fewer people rode public transit to work in 2000, than in 1990 before the billions were spent on additions and expansions.

 
The 25% General Mobility money is not protected:

METRO promised to protect the 25% of the METRO sales tax going to the City of Houston, Harris County, and neighboring towns, for roads. But METRO is very likely to experience major cash flow problems long before their plan is complete, and the 25% is simply not protected if consumed by operating losses or construction cost overruns.

 

METRO is already on highly unstable financial footing

An analysis of METRO’s budgets show that they have vastly overestimated their sales tax and federal grant revenues. METRO is likely to experience major cash flow problems in the near future and their precarious financial condition makes it inappropriate to ask voters to approve a massive, $640 million bond program, let alone embark on a $8 billion rail plan.

 
The plan is not structured to accommodate Houston’s growth:

If METRO’s plan passes, the first 22 miles of light rail is designed almost exclusively for serving downtown, even though only 7% of existing jobs are downtown, and 95% of the new jobs that will be created in Houston are not going downtown either. METRO says we need this new system to keep up with growth, but the majority of the growth will not be where the rail is being built.

 
Vast majority of proposed rail riders would come from buses:

Since the vast majority of rail riders (a very expensive system) will come from buses (a relatively inexpensive system), the METRO plan will make almost would have almost no impact on traffic and congestion and simply shuffle current riders to a new system, at great expense. In fact most riders will still have to take a bus to the rail, then ride the train, then take another bus when they disembark from the rail.

 
METRO's plan does NOT significantly expand bus service:

Contrary to METRO's claims, they would spend only 3.3% of the new funds on buses thru 2010, and absolutely no new funds from METRO Solutions goes to buses until 2006. In fact, most cities who build light rail, including Dallas, end up with a large increase in costs which results in cutting bus service and/or raising fares to support an expensive, inefficient rail system. Dallas recently increased the basic one-way fares from $1.00 to $1.25 and reduced train and bus service. By their own estimates, this will reduce ridership (boardings) by 5% to 7%. The result is that the person who has no choice and depends upon public transit pays more and gets less service, thus fewer people ride transit.

 

This wasteful expenditure
will ultimately cause a dollar for dollar tax:

If over $2 billion is wastefully spent on the initial 22 miles of light rail, which will not reduce congestion, it will deplete those limited funds available for other true congestion relief projects, and probably lead to a tax increase (i.e. property, gasoline, sales tax, and/or toll increases) to replace those wasted funds. We cannot afford to waste billions of transportation dollars on METRO's proposal, when it does almost nothing to solve our congestion problem.

 
We don’t need rail to be a “world class city”
or for economic development:

Dallas has rail, but was dropped from consideration for the Olympics long before Houston. On the other hand, San Antonio landed a huge Toyota plant after voting down their light rail system. Austin also voted down light rail, and has Dell, Motorola, and a large amount of new business development and entrepreneurs. Consider our energy industry, the Medical Center, the Port, NASA – we Houstonians have built a thriving, wonderful city without a light rail system that does not reduce congestion. Congestion is the real threat to growth, and this plan does not address congestion.

 
(* Rail construction costs, operation and maintenance costs, contingency costs and debt service..)


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: houston; lightrail; metro; rail; spending; waste
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To: rustbucket

21 posted on 10/02/2003 6:00:38 PM PDT by Dog Gone
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To: longtermmemmory
These metro systems need to be agressivly voted down. Its an effort to eliminate private cars.

That kind of anti-transit rhetoric is so patheticly stupid that it's hilarious.

22 posted on 10/02/2003 6:05:23 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Servant of the 9
I think the light rail proposal preceded and was the excuse for the Metro we have today.

Metro was created to shove rail down our throats - no doubt about that. The problem is that they are the only authority who can do this without being held politically accountable. They are the epitome of an incompetant, thoroughly corrupt, and heavily bloated bureaucratic agency with significant unrestrained power and virtually no public oversight.

If we get rid of metro and liquidate its assets in a public auction the pro-rail people will still be there but they won't have a chokehold around the region's neck by way of undeserved political power. They'll be just another private interest group trying to get its issue passed in city hall.

23 posted on 10/02/2003 6:08:22 PM PDT by GOPcapitalist
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To: Frapster
The local politician-crooks in Orlando/Orange County FL are pushing a 1/2 cent sales tax to fund light rail among other boondoggles. There is a referendum next week which the sheeple will probably approve.
24 posted on 10/02/2003 7:38:54 PM PDT by StockAyatollah
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To: Dog Gone
Houston's bus system is already one of the best in the world. (No joke.) Low fares, frequent service, and a good amount of transit centers and busways (carpool lanes) to speed people along.

What they need to do is build more stations and extend the busways further out into the suburbs (maybe allow people to drive them for a toll to help pay for them), keep the low bus fares, widen streets to give them a lane, and give the buses signal priority. All of this will be much cheaper and more comprehensive than running a light rail system to a city that has a weak center.
25 posted on 10/02/2003 11:39:37 PM PDT by polyiguana
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To: Support Free Republic
We were set up to do Monorail in Houston; quicker, cheaper and easier to setup. Until DS brown got elected, knowing that it was his last job and would need to skim some cash off of the top so he could retire; what a piece of trash he is, he has failed at every job he has ever had! I would never ride a bus or even rail, but I would ride on a monorail. I have been on one at Disney land and it was a lot of fun you could see and were up and away from the din at street level.
Monorail can be put up right over existing roadways is quick, quiet and cheap to operate. Plus you can't hit anything, it won't flood out and did I mention that it is quick and quiet? This downtown rail is the biggest fiasco and payoff for brown and metro. Worthless waste of cash/taxes.
26 posted on 10/07/2003 2:15:51 PM PDT by redrac
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To: Frapster
An anti-rail Houstonian bump.
27 posted on 10/07/2003 3:07:59 PM PDT by jimt
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To: Frapster
On a side note, Metro just increased the tolls on the beltway 8. It's like rubbing salt in the wound. I try to avoid the toll road as much as possible.
28 posted on 10/07/2003 3:13:17 PM PDT by 38special
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To: 38special
yeah - I got on the toll road for the first time in a long time over the weekend and was surprised to see it going up to $1.25.
29 posted on 10/08/2003 8:53:14 AM PDT by Frapster (John 3:16)
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To: Frapster
I just came back from the polls...

What made my final decision was the direct mail piece I received yesterday from Metro.

What I saw was that by 2012, the only thing MetroRail intends to accomplish is connecting primarily low income areas to downtown and the current soon to open downtown - medical center - reliant center rail line. This 2012 phase does nothing to address Houston real transit problem - commuters from outside the Beltway getting to and from major business centers.

Looking further into the future, other then connecting to Bush or Hobby Airports and the Galleria, the plan does nothing but continue expansion to primarily low income areas. Of course, the question begs to be asked "How many business travelers, convention visitors or tourists would want to ride a train that take them from the airport to downtown with multiple stops in low income areas?" Answer is few if any will ride a train like this. This reasoning has nothing to do with the racial make up of these low income areas,,,it has to do only with the fact that these areas are ugly , run down and have high crime rates.

Only when looking at future rail extensions does Metro even begin to service suburban commuters going to and from Houston Business Centers. How many billions and more importantly how much time will be have passed by the time any of the future rail extensions come into operation that even begin to address Houston true transit problems?

My take is that I graduated from high school in Houston in 1983, I graduated from U of H in 1992, I am now 38 years old. Passage of this metro rail plan would mean that by the time rail offers true services to commuters I will be close to retirement.

Needless to say, I voted against Metro's plan. I am not against rail in any way, but I am against spending billions of tax dollars by an unelected entity on a rail system that does nothing to address Houston's real mobility problems.

My suggestion to gain my vote would be a two level plan with heavy commuter rail making use of exisiting and enhanced BNSF and UP rail lines combined with light rail operating in selected areas. Following, I have listed some of these ideas. Look at a map and see what you think.

Heavy Commuter Rail Lines -

Kingwood / Humble - Downtown
Conroe / Woodlands - Downtown
Tomball / Willowbrook - Downtown
Clear Lake - Downtown
Richmond / Sugarland - Downtown
Katy - Downtown
Fairfield / Copperfield - Downtown
Bush Airport - Downtown - Hobby Airport (Airport Link)
Pearland - Downtown

Heavy Commuter Rail Lines would have no stops closer to downtown then Beltway 8 before going to / from downtown other then at intersections of light rail lines inside of the Beltway as outline below.

I would like to add that the enhancement of BNSF and UP lines has a side benefit. During late night hours when heavy commuter trains dont run, the BNSF and UP freight railroads can use these tracks to move products in and out of Houston more efficiently strenghtening Houston from a business perspective.

Light Rail Lines

Downtown - Med Center - Reliant Center - Post Oak / Main Transit Center

Post Oak / Main Transit Center - Galleria - NW Transit Center

Downtown - U of H - Hobby Airport

Downtown - Greenway Plaza - Galleria

Northside Light Rail Line connecting Tomball Heavy Rail - Greenspoint - Woodlands Heavy Rail - Bush Airport - Kingwood Heavy Rail

Only when I see a true solution will Metro gain my support. I would also like to see Metro become an elected board rather then a club of appointees from Houston City Council and County Commissioner courts.
30 posted on 11/04/2003 9:31:44 AM PST by tx65
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To: Willie Green
That kind of anti-transit rhetoric is so patheticly stupid that it's hilarious.

It may be all of those but it is also incredibly true. People don't want to ride around like cattle. Take those billions and build some roads.

31 posted on 11/04/2003 10:14:39 AM PST by meyer
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To: meyer
People don't want to ride around like cattle.

Some do, some don't.
That's the whole idea behind providing alternatives from which people may choose.
It's arrogantly presumptuous to pretend that you know what everybody wants.

32 posted on 11/04/2003 11:26:27 AM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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