[milwaukee-electric] Re: Fwd: Milwaukee getting back on board after 51 years.

Y Marti yance at oldmilwaukee.net
Mon Sep 21 16:51:49 EDT 2009


Its not a done deal until the tracks are laid. Don't get complacent.  
There will be a storm of opposition from "Tea Party" types like Scott  
Walker, Charlie Sykes, etc. Make your voices heard by attending the  
Open House at the Municipal Building on October 8th as well as writing  
to members of the Common Council and the Mayor. Tell your friends to  
also show strong support.

Quoting LouRugani <x779 at webtv.net>:

> --- In WisconsinRailroading at yahoogroups.com:
>
> Streetcar plan aimed at east side commuters
> By Larry Sandler of the Journal Sentinel
>
> Posted: Sept. 18, 2009
>
> Plans for a $64 million Milwaukee streetcar line have shifted toward  
> a commuter-oriented route that would connect lower east side  
> neighborhoods with downtown office buildings, veering away from a  
> more tourist-themed loop around downtown attractions, Milwaukee  
> Mayor Tom Barrett says.
>
> City planners are studying three route options, all of which would  
> run from the downtown Amtrak-Greyhound station and the Midwest  
> Airlines Center to the intersection of E. Ogden and N. Prospect  
> avenues, with a possible extension to E. Brady St.
>
> In future years, the system could be extended to the University of  
> Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Marquette University, Riverwest, Walker's Point  
> and other neighborhoods within a few miles of the original route,  
> depending on whether funding is available.
>
> Barrett will unveil the route options Friday morning at a community  
> development summit meeting on regional transportation, sponsored by  
> the Urban Economic Development Association of Wisconsin and the  
> Greater Milwaukee Committee. The public can review and comment on  
> the streetcar plans at a public information session from 3 to 7 p.m.  
> Oct. 8 at the Zeidler Municipal Building, 841 N. Broadway.
>
> The streetcar plans are part of the Milwaukee Connector study, a  
> joint transit planning effort by the city, Milwaukee County,  
> Wisconsin Center District and Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of  
> Commerce. The study was aimed at finding ways to use $91.5 million  
> in long-idle federal transit aid, until Congress finally settled the  
> issue by handing $54.5 million to the city for streetcars and $36.6  
> million to the county for express buses.
>
> City officials plan to use modern streetcars, a lower-cost form of  
> the light rail operating in Seattle, Tacoma, Wash., and Portland, Ore.
>
> The streetcars would operate in regular traffic lanes and would not  
> take away any street parking, said downtown Ald. Bob Bauman,  
> chairman of the Common Council's Public Works Committee. Planners  
> are considering technology that would turn traffic signals green as  
> streetcars approach, City Engineer Jeff Polenske said.
>
> Barrett's initial streetcar route would have looped around downtown  
> from the train station, leading to criticism that it would serve  
> visitors better than residents. The new route options are focused on  
> connecting densely populated neighborhoods with major employment  
> centers and hotels, Barrett and Bauman said.
>
> But the depot is still a key stop, anticipating that plans for  
> commuter rail and high-speed rail would bring in more visitors who  
> could use a transit link for the last leg of their trip, Bauman  
> said. The streetcar could be operating by 2014, and rail links to  
> Chicago would likely be beefed up if the Windy City lands the 2016  
> Olympics, Barrett said.
>
> If authorities can agree on funding, the KRM Commuter Link rail line  
> could be in place by 2015 or 2016, a timetable that might be  
> accelerated for the Olympics, Ken Yunker, executive director of the  
> Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission, said Wednesday.  
> The $206 million line would run seven round trips each weekday to  
> connect Milwaukee, Racine and the southern suburbs to Kenosha, where  
> passengers could transfer to the Chicago area's Metra commuter trains.
>
> Meanwhile, Midwestern governors are pressing the federal government  
> for $3.5 billion to start a Chicago-based high-speed rail network,  
> including a $519 million Milwaukee-to-Madison route that would  
> connect to Amtrak's existing Chicago-to-Milwaukee Hiawatha line. The  
> Milwaukee-to-Madison line could start service by 2013.
>
> For the streetcar, city officials are required to match the federal  
> grant by paying 15% of construction costs. Barrett said that money  
> could come from borrowing or a tax incremental financing district.  
> Other options are under study to pay operating costs, Polenske said.
>
> Barrett said the city would find ways to fund the streetcars without  
> using property taxes. Although the city is facing a $90 million  
> budget shortfall next year, Barrett and Bauman said the streetcar  
> line was a necessary investment to keep Milwaukee economically  
> competitive with other cities that have or are building rail lines.
>
> "We cannot just stagnate as a community," Barrett said.
>
>
>
>
>
>





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