The Milwaukee County Clerk is leading a one-man crusade to pull a planned rail stop out of anti-rail Waukesha County and bring it into Western Milwaukee County.
Details
here.
Will our legislators get on the phone with the Governor, or WisDOT and make some noise?
What if Tosa doesn't want it?
ReplyDeleteDo you even care?
Nope.
@Jim I'm not sure that's a great idea. A stop in Milwaukee County seems more like a job for a light-rail system, while HSR stops need to be more spread out. I guess I'd like to look at the distances to see if they make sense first.
ReplyDeleteDave: Thoughtful comment. I think proximity to the Medical Complex might be what they are after. The line location is also crucial, obviously.
ReplyDeleteThis is all useless jaw-jacking, your CSR is never going to be completed.
ReplyDeleteAld. Bob Bauman has asked me post this commentL
ReplyDeleteThe proposed Milwaukee to Madison high speed rail line will become a reality at least as far and the upgrading of the rail lines to accommodate high speed passenger trains.
It is possible that the next governor could block the appropriation of state funds for operating costs, however, that would set up the rather ridiculous situation of having a new and upgraded rail line with no trains running on it. It would be like spending $823M on a new highway and then refusing to fund the cost of policing, snow plowing, routine maintenance, street lights, etc. thereby effectively preventing any motor vehicles from using that new road.
It is highly unlikely that any reasonable elected official, even a conservative elected official, will allow this to happen especially in light of the fact that, unlike local transit, intercity rail passengers tend to be middle and upper middle class persons who vote including campaign contributing business persons.
Based on ridership between Milwaukee and Chicago even Republicans ride the train.
WisDOT is moving very quickly to let contracts for all or most of the $823M prior to January, 2011.
A significant number of jobs will be attached to these contracts and politically powerful engineering firms (HNTB) and road builders will be the contractors.
There is nothing anyone can do about this since the necessary funding agreements have been entered into between the WisDOT and the Federal Railroad Administration.
In addition, if these contracts are cancelled down the road, some portion of the federal money would have to be refunded (or the Feds will simply deduct the money from Wisconsin's federal highway appropriation; i.e. less money for the Zoo Interchange and countless other highway projects). In short the next governor will face the choice of either allowing the work to proceed or asking the legislature to write a check for the federal funds expended to to date.
I cannot envision the latter scenario happening.
Accordingly, the time is ripe to lobby for a western Milwaukee County station.
This rail line will become reality no matter what talk radio says so even opponents would be well advised to make the best of this infrastructure investment.
I agree that a light rail stop makes sense in Tosa. Would a high-speed stop make a light rail stop more or less likely? I liked the idea of not putting the stop in uncooperative Waukesha, but at the same time I don't want to be petty or do something that doesn't make sense.
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