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Mayor Villaraigosa wants commuter rail now, not decades from now

by: Dante Atkins

Fri Oct 30, 2009 at 15:26:49 PM PDT


The heart of Los Angeles is a square bounded by freeways--the 101 to the North, the 110 to the East, the 10 to the South, and the 405 to the West.  I live right in the middle of that square.  And I envision a day where I can get to Sacramento, San Francisco, or San Diego not by driving 20 minutes to the appropriate freeway and then several more hours on that freeway, but rather by stepping outside my front door, walking to the nearest subway station, and taking it to Union Station where I connect with the HSR line right downtown to my destination.

And while the high-speed rail authority is trying to make sure that the long half of the project gets completed while I'm still alive, the City of Los Angeles has been waiting for someone to show that type of initiative.  In November 2008, voters in Los Angeles County overwhelmingly passed Measure R, an additional half-cent sales tax levy to fund a wide variety of transportation projects, but especially a subway to the sea that will serve the Wilshire Corridor commuter lane for all those that live in the East and work in the West.

So what's the problem?  It's supposed to take 30 years.  According to the current schedule, I'll be approaching my 60s by the time I would finally get a chance to hop on a subway here in midtown.  Who knows--maybe they'll have invented personal teleportation technology by then.

Fortunately, Mayor Villaraigosa doesn't think that's acceptable:

The mayor today will unveil an ambitious but politically risky transportation plan that fast-tracks several high-profile rail projects to be completed within the next decade. That's a big speed-up, because officials have generally been talking about completing them within 30 years.

Villaraigosa has made building more rail a priority of his administration, though he's the first to admit it's going to take more than speeches and good intentions to get it done.

"Yes, this is a stretch goal. Yes, this is going to be tough, but I think by now folks shouldn't count me out," Villaraigosa said in an interview. "The fact is that this is the most important thing that we can do to alleviate congestion and gridlock, to improve the quality of our air and to really vindicate the people's will for the need to address transportation."

Accelerating light rail projects in the City would be one of the best things we could do.  It would create jobs more quickly, it would alleviate traffic, and it would mitigate air pollution.  The problem?  We would need about $10 billion.  But I'll tell you this much: if there's a second round of stimulus coming, I can't think of better ways to spend it than development of light rail in Los Angeles.  The timing is also good because construction costs are lower in bad economic times--if we wait until the economy improves, construction will become concomitantly more expensive.

Of course, I may be just a little biased.

Dante Atkins :: Mayor Villaraigosa wants commuter rail now, not decades from now
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Well, maybe second best (0.00 / 0)
Better to keep schools open and entire CSUs from shutting down until tax revenue ticks up again.

After that, HSR.


Waiting for 30 years? I don't think most would want to do that (0.00 / 0)
I may not live in LA county anymore, But I think the Mayor is right, The People of LA are paying for this, So why should they wait for 30 years? They should do both the Gold line extension and the line to the beach, Why? Then the line will finally go somewhere, Like to the beach, Among other places that is.

Why is it always rail? (0.00 / 0)
For a lot less than $10B LA could have a much better bus transit system. Fixed rail, whether light rail, heavy rail or high speed rail, isn't anywhere near as flexible as a bus network. For anyone other than the poor, though, buses seem to only be acceptable in LA when they take you from the airport to the rental car lot.  

Huh? (0.00 / 0)
Flexibility isn't the only goal here. On heavily traveled corridors, like the Westside, you need high-capacity grade-separated transportation to give people a reliable, fixed alternative to driving.

Buses get stuck in traffic, carry fewer riders, and have higher operating costs. Their flexibility is a big drawback since that leads to perceptions that buses are not reliable, flaky, or that the routes aren't permanent, so you don't get the transit-oriented development that you need.

There is no major city in the world that relies solely on buses to manage its transportation needs, certainly no city on the size and scale of LA.

Further, LA already has huge success with its existing passenger rail systems. The Red Line subway is heavily used, the Metrolink commuter system also has high ridership.

Buses are and will continue to be a part of LA's transportation solutions. But only a fool would rely on them alone. Fixed rail not only has to be part of the solution, it already is part of the solution.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


[ Parent ]
One of the reasons rail is better than bus (0.00 / 0)
is that rail is smoother and can carry more amenities than a bus.

On a rail line, I can easily walk to the bathroom, I can work on my laptop, I can walk to a snack car. Typical buses - even very nice coaches as used by Amtrak California et al - are not nearly so comfortable for those kinds of activities. You have to sit in your seat, pretty much, and they are noisier and bouncier - just because the roads are noisier and bouncier. There's not typically an outlet (though that might be added to commuter buses).

Buses have a place but they are best reserved for low-volume or very short distance.

Fry, don't be a hero! It's not covered by our health plan!


[ Parent ]
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