From the foot and bicycle traffic I’ve seen, the rail-side path along the new Lynx Blue Line is popular. It’s a great way to walk or bicycle and avoid traffic. Too bad there might not be a similar path along its extension up to UNC Charlotte and beyond.
At a Tuesday night public meeting on plans for the extension, Charlotte Area Transit System and city planning department folks said it will be much harder to find money for, and build, a similar path. One key reason: The city owns the railbed from uptown south to Scaleybark — where the path is. But heading northeast out of uptown, the rail right of way is owned by the N.C. Railroad, and CATS will lease space in the ROW. That section already carries freight as well as Amtrak passenger trains.
The bike/walking path was paid for mostly by city bond money for the so-called SCIP (South Corridor Improvement Project). The city hasn’t yet prioritized its list of proposed NECI (North East Corridor Improvement, and they’re calling it “nee-sie”) — and it’s a bigger laundry list to start with. And a time of pinched local government budgets and tight credit all over the country.
Andy Mock of CATS tells me CDOT and the county park and rec department are working to see what can be done, perhaps with a walking/biking path that leaves the trackside and goes up North Tryon Street — which the light rail will do, probably north of Old Concord Road.
If you think the city absolutely should put this project atop its NECI priority list, be sure to let your City Council representatives know.