Even hindsight isn’t always 20-20 of course, but if you look at the breakdown of which transportation projects across the U.S. won pieces of that $1.5 billion in federal stimulus money, it’s pretty clear the feds were favoring transit, rail and pedestrian projects. The top-ranked highway-only project was 10th on the list.
So did N.C. officials miscalculate by putting their big weight on repairing highway bridges over the Yadkin River, instead of making a big push for Mecklenburg County’s languishing-for-lack-of-federal-money commuter rail line? Charlotte and CATs submitted the request, of course, but in order to be team players with N.C. DOT and the governor they weren’t pulling out the big guns to lobby for it.
New York City’s project to improve dowdy Penn Station (the “Moynihan Station, Phase 1”) got $83 million. The “Tuscon Modern Streetcar” project won $63 million. A commuter rail project in Massachusetts (“the Fitchburg commuter rail extension and Wachusett station”) won $55.5 million. The DC area got $58 million for bus enhancements, and Philadelphia got $54 million for pedestrian and bicycle improvements. A lot of the money went for freight rail improvements, too.
“Selected projects must foster job creation, show strong economic benefits, and promote communities that are safer, cleaner and more livable,” the press release said. Later, it said the 22 so-called “livability projects” were “aimed at giving Americans more choices about how they travel and improving access to economic and housing opportunities in their communities.”
I think North Carolina’s Yadkin River bridge project, although a sorely needed repair job, failed to score on the “cleaner and more livable” factors. And I think it’s quite possible the shovel-ready but fed-funding-lacking North Corridor commuter rail line to Davidson would have hit high marks for “cleaner and more livable,” because of its obvious connection to more environmentally sound development, and for taking a load of traffic off I-77. It’s an example of regional cooperation, too, with four municipalities (Charlotte, Huntersville, Cornelius and Davidson) involved.
Conti demurred when I asked him to second-guess the request on Thursday. “It would have been just as hard to get any significant funding for the North Corridor,” he said. I wonder.
In any case, now that the state has learned the bridge repair project gets only $10 million in stimulus money, it’s moving to start the repairs in a few months.