Quote:
Originally Posted by moorhosj1
Sounds like you are now back-justifying your original comment. Nobody said those other places weren't potential options or that there couldn't have been more creativity from CTA.
The point was that your line about this ONLY being an extension for "equity" and to fulfill and old promise is false. As you admit yourself, they need a new rail-yard. Gluing it to the extension to help get Federal dollars isn't elegant, but it got us the first "L" service expansion in decades.
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It sounds like a bad attempt at gotcha in accusing Downtown of using the word "ONLY," which was never used. Saying that there were other options and that the CTA could have used more creativity is really all that needed to be said. That is the crux of the argument, and the rest is just smoke.
Neither you nor Bonsai Tree can refute that equity initiatives and political considerations were primary drivers of the Red Line extension, in contrast to operational necessity, efficiency, and potential passenger capture (which are the major considerations that should matter in PT).
Let us be real here; let us not talk about the virtues of a new rail yard as being the primary justifying motivator, given that no new rail yard should necessitate a 5 billion and 5.6-mile investment. Downplaying the conflation of the two objectives (rail yard with the extension) efforts by dressing it up as "less than elegant" is the kind of speech by officials and transit advocates that makes the public utterly cynical about future projects and funding.
Yet we will feign dismay as the public continues to sour on the CTA/Metra when it is clear that officials are making transparent niche social and political considerations instead of caring about best practices and efficiencies.
Meanwhile, our transit headway will continue to be putrid, optics of crime and grime are rife, and projects that could truly enhance the experience for potentially 100k's riders get put out to the back of the line for decades (at best).