Archive for May, 2009

CTA to Host Open Houses for Red Line Extension project

Thursday, May 21st, 2009
The CTA is hosting a public presentation of locally preferred alternatives to the proposed Red Line Extension in the study area bordered by 95th Street on the north, Ashland Avenue on the west, Stony Island Avenue on the east, and the Cal-Sag Channel/ Little Calumet River and 134th Street on the south. These open houses are being conducted as a requirement for the project to receive funding from the Federal Transportation Administration’s New Starts program. To receive funding through New Starts, this project must be put through an alternatives analysis study, file an environmental impact statement, as well as complete preliminary engineering, final design, and lastly, construction.  These open houses will be a great opportunity to learn more about this project and influence the planning process.

Open houses are scheduled as follows:

Wednesday, June 3, 2009
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
(Presentation will begin at 6:15 p.m.)
Olive-Harvey College Cafeteria
10001 South Woodlawn
Chicago, IL

Thursday, June 4, 2009
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
(Presentation will begin at 6:15 p.m.)
Woodson Regional Chicago Public Library
9525 South Halsted Street
Chicago, IL

$3.5 Million in Comprehensive Regional Planning Fund in Danger

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009
The Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP), the state agency which integrates land use and transportation planning in the seven counties of north-eastern Illinois, has been put in danger of having their $3.5 million for Comprehensive Regional Planning Fund (CRPF) written out of the state budget. This would have a deeply painful effect on transportation funding in Illinois, as CMAP needs these funds to be able to leverage $11 million in matched federal funds, which allow them to secure around $2 billion for transportation projects in Illinois. Legislators supporting this cut are in effect leaving a far larger pot of federal funding on the table in looking for an immediate budget shortcut.
Losing this funding would endanger some of CMAP’s vital projects; among them the preparation to the Go To 2040 plan, the first-ever comprehensive plan for investment and development in the region, currently scheduled to be released in 2010. If this legislation goes through, CMAP’s planning efforts to accommodate population growth, currently estimated at an increase of 2.8 million by 2040 will be severely hampered.
For further reading, CMAP has a summary of their case available here and a sample letter available here.  Please contact your state legislators (the Illinois State Board of Elections can help you identify exactly who to contact) and let them know that you oppose cutting funding to CMAP’s Comprehensive Regional Planning Fund.

Fight Elimination of the RTA

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Surprising rumors in Springfield have indicated that RTA may soon be eliminated. (See Greg Hinz’s article, “Madigan out to kill RTA?”) The RTA provides vital large-scale vision in allocating funds and coordinating services between the CTA, Metra, and PACE. Without the RTA, these agencies will no longer have a channel to coordinate with each other, drastically reducing their efficacy and rendering long-term planning between them next to impossible. We are urging our members to stop this bad decision in its tracks, by sending a letter to their legislators reminding them of the RTA’s central importance to maintaining an effective, healthy public transportation system in Illinois.

T4America’s National Platform

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Transportation4America recently released their full Campaign Platform, offering advice to President Obama and his administration on how to forge their priorities in enacting a sustainable transportation plan. The current $286 billion SAFETEA-LU plan will expire this year, giving the Obama administration a unique opportunity to make a dramatic shift in transportation policy. T4America’s recommendations emphasize fiscal accountability, sustainability, and integrating land use planning with tranportation policy. Read more on their website, where you can download the full 31-page report or a 3-page executive summary. You can also sign a petition urging Congress to support these priorities here.

Transit Future is Back!

Friday, May 15th, 2009

In response to recent developments in local transportation politics, CNT is reviving the TransitFuture coalition. Created in March 2007 to rally local support to avert the Doomsday defunding of public transportation in Northeastern Illinois, the TransitFuture’s organizing efforts paid off, and the crisis was averted. With the current funding crunch, that victory has revealed itself to be temporary, and the TransitFuture coalition is back in action to organize against the latest batch of harmful budget threats. Stay tuned to our website and listserv to learn how you can help stop Illinois’ budget crisis from doing irreparable damage to the public transportation system.