Re: Did anyone go to the Light Rail Meeting?
Yes Steve, I attended as well and wanted to say hello to you but had another engagement, and left right at 7:00 just as the guy began to sort of rant about there being a lot of buried street car tracks (which is ture) that we could dig up and get a streetcar line going right away. I think that is a little Polly Annaish and more about being pissed that so much of OKC's rail infrastructure has been discarded and more of the same on the horizion. I would like to believe that it was that simple too, but I don't think it is. It's sort of like remodeling an old house. Sure, you have some things to start with, but uncovering, recovering and refurbishing is usually just as expensive and more time consuming than building from scratch, but a hell of a lot more romantic. I am also still pretty pissed about all that OKC has tossed in the ash bin as well, but am trying to channel that energy to better use these days.
I am still open to other opinions, but curently, I disagree with doing the street car porion first, although I would personally benefit from having that system in place ASAP rather than seeing it completed when I am about 90 based on the time line in the presentation. To demonstrate the broader public benefit necessary to get the Feds on board, The City must improve the existing bus system first. Also, I think that the Phase I light rail segment as proposed would attract lots of ridership and really ignite enormous demand for more.
One thing that I have suggested in written comments and will follow up on with City Council is that the some of the existing rubber tired trolleys be used to implement service on the entire propsed Modern Streetcar loop ASAP. The equipment should be available based on Larry Hopper's comments that they have scaled back somewhat on the downtown/bricktown routes. That would serve as a market test for the potential future ridership of the proposed Modern Streetcar Line and provide immediate linkage between the OU and St. Anthony Medical Centers, Downtown, Midtown and Bricktown.
I also totally agree with using passes. Fumbling with quarterts is a pain.
The Old Downtown Guy
It will take decades for Oklahoma City's
downtown core to regain its lost gritty,
dynamic urban character, but it's exciting
to observe and participate in the transformation.
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