Frequently Asked Questions Answers to Frequently-Asked-Questions are provided on the following pages. Questions and answers are organized under these general categories: 1) Design Alternatives; 2) Funding; 3) Public Engagement & Decision-Making; and 4) Study Background DESIGN ALTERNATIVE Q & A's Q. Will the system be safe? Collisions occasionally occur along shared, unprotected rights of way, where light rail trains travel alongside or together with traffic, without any physical barriers between them. Sometimes, collisions occur when motor vehicles are allowed to make uncontrolled left turns across the tracks. No comparable conditions will exist on MetroLink. The only at-grade options being considered are those in which trains will run in a protected right of way. At grade crossings, MetroLink will operate at low speeds, often approaching station platforms, further reducing accident risks. At underground stations, where personal safety and security is the concern, there will be appropriate security systems and personnel to ensure confidence in the safety of the system.
Q. Will the light rail vehicles block intersections and aggravate traffic congestion? Q. Is an at-grade alternative being considered only because funding is limited? Funding limitations, if any, will not compromise the quality of the design for the MetroLink Cross County extension. In fact, the freedom to select from more elaborate and costly designs is enhanced by using local funds alone. The ability to "build it right" is in no way diminished by the available funding. Q. Are there significant speed differences between the alternatives under consideration? Q. Will extending MetroLink diminish downtown St. Louis' role as the regional "hub"? Q. When was the decision made to build the segment of MetroLink from the Forest Park Station to Shrewsbury? Were the decisions to extend the line to Shrewsbury and consider an at-grade alternative made only after the Proposition M vote failed in November, 1997? The regional plan for MetroLink was adopted in 1989. Priorities were assigned to nine corridors throughout the region. The Cross-County Corridor, which generally follows a route to Clayton and then extending north and south to Florissant and Butler Hill Road respectively, was selected in the first tier of priorities, along with the route currently under construction to Belleville, IL. In March, 1997 the East West Gateway Coordinating Council's (the Council) Board of Directors adopted the findings of the Major Transportation Investment Analysis (MTIA) in the Cross-County Corridor, which included a variety of highway improvements and the extension of MetroLink. The first "operating segment" of Cross-County, the route now being designed, was identified at that time. It was determined that this route would be independently successful, and could likely be paid for with the Proposition M funding being accumulated. This study did not determine the design of MetroLink, just the general route. A subsequent "Strategic Alignment Analysis," completed in August 1997 by an independent consultant, resulted in a decision by the Council's Board of Directors to endorse the North-of-Forest Park route for the first operating segment of the Cross-County extension. The route runs north of Forest Park to Clayton and then south to the vicinity of I-44. This decision was made before the Proposition M vote with the full knowledge that this segment could be built and operated with existing funds regardless of the outcome of the vote later in the year on Proposition M. The failure of Proposition M in November 1997 did not affect in any way the Council's plans for the route currently being designed. Had Proposition M passed, it would have meant that the remaining segments of the Cross-County Corridor would have been built, along with at least one other corridor. Q. Why are planners proposing to extend the system to Lansdowne Avenue? Q. What kind of environmental analysis will be performed during the project?
FUNDING Q & A's Q. How will the extension be funded? Q. Will a tax increase be required to build or operate this extension? Q. Couldn't we build a higher quality extension if we used federal funds? The use of federal funds would not necessarily promote consideration of higher cost alternatives (like the underground alternatives), as some have suggested. The high cost of those alternatives would likely cause the projects to rank poorly in the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) cost effectiveness criterion used in rating projects competing for federal funds. The federal process for funding these projects assigns ratings for more than one hundred proposed projects. Only a handful are ultimately funded. Transit projects must do very well on the FTA cost effectiveness criterion to have any hope of receiving federal funds. The likelihood of receiving federal funds for an underground alternative would therefore be extremely remote. Using local monies, we are free to consider any alternative regardless of cost effectiveness. Q. Why isn't the region receiving its share of federal money for MetroLink's extension? The region does not automatically receive a share of federal transit construction funds. Rather, the St. Louis region is competing with as many as 100 cities nationwide at any one time for an annual federal appropriation that will be approximately $900 million. The region has averaged about $30 million a year in appropriations over the last 14 years. Considering these circumstances, the Council concluded it would be well into the next century before there would be adequate federal funds to pay for the extension of MetroLink in the Cross-County Corridor were the Council to pursue federal funding. Were the region to wait for federal funds, it would probably be 10 years or more before the Cross County segment, currently being studied, would be under construction. Q. Why not shorten the line to enable consideration of higher cost alternatives? Q. With limited funds, why is the Forest Park circulator being considered as part of this project?
Public Engagement & Decision-Making Q & A's Q. Has the public been given adequate opportunity to participate in the planning process for MetroLink? Staff and consultants will continue to meet with any group that asks. It's important to the Council that the diverse interests, ideas, and concerns of the affected communities as well as those of residents, transit users and organizations are considered throughout the design process. There are several ways to express your ideas and concerns. We encourage you to share your ideas with the Council by calling the study hotline and leaving a voice message or by sending an e-mail message to crosscounty@marymeans.com. Written comments may be sent to Steven Schukraft, Engagement Team Manager in care of the East-West Gateway Coordinating Council, 701 N 15th St Suite 1001E, Tenth Floor, St. Louis, MO 63103. You may also want to share your ideas and concerns with your local elected officials. Q. Is the public engagement process affecting the design of the project?
Q. Has the decision-making process for this segment of the MetroLink system been too hasty? Q. Who will decide on the Conceptual Design for the extension?
Study Background Q & A's Q. What is the Cross-County Conceptual Design Study? For the Cross-County MetroLink extension, a conceptual design study is being undertaken to test and ultimately decide upon design options and alternatives for the extension of MetroLink along a route from the Forest Park Station to Clayton and south to Shrewsbury. During the study, the Council and its consultants will prepare maps, drawings, analyses and reports that describe possible design and operating alternatives for the extension. While previous planning studies resulted in the selection of the route, additional information regarding the extension's design, costs and impacts must be analyzed before decisions can be made on a specific design for this route. The study will address issues such as the appropriateness of running trains below grade in a tunnel, at the surface in a separate right-of-way, or on elevated tracks. The location and design of stations and related facilities such as park-and-ride lots and bus loading and unloading areas will also be considered. Q. Who is conducting the study? A team of consultants led by Mary Means & Associates, Inc., a community planning firm based in Alexandria, VA, is managing the community engagement process for the study. Parsons Transportation Group, supported by a team of engineers, architects, planners and specialists, is managing the conceptual design and environmental analysis processes. Q. What is the Council? The board is composed of members from throughout the region. Of the Board's 21 voting members, fourteen are local elected officials, six are citizens representing both states, and one is the Chair of the Bi-State Development Agency . Representatives of a number of other state and federal agencies sit on the Board as non-voting members. The Board meets monthly to discuss and deliberate issues of regional concern and to decide matters of common interest. A number of standing and ad hoc advisory committees help inform the dialogue and decision-making process. Information on the Council's programs may be found on their web site at www.ewgateway.org or by calling the Council at (314) 421-4220. Q. What will be the results of the study? Once a conceptual design for the extension is approved by the Council's Board of Directors, Bi-State will complete the final design, engineering and construction and begin system operations on the new line. Q. How was it decided that Cross-County would be the first extension of MetroLink in Missouri? In 1994, the Council adopted Transportation Redefined, a long-range transportation plan for the St. Louis Region, that identified several transportation corridors for further study, including Cross-County. The Council completed a study of the Cross-County Corridor, called the Cross-County Corridor Major Transportation Investment Analysis, (MTIA) in 1997. The study was conducted jointly by the Council and MoDOT in cooperation with Bi-State. The MTIA resulted in the Council's decision to amend Transportation Redefined to include, among other transportation improvements, the extension of MetroLink in the Cross-County Corridor. The MTIA planning process lasted approximately two years from the Spring of 1995 to the Council's decision in March 1997. Q. How was the "North-of-Forest Park" route chosen for the extension? The Strategic Alignment Assessment resulted in a decision by the Council to extend MetroLink along a route that branches off the existing MetroLink line at the Forest Park Station following Forest Park Parkway and Millbrook west through downtown Clayton. The route then turns south and follows the existing railroad right-of-way to I-44 in Shrewsbury. This route, often referred to as the "North-of-Forest Park" route, was selected by the Council in September 1997. Q. What future MetroLink extensions are under consideration?
These studies are the first stage in considering transportation improvements in each corridors, a process already completed for the Cross-County Corridor. Investments in highway and transit improvements, including potential extensions to MetroLink, will be among the improvements analyzed for each corridor. Contacts The Cross-County study is sponsored by the East-West Gateway Coordinating Council in cooperation with the Bi-State Development Agency and the Missouri Department of Transportation. For more information call the study hotline at 314.621.4499, check out the Council's web site at www.ewgateway.org or send an e-mail message to crosscounty@marymeans.com. (rev 05.08.99)
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