Re: Fall River/New Bedford Commuter Rail
Lets get back on track here (pun intended).
Somebody brought up the effect of a station move on people in Lakeville. A good point and a proper consideration, but not enough to derail the entire project (see Harbor Towers example) IMHO. There was a tangent about how this will scare all of the region's real estate agents away from making deals which seems a bit overblown since moving T stations has in fact happened before (in Boston) and we managed to stave off cannibalism in the years that followed but again I feel for this handful of people. However, I've got to be honest here. Not everybody is going to be completely happy. If that was the goal, nothing would ever get done.
Next the projects you site as being closer than SCR which is on the backburner with the exception of GLX are wishful thinking. Our grandchildren probably won't live long enough to see NSRL. Even SSX, a frankly more worthwhile project than SCR, is nowhere close to even starting and everybody is completely on board with it.
Finally you seem to imply public works projects are subject to some sort of statewide referendum, and you're this close to leaning on your reps to oppose SCR forever. Look, no offense, but I highly doubt ANY of these current proposed projects really register on the average person's radar. GLX a little when the contractors tried to screw the state. What South Coast pols need to do is convince Baker that a cost effective expansion is worthwhile. If they can do so, and we'll see when we get a new study hopefully with ridership projections and the like, it may get built before NSRL or even SSX because it in theory is a simpler project with less moving parts. Time will tell...
Rover, YOU ARE THE ONE WHO HAS BEEN PLAYING THIS CARD for your last so many posts. You've been saying the few need to be sacrificed for the many, with "few" being Lakeville and "many" being South Coast.
Your last sentence in this paragraph is precisely what I was warning YOU about. You don't need to turn it around and warn me of it, I've been on the short end of that thinking plenty of times, I'm fully aware of it.
Also, in your first sentence, you warn that nothing will ever get done if this approach gets used. Actually, all sorts of transit work is getting done (not as much as I'd like) and GLX might get back on track too (I know, not certain yet). Hell, even SSX and NSRL are being floated again. Why is it that some work is getting done, while SCR is forever on the backburner? Because this "sacrifice the few for the many" logic - that YOU have been advocating should be used, not me - tends to put South Coast on the perpetual losing end.
A little psychological projection maybe? If you think I'm playing a bad card, maybe you ought to explain why you've been playing it for several days now?
Lets get back on track here (pun intended).
Somebody brought up the effect of a station move on people in Lakeville. A good point and a proper consideration, but not enough to derail the entire project (see Harbor Towers example) IMHO. There was a tangent about how this will scare all of the region's real estate agents away from making deals which seems a bit overblown since moving T stations has in fact happened before (in Boston) and we managed to stave off cannibalism in the years that followed but again I feel for this handful of people. However, I've got to be honest here. Not everybody is going to be completely happy. If that was the goal, nothing would ever get done.
Next the projects you site as being closer than SCR which is on the backburner with the exception of GLX are wishful thinking. Our grandchildren probably won't live long enough to see NSRL. Even SSX, a frankly more worthwhile project than SCR, is nowhere close to even starting and everybody is completely on board with it.
Finally you seem to imply public works projects are subject to some sort of statewide referendum, and you're this close to leaning on your reps to oppose SCR forever. Look, no offense, but I highly doubt ANY of these current proposed projects really register on the average person's radar. GLX a little when the contractors tried to screw the state. What South Coast pols need to do is convince Baker that a cost effective expansion is worthwhile. If they can do so, and we'll see when we get a new study hopefully with ridership projections and the like, it may get built before NSRL or even SSX because it in theory is a simpler project with less moving parts. Time will tell...