Equilibria
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 6, 2007
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We have Focus40 here which is basically that, the difference is we don't have many new corridors in need of HRT/LRV compared to a younger transit system like Seattle. I think the MBTA's plate is plenty full with regional rail, overhauling the existing lines and stations, and redoing the bus system, which they are already doing. https://www.mbtafocus40.com/
I agree that's true in a pragmatic sense, but only because Focus40 didn't capture a lot of the low-hanging fruit. RBX and Blue-Lynn were in there, but Orange-West Roxbury, Green-Needham, etc. were not. The language "we're imagining" suggested that they'd be bringing in innovative concepts, and it was used as either (a) a parking spot for perpetually stalled infamous concepts or (b) crazy, unbuildable notions like a subway across the Common. For the Green Line, "we're imagining" included Green-Mystic Valley, which is something they should be diligently working to fund and break ground on, not something they're dreaming of.
The MBTA has definitely done a good job of late advancing useful "transformations" like Regional Rail and Bus Transformation (network redesign, BEB facilities plan, etc). But if the plate is full that just means the bandwidth is too low. There's no way for the MBTA to advocate for more bandwidth (people and funding) until it's honest with the Legislature, Governor, and public about what it could do.
We have a revitalized thread dedicated to drawing the map Charlie_mta is talking about. We may have fewer corridors than Seattle and Austin, but we surely have them, and until the MBTA admits they exist, they stand no chance of ever being built.