At this point, we should be doing projects in parallel rather than one-project-at-a-time with 1 station or 5 station extension it all take a decade each.
Given the state of the Red Line to his city, he doesn't care about the Red Line either.
This guy got a point. Why are we talking about this? I look back to the past pages an arguably the development that trigged this discussion is that report... but that was still months ago. The post that seem to trigger all of this isn't exactly bringing new news.
If we're still stuck at one-project-at-a-time and each project taking up the decade no matter the size, then we're speculating on projects that won't start until 2040s at best. And that's assuming there's appetite for transit projects that are not busses. If anyone listen to the currently most recent podcast with Tibbits-Nutt, then Red Blue we might have to fight through her before getting to the real fight of getting federal funding. Pessimistically (which I do hope I'm wrong, I also get the impress Tibbits-Nutt does want to do good by offering quality transit), we might only get to see busses and slow zone fixes under this administration - so basically getting us back to situation when the GM were Grabauskas where we all used to be perplexed the only time the MBTA seem to go on a limb for is busses - but at least the rail were in a better state (if perhaps only by inertia than different practices).
Not to mean to put a negative spin of bus improvements and slow zone fixing. But, it does mean by the end of 2024 (assuming the repairs goes well), we're mostly getting back to wants and hopes of 2009 (well with GLX existing now, tbf).