http://www.masslive.com/politics/index.ssf/2015/02/massachusetts_senate_reluctant.html
This is the scariest part to me:
"But Republicans said there are things lawmakers can do other than raising taxes. State Sen. Robert Hedlund, R-Weymouth, urged Democrats not to turn transportation into "a political football." He said Republicans have offered solutions that do not raise taxes, such as limiting expansion of the MBTA until maintenance needs are addressed."
Sen. Hedlund has (along with other Republicans, I'm sure) latched on to a comment the Governor made about this without understanding it at all what it means (frankly, I don't think the Governor does, either). Operating and capital funds do not come out of the same bucket. Large expansion projects are paid for by Federal grants as well as other means that are unavailable to address maintenance needs.
The trade-off is between large capital projects to expand service and other capital projects to address longstanding deficiencies in equipment, such as track, signals, and rolling stock. Presenting it in this disingenuous way gives the impression that the MBTA has expanded at the expense of maintenance. That's not true. The MBTA has invested at the fringe (such as, say, IN THE SENATOR'S OWN DAMN DISTRICT) instead of investing in the core, and that's what needs to be corrected.
Conservatives here are trying to obscure the fact that this. agency. does. not. have. enough. money. That's it. There is no solution to be found simply by blaming a "wasteful" agency and denying it money.