Closer to 4.5 miles but still . . . Point taken about the low efficiency of capital dollarsTaper your enthusiasm guys... its cost 2 billion for 2 miles of GLX track.
We will be lucky if we get one small project completed.
Closer to 4.5 miles but still . . . Point taken about the low efficiency of capital dollarsTaper your enthusiasm guys... its cost 2 billion for 2 miles of GLX track.
We will be lucky if we get one small project completed.
$61 billion was provided through federally directed aid to businesses, individuals, and public entities. This funding was provided through programs like the Paycheck Protection Program for businesses, stimulus checks for individuals, and Federal Transit Authority grants for Regional Transportation Authorities.
$41 billion was provided to the Commonwealth through targeted aid administered by the Commonwealth, including $28 billion to support COVID-related Unemployment Insurance benefits and $2.9 billion through the Elementary and Secondary Education Emergency Relief Fund. Although the Commonwealth administers these funds, state agencies are restricted by specific federal rules about who they can distribute funds to, how much, and for what purposes.
$11 billion was provided to the Commonwealth through flexible aid, including the Coronavirus Relief Fund and the Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund. These funding sources still have federal rules about how funds can be used, but the Commonwealth has more flexibility in deciding how and where money should be spent. The Commonwealth received $2.5 billion for the Coronavirus Relief Fund and $5.3 billion for the Coronavirus State Fiscal Recovery Fund. Through the Coronavirus Relief Fund, the City of Boston received $121 million and Plymouth County received $91 million. Through the Coronavirus Local Fiscal Recovery Fund, Massachusetts’ municipalities and functional counties received $3.4 billion.
As Old Colony posted, you can visit the Regional Planning page on Mass.gov for a listing of MPO's and TPO's across the Commonwealth.@dshoost88 Where can we participate in our MPO? (Websites? Hearing times?)
What will the agenda item be that says “advocacy is possible & welcome?”
What is the most helpful/productive “I want stuff I want” participation?
My 3 top highway projects to fund with this are:According to calculations by CNBC of the Senate bill, MA will receive $9.33 billion
$4.2 billion highways
Portal and the Gateway tunnel are not being funded by this Infrastructure bill, as they are already funded.I think I was wrong: I now think The money that is going to the northeast corridor subsumed the previously agreed monies for the B&P tunnel, the gateway tunnel, and the Portal Bridge. So we will probably see those built, but a whole lot of other $ going to engineering things like the Susquehanna and Gunpowder briges
Taper your enthusiasm guys... its cost 2 billion for 2 miles of GLX track.
We will be lucky if we get one small project completed.
Am I the only one underwhelmed at the amount of money Mass is getting back from the feds? For a state the regularly sends more to Washington than we get back, I was hoping for at least 20 billion.
Admittedly that number seems to be formula distributed funds only: significant billions are to be distributed via project grants so it's likely MA will get more.Am I the only one underwhelmed at the amount of money Mass is getting back from the feds? For a state the regularly sends more to Washington than we get back, I was hoping for at least 20 billion.
Seaport LRT should br doable for 1.5B topsThis.
I was really excited for both of the major two bills and this one also. But I thought they greatly under did the amount for major mass transit projects (especially when Dems are in control and they’re the climate change party - wouldn’t you want to take cars off the road?)
An additional $150B would do an AMAZING amount for this nation. If you required localities to produce 25% of the cost of projects or something then you’d really have something
There are so many projects that would be massive game changers for cities.
(Estimates are my best guess)
$15B Transbay Bay Area
$10B North South Rail Link Boston
$4B Blue North Boston
$4B Seaport LRT Boston
$5B Orange Extension Boston
$0.5B Red/Blue Connector
$8B Utica Ave Subway New York
$8B Triboro Line New York
$10B Second Avenue Phase 3 New York
$5B West Seattle Subway Seattle
$15B Sepulveda Subway Los Angeles
$10B Vermont Subway Los Angeles
$4B Purple Line to the Sea Los Angeles
$5B Downtown Subway Tunnel Austin
$8B D2 Subway Tunnel + D1 Under Dallas
$6B Green/Gold Extensions Atlanta
$3B BeltLine LRT Atlanta
Imagine if a bill like this not only funded major projects like this, but in addition: HSR for major areas like Houston to Dallas; NY to Chicago, Atlanta to DC. And also provided a permanent funding source for such projects.
We can dream I guess
Closer to 4.5 miles but still . . . Point taken about the low efficiency of capital dollars
Not really sure how you can improve that.I hope the neponset circle/Morrissey/93 ramp is included as well.