Those projections are from the past though.
Lexington is one of the success stories of the MBTA communities act. They proceeded in actual good faith and are seeing development in the places that matter. Many of the people against the proposal are doing so on the back of limited bus service so would support it if the MBTA buses were more frequent. Lexington is primed to be what Arlington was minus the catholic hand wringing. You can't argue in good faith that we should extend the red line to Milton, who actively won't densify, and then say that Lexington shouldn't have the red line. The community at large understands that is Cambridge/Boston facing, that transit is important (
they have their own municipal buses to serve trolley lines that don't exist anymore and are not covered by the MBTA), and they are willing to densify
the core villages of the community where the trains used to stop. The density now is not really a factor when the state is quasi-forcing towns to build housing because we are desperate for it. By the time these things get funded, Lexington
WILL be more dense plus we can connect the red line to 128. It's frankly a no-brainer that you're poo-pooing because you want that money applied elsewhere. Choose "yes-and" so that we have plans that are shovel ready when the money is there.