Ultimately, the decision won't be as simple as how fast the trains move. FRA officials and many in the transit community have echoed Obama in saying that it is pointless to move people from one city to another if they have few options for navigating the streets of their destination once they arrive.
The "last mile" issue would appear to level the playing field between those incremental proposals that link cities with robust transit systems and those that have the ability to build new lines but lack existing comprehensive local transit infrastructure.
"If we have small segments that are not connected, that don't interface with public transportation or airports or our highway system in a logical, rational network way, it's not going to make sense," Rae said. "We're not going to build rails to nowhere."
Note to self, "Be sure to contact each JTA - TPO executive/staff, Mayor, and Council member, to thank them for their support of our Skyway, during the one time in it's entire life span where we had a shot at federal bucks to finish it. Also for requesting those funds to complete a streetcar starter system, and for backing the Federal efforts on the FEC, and AMTRAK FLORIDA..." Like they say in Jacksonville, Washington D.C. and other first and second tier cities around the globe, mulimodalism is where it's at, it is our only possible sustainable future step.
JACKSONVILLE TIME TO PULL YOUR HEAD OUT!OCKLAWAHA