^Well, not so fast. For everyone's reference, the letters jaxlongtimer mentions can be found
here.
The Feds have effectively cut off cities from specifically transit funding for a decade or more before, there's Miami until the SMART plan a few years ago, or Orlando until SunRail happened, Tampa is more of a state issue than a federal one but the FTA won't wait forever. They threatened St. Louis about one of their streetcars a few years ago until the transit agency there took it over and reopened it. As much as politics can be at play, the federal government does have an interest in not incentivizing cities to waste the money they are awarded. The cold shoulder doesn't last forever (especially for more popular transit agencies, which JTA is not), and new local funding can potentially change the tune, but that's not a guarantee (see Philadelphia and their King of Prussia project, or more recently San Jose and their overly expensive subway project). There's only so much money in the Capital Investment Grants program anyway, so they can afford to be picky.
Three points here to add:
First, if you read the Fed letters Marcus posted before, it is not at all clear that the Feds would want/demand payback, it is merely a possibility. I have said before they could very likely waive a payback if politicos applied pressure. This should be bipartisan.
Second, the annual and ongoing cost to maintain the Skyway and/or further invest in it to keep it going far exceeds any penalty. Any business thinking person would cut their losses and swallow the short term bitter pill for the longer term. It is a no brainer here.
Third, Fed transit officials in the Biden administration are goo-goo eyed over Deegan's victory here and have made it clear they are willing to throw transportation dollars our way if asked, Skyway/U2C be damned.
No one should be letting JTA off the hook on either the Skyway or U2C. This is why Jax is so far behind others... the emperor is naked and no one has the guts and/or know how to call him/her out. We are soon to be the laughingstock of the mass transit industry for another few decades at this rate.
I think the question at the core of the first point is whether the kinds of politicians we send to Washington would be inclined to try and give Jacksonville a freebie for screwing up to the tune of nearly $200 million, and then whether everyone else in Washington would be inclined to accept that. Maybe that's worth asking, but I would question why they would give us that. I'm also not aware of the FTA ever actually
waiving the obligation as opposed to either requiring it to be reinvested (with local funding to match) or outright demanding and receiving payback.
The ongoing cost of the Skyway is obviously an issue, but looking at the bigger picture, we are going to have to pay millions of dollars a year for some sort of mass transit system anyway. If we're talking about a different mode, it doesn't actually provide much benefit to demolish the Skyway first and then try to decide from scratch what we might do, especially if we were to forego fixed guideway and the operational funding that comes with that. If anything, the fact that the city has already long allowed JTA to run wild with a quarter billion dollars for the U2C with no qualms about whether it'd even work doesn't demonstrate the level of competence needed to convince the FTA that we deserve a freebie for screwing up the first time.
And on that note, the way the Biden admin has treated the U2C
should be a blaring alarm that they are perfectly fine with letting JTA fail since it is almost entirely a local problem. Remember that in the nearly 8 years since Nat Ford originally proposed autonomous vehicles and sought the funding for them, the FTA has provided a grand total of about $14.2 million, with all of it awarded either during the Trump Administration or during a Trump fiscal year.
Every other cent that was not an FDOT match to a federal grant is JTA or COJ money. Unlike the Skyway, the FTA has very little to lose from the U2C. That in itself might be a sign that they are less interested in providing the kind of support they did for the Skyway, regardless of how much they might like Donna Deegan. The Emerald Trail is not the U2C, and I would hate for the competent folks at Groundwork Jacksonville to be conflated with JTA's impending disaster.
It was only a few months ago that local, state, and federal officials were
asked to go on the record about the U2C. Nearly everyone asked refused. If we don't even have the confidence to say that the mostly locally funded project will work or is worth taxpayer dollars, there is little chance that the federal government is going to let us walk away from what we asked them to pay for.