Study forecasts fewer riders aboard CenterLine
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Deirdre Newman
Transportation authority projections Monday of 10% fewer riders on
the CenterLine light-rail project than previously expected did not
budget support and simply enforced naysayers’ objections.
Supporters, like Mayor Gary Monahan, said the decrease in the
projection doesn’t alter his support for the $1 billion light-rail
system, which is slated to run 9.3 miles from Santa Ana to John Wayne
Airport through Costa Mesa.
“The project is not about the first leg,” Monahan said. “I firmly
believe that about 20 years down the road, it will be going from the
airport to Disneyland to -- if Anaheim has its way -- an NFL stadium.
Projections are like the wind. They change all the time.”
Opponents, like Councilman Allan Mansoor, said the decrease
confirms what critics have feared.
“I think it points to what I’ve been saying all along -- that the
ridership just is not going to be there to justify spending all this
money,” Mansoor said.
The Orange County Transportation Authority Board of Directors
received the revised projection Monday. The change comes at the
behest of the Federal Transit Administration, which asked the
authority to reevaluate its ridership projection based on new
standards the administration has developed, authority spokesman Ted
Nguyen said. The new standards will allow the administration to
equally assess light-rail projects across the country that are vying
for federal funds, Nguyen added.
The revised forecast for the year 2025 shows 22,600 riders per
day. The previous forecast showed 24,800 riders per day.
The lower number is still at the high end of what the
administration considers reasonable for new light-rail systems,
Nguyen said.
The City Council voted in 2001 to support the project. But
authority officials who developed the project are having trouble
securing federal funding needed to build it. They are looking to the
federal government to provide half of the approximately $1 billion
cost of the project. The other half would come from Measure M, the
half-cent sales tax to fund transportation improvements in Orange
County passed by voters in 1990.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers government. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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