https://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2008-05-23/627446/
"We do need a new goal," said a newly tempered McCracken, "but first we need to do consensus-building among all of us, on what that goal should be." The city of Austin is bowing to Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization directives for a regional planning process in which all projects are to be integrated and evaluated on their merits. To help the city answer the exacting questions on the new CAMPO Transportation Investment Decision Tree, consultant ROMA Austin is continuing to analyze, evaluate, and amass the detailed information required – on mobility benefits, technologies, alignments, preliminary cost estimates, and ridership. But the data needed on funding and financing mechanisms lies outside ROMA's scope of work. McCracken said a staff team directed by City Manager Marc Ott and Assistant City Manager Robert Goode (another recent Fort Worth transplant) has begun analyzing how other cities have financed urban rail systems.
"We're very close to having ROMA wrap up a cohesive package of analysis," said city Urban Design Officer Jim Robertson. But no schedule is yet in place for when the transit data (part of a broader Downtown Austin Plan mobility study) would be presented to City Council, and eventually to CAMPO. Given the other pieces of the puzzle that must come together – new Cap Metro criteria for transit-funding partnerships, a potential new agreement for commuter service to San Antonio – McCracken foresaw that the entire streetcar/urban rail vetting process might reasonably take another four to six months. One safe prediction: Nothing will get on a ballot until CAMPO Chair Kirk Watson thinks it's ready to roll.
Copyright © 2025 Austin Chronicle Corporation. All rights reserved.