A much-anticipated agreement to close an estimated $272 million shortfall in the Southwest light-rail line's budget was revealed Monday.
Hennepin County, which has already contributed more than $1 billion to the project, would pay 55% of the amount through an existing transportation sales tax under the new pact, according to a council news release. And the Metropolitan Council, the regional planning body building the line, would cover the remaining amount using federal funds.
The agreement is subject to approval by the council and the Hennepin County Board, but Monday's announcement for now eliminates lingering uncertainty over how the remainder of the $2.7 billion project will be paid for.
The 14.5-mile line between downtown Minneapolis and Eden Prairie is about 75% complete, with passenger service expected to begin in 2027. But the state's most-expensive public works project is nearly a decade behind schedule and double its original budget.
The Met Council's announcement did not say how much funding the project actually needs to complete the job and get trains moving. That figure will be included in a new budget for the project that will be sent to federal funders early next year. Council officials declined to comment Monday.
But a report issued last spring by the state Office of the Legislative Auditor, which is probing Southwest's cost overruns and delays, said that amount is about $272 million.
The legislative watchdog's report also stated that through June 30, some $1.2 billion had already been spent on Southwest, most of it coming from the federal government and Hennepin County. The line, which will stop in St. Louis Park, Hopkins and Minnetonka, is located entirely within the county's boundaries.
In several reports, the Legislative Auditor has criticized the Met Council for not being "fully transparent" with the public and legislators about Southwest's burgeoning cost and delays. The probe also claims the council failed to effectively enforce the main contract overseeing construction of the line.