The Metropolitan Council says planning for a bus rapid transit line connecting St. Paul to neighboring suburbs will move forward, despite the threatened loss of a key local government ally.
After Maplewood leaders on Monday moved to withdraw support for the Purple Line — citing the effect of potential route changes on a local business district — staff with the regional planning agency attempted to defuse tensions, saying no modifications have been finalized.
"Nothing has been finalized or decided yet," Metro Transit spokesperson Drew Kerr said in a statement Tuesday. The Met Council oversees Metro Transit.
Met Council staff will present route options to the Purple Line's Corridor Management Committee on Nov. 10, which will be followed by weeks of public review and comment, Kerr said.
Mayor Marylee Abrams — who has been an ally of the project — asked the City Council to pull its support after learning about plans to potentially buy and raze some or all of the Birch Run Station shopping complex near Maplewood Mall. The City Council agreed to vote Oct 24 to withdraw support.
Ramsey County Board members, who with the Met Council are shepherding and funding the Purple Line, expressed frustration Tuesday with Maplewood leaders' change of heart.
"I was disappointed in the fact that we are supposed to be partners. It was not the way I'd like to see things done," Commissioner Victoria Reinhardt said at a Regional Rail Authority meeting.
Commissioner Rafael Ortega, who chairs the rail authority, seemed undeterred.