About a month ago, residents of Lyn Park in north Minneapolis learned the Blue Line light-rail extension could split their predominately Black neighborhood in two.
That didn't sit well among residents of the middle-class enclave just north of Target Field, who say light rail will be noisy and dangerous and depress the value of their homes. On Tuesday evening, about a hundred people directed their anger at the Metropolitan Council during a tense, three-hour meeting at Shiloh Temple.
"Ladies and gentlemen, here we go again," said resident Ken Rance. "This will be another Rondo."
Rance and others on Tuesday frequently evoked Rondo, the Black neighborhood in St. Paul that was wiped out beginning in the 1950s when Interstate 94 was built. Its destruction has been a source of trauma in the community ever since.
After nearly two years of study, Met Council and Hennepin County planners announced the new route for the Blue Line extension last month, choosing West Broadway in north Minneapolis instead of Lowry Avenue. The line will ultimately connect the Mall of America to Brooklyn Park, also serving Robbinsdale and Crystal along the way.
Before it can be built, the new route will need final approval from the Met Council, Hennepin County and every city along the line, including Minneapolis. The Blue Line extension is slated to begin construction in 2025, with passenger service starting in 2028.
The new configuration comes after the council abandoned a previous $1.5 billion iteration that largely avoided the heart of north Minneapolis and called for eight of the line's 13 miles to be shared with BNSF Railway freight trains. Years of negotiations with the Texas-based rail giant proved futile, so a different plan was devised.
This one calls for light-rail trains to travel along Lyndale Avenue from Target Field, with a stop at Plymouth Avenue station, which would serve the V3 Sports center, Minnesota Workforce Center and the Hennepin County Human Services Center.