When asked what bus rapid transit service would mean to Century College in the east metro, Angelia Millender is momentarily tongue-tied.
"Oh my goodness," she said. "It would be a game-changer."
Millender, president of the two-year community college in White Bear Lake and Mahtomedi, broached the idea of extending the Purple Line BRT with the Metropolitan Council just a few weeks ago. And now, with speed unheard of in public transportation planning, the council is considering ending the $475 million line at the college — instead of downtown White Bear Lake, as originally planned.
"It's unprecedented, what we're doing," said Purple Line project director Craig Lamothe.
The revamp of the Purple Line, formerly known as the Rush Line, comes as the Met Council builds out a network of bus rapid transit lines, which are intended to complement the region's light rail service. They're more affordable to build than rail — some operate mostly on dedicated guideways or highways, while others run in traffic. Should the Purple Line begin service in 2026, it would be the Twin Cities' ninth BRT line.
Yet there are a few nettlesome details to the Century College situation. White Bear Lake's city council last March adopted a resolution asking the Met Council to pare the Purple Line's route so it does not enter its "jurisdictional boundaries."
The resolution resulted after opponents in White Bear Lake asserted the BRT line coming from downtown St. Paul — in the works for decades — would ruin the small-town charm of the lakeside community.
As a result, transit planners regrouped and came up with two new alternatives for the line's northernmost station, the Maplewood Mall Transit Center or a park-and-ride facility in Vadnais Heights.