Elected officials Wednesday were unified in their support of the Southwest light-rail line — but not of its new $2 billion price tag.
The cost of the controversial rail line, which would link Minneapolis to Eden Prairie, ballooned by $341 million after environmental, engineering and other costs came in far more than expected. Gov. Mark Dayton last week called the unexpected hike "appalling," and Metropolitan Council Chair Adam Duininck said "all options are on the table," including scuttling the project altogether.
On Wednesday, Metro Transit staff presented facts and figures for various boards and committees involved in planning the project. Responses ranged from hopeful to shocked.
Members of the Counties Transit Improvement Board (CTIB), comprised of elected officials from Anoka, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey and Washington counties, said they would not commit any more than the $496 million already approved for the project, or 30 percent of the previous $1.65 billion cost. CTIB raises its funds through a metro-area quarter-cent sales tax set aside for transportation.
The transit board's sentiment was echoed later in the day by members of the Metropolitan Council, the regional planning body, as well as an advisory committee comprised of other elected officials and mayors representing towns along the 16-mile suburban route.
Their marching orders involved instructing Metro Transit staff to suggest where those painful cuts will be made.
"We are going to have to get out our sharp pencils" to slash costs, said CTIB Chairman Peter McLaughlin, who is a Hennepin County commissioner. He said both the Blue and Green light-rail lines reached a similar nexus in their development where "sacrifices needed to be made. I still think we can make [Southwest] work."
The price increase was largely attributed to increased wetlands and contaminated soils along the suburban pathway of the project, as well as an increase in the number of property acquisitions needed to clear the way. The opening of the line, originally slated for 2019, was also pushed back a year — a delay that will cost $50 million.