Archdale Light Rail Station, Nov. 2008 Credit: Reconnecting America

Archdale Light Rail Station, Nov. 2008

  • Reconnecting America
  • Archdale Light Rail Station, Nov. 2008

Oooo. Did you hear? The Charlotte Area Transit System is getting some federal money ($18 million, according to The O) to add a car to Lynx trains, adjust the pit stops for said longer trains and even, wait for it … lengthen the stretch of the tracks so the train can reach other areas of the city.

Wowee. This is so exciting! Soon, Charlotte will be like a real city.

Real cities have good public transportation. By “good,” I mean it reaches the far corners of the city, and often beyond. In real cities, people can park their cars — if they even own one — because public transportation can take them where they need to go, efficiently. At train stations, you can often find car-sharing programs and rental bikes.

But not in Charlotte. Oh, no. We fight over every inch of track, don’t we? Public transportation, after all, is for the plebes, and we’re aristocrats in our minds, millionaires in waiting if we aren’t already flush with cash.

This influx of federal money, as exciting as it sounds, is to make adjustments to Lynx that were axed from previous plans so the city could claim that it saved some money.

Saved money? Bull shit. Now the city has to go back and upgrade the wee bitty bit of light rail track it has, serving a small portion of the city, before it can expand the train’s services. But because the city tried at all, we pat our leaders on the back and puff our chests, as if we’ve done something impressive, crowing about how Charlotte is tops.

If you think Charlotte is a so-called world-class city, I highly recommend you travel to another, larger city. Charlotte’s wet dreams are about having the clout to match its swagger. An excellent public transit system would help make those dreams a reality.

Won’t all of the people traveling to Charlotte next year for the DNC be surprised to learn that getting around Crown Town isn’t easy? I bet they will. Ask some of them when they get here what a world-class city is like. They’ll tell you about a place that’s not here.

Here’s more from The Observer on the Lynx upgrade:

CATS hopes to have the improvements finished by mid-decade, about two years before a planned nine-mile extension of the Lynx Blue Line is scheduled to open in 2017.

The original plan for the light-rail line last decade called for three-car trains. But in an effort to save money, CATS reduced the scope of the project and all stations were only built to handle two-car trains.

The rail line carries about 15,000 passengers a day on the average weekday. The opening projections in 2007 called for 9,100 passengers a day, with that growing to 18,000 a day by 2030.

The U.S. Department of Transportation grant won’t be enough to expand all train platforms. CATS plans to start with uptown stations, as well as the station at the end of the line, at South Boulevard and Interstate 485.

CATS is also working on the roughly $900 million extension of the light-rail line, to UNC Charlotte.

Read the rest of the article, by Steve Harrison, here.

Further reading: Imagining a City Without Its Public Transportation — The Atlantic

Rhiannon Fionn is an award-winning independent journalist who began at Creative Loafing in January 2009 as an intern. Prior to that, she worked in insurance and retail management. After years of investigative...

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4 Comments

  1. I don’t understand the writer’s complaints, when the city is moving, albeit too slowly, toward expanding the light rail system as she wants. The reason the Lynx line is short is that the yahoos in the city fought like hell to keep any light rail from happening at all. That and the recession killing the federal money needed to make planned extensions. Get a grip on the anger and save it for something truly terrible.

  2. ^ Totally agree. Her gripes are valid, but come on, even a tepid step in the right direction is still good news, not an opportunity to belittle your city. I think we’ll see transit momentum really build once people can see something that resembles more of a full system.

  3. After reading this somewhat unfocused rant I can’t tell it she is for or against the light rail program. I am always amused by people who complain loudly that Charlotte is hick town trying to pretend to be a big city. Last time I looked, Charlotte, with 3/4 of a million people, was one of the twenty largest cities in the USA. We should have built this system 20 years ago.

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