Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Was light rail at root of odd council budget vote?

A source with good Charlotte City Council information tells me this morning it's highly likely the bizarre 6-5 City Council vote Monday night to spike the proposed city budget (but proposing no other budget, either) was related to an attempt in the N.C. Senate to kill any state funding for Charlotte's Blue Line Extension project. (Click here for more on the council's budget vote.)

The proposed Senate budget, released Monday, as reported by the N.C. Metropolitan Mayors Coalition, would cut the state's transit programs by eliminating the New Starts Program and transferring the $28.9 million to the General Maintenance Reserve. The Charlotte light rail Blue Line Extension is the only project in the New Starts Program. The budget bill specifically says public transportation appropriations shall not be expended on any fixed guideway project in Mecklenburg County. There is an additional provision that says fixed guideway projects can compete for Highway Trust Fund dollars under the equity formula.
 
What's the connection to the city budget? My source believes the issue is Republican opposition to the city's proposed streetcar project, which would have cost $119 million, part of the almost $1 billion, multiyear capital projects budget City Manager Curt Walton proposed. The capital program is what would have required a property tax increase of 3.6 cents per $100 in property value.

Council member Michael Barnes, a strong supporter of the BLE, which would run through his district, asked several questions during the council meeting to make Charlotte Area Transit System chief Carolyn Flowers  specify publicly that the 30-year CATS plan, funded with a countywide sales tax, does not include money for the proposed streetcar project, which would come from city money only.

My source speculates that the four council members who raised barely a peep against the budget through months of council discussion and who were part of a 9-2 straw vote for it May 30, but then voted against it Monday Barnes and at-large members Patrick Cannon, Claire Fallon and Beth Pickering will try to get the streetcar removed from the capital budget. Why? Because influential Republicans at the state level don't like it, and may be using the BLE as a bargaining chip. I won't identify whom my source named as behind it until I can get that person's comments.

And I'm seeking comment from some of those council members. Will update this when I have more information.