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Milwaukee County will receive $40.9 million in federal support for its $54.79 million East-West Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project to connect downtown Milwaukee with Wauwatosa and the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center.
That’s according to a tweet from President Donald Trump. The line would be funded as part of a Small Starts grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT). “Bringing modern transit to the region’s most critical corridor and spur millions in economic development. Love Wisconsin!,” tweeted Trump. Trump had originally proposed to eliminate the grant program and his administration withheld releasing funding on already approved grants.
Milwaukee County applied for its grant in September 2016 and, with project consultants AECOM and HNTB, had been working through the USDOT’s project development process. A USDOT report from November 2018 said the project was on track for a 2020 grant approval.
The nine-mile-long system would rely on dedicated lanes, traffic signal priority, off-bus fare payment and special buses to provide faster service than the Milwaukee County Transit System‘s existing system. The county transit system would operate the line and already provides approximately 10,200 rides a day in the corridor.The 19-stop line would run from the site of the proposed The Couture tower on the lakefront and west on Wisconsin Ave. to Hawley Rd., and then along Bluemound Rd. before snaking through the Milwaukee Regional Medical Center to a park-and-ride lot on N. Swan Blvd. Approximately 46 percent of the route would contain dedicated, bus-only lanes.
Gains in ridership are expected to come from a high frequency of service (every 10 minutes on weekday daytime hours, 15 to 30 minutes at other times), fewer stops and off-bus ticketing (both leading to reduced travel time), better stations than traditional bus shelters and improved vehicles that would cost upwards of $1 million each. According to a study by the county, the corridor would have considerable benefits for nearby residents: 23 percent of those living within a half-mile of the route lack an automobile in their household, far above the county average, statistics show. Along the route are major employment and job centers including Downtown (81,000 jobs, 25,000 residents), near West Side (40,000 residents, 30,000 jobs) and Milwaukee Regional Medical Center (16,000 jobs, 30,000 daily visitors).
The remaining funding for the project is expected to come from an additional federal grant ($2.27 million), the county vehicle registration fee ($1.98 million), a signal prioritization project ($1.28 million) and county bonding ($8.34 million). The county’s share of the funding will go towards purchasing buses for the line. The line is expected to cost $6.07 million annually to operate, a portion of which would come from reallocating existing transit service in the corridor.
As of late 2019, the East-West BRT line was expected to open in 2021.
The City of Milwaukee has yet to pass a file with Milwaukee County regarding who will pay for snow plowing, station maintenance and other indirect costs related to the project. “That’s the important file,” said Alderman Robert Bauman when the Common Council approved a reimbursement package for the county to repay the city for design and engineering costs. The city and county have not always seen eye-to-eye on the project.
The county now faces the same challenge as the city does with its streetcar where the delays on The Couture and its planned first-floor transit concourse impact the ability to complete the system as planned. Unlike the streetcar’s fixed tracks the bus could be detoured temporarily, but logistically issues could emerge if the county moves forward with a plan to use battery-powered buses and needs to install a downtown charging station. Department of City Development officials promised an announcement on The Couture by the end of June.
More about the East-West BRT Line
- Transportation: Trump Announces Funding for Milwaukee Bus Rapid Transit Line - Jeramey Jannene - May 28th, 2020
- Transportation: Committee Approves City BRT Agreement - Jeramey Jannene - Oct 23rd, 2019
- Transportation: Bus Rapid Transit Expected by 2021 - Graham Kilmer - Jul 12th, 2019
- East-West Bus Rapid Transit Project Receives Milestone Federal Approval - Milwaukee County Transit System - Nov 30th, 2018
- MCTS Submits Updated Application for Bus Rapid Transit Funding - Milwaukee County Transit System - Sep 8th, 2017
- Eyes on Milwaukee: Council Approves BRT Route Restrictions - Jeramey Jannene - Aug 1st, 2017
- Council approves amended bus rapid transit resolution - Ald. Michael Murphy - Jul 31st, 2017
- Eyes on Milwaukee: City Fighting County on Rapid Transit - Jeramey Jannene - Jul 19th, 2017
- Eyes on Milwaukee: Give Your Input on BRT Project - Jeramey Jannene - Jun 7th, 2017
- Plenty of Horne: $2 Million BRT Study Underway - Michael Horne - Feb 6th, 2017
- Quito’s BRT, a Model for Milwaukee? - Ken Smith - Nov 14th, 2016
- Eyes on Milwaukee: City Approves Bus Rapid Transit - Jeramey Jannene - Jul 26th, 2016
- Eyes on Milwaukee: City Panel Approves Bus Rapid Transit - Jeramey Jannene - Jul 13th, 2016
- Murphy’s Law: Does Anyone Oppose Bus Rapid Transit? - Bruce Murphy - Jun 7th, 2016
- Eyes on Milwaukee: Bus Rapid Transit Meetings This Week - Jeramey Jannene - Apr 12th, 2016
- County Plans for Bus Rapid Transit - Matthew Wisla - Jan 16th, 2016
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May 29, 2020 at 07:10AM
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