Friday, February 8, 2008

Commuter Rail Coming to Charleston?

It's amazing to consider the difference a good commuter rail service could make in Lowcountry real estate. What if the commute from Summerville or Moncks Corner was an easy 30 minute ride, instead of an hour in nightmarish traffic? I love being a part of the exciting growth of my favorite city!

"The phrase 'commuter rail' has been hot on Charleston Mayor Joseph P. Riley Jr.’s lips recently, but with so many policy decisions up in the air, most notably about who would foot the multimillion-dollar bill, it seems that train is still a long time a-comin’. 'We must do it now,' Riley said last month during his ninth swearing-in ceremony in downtown Charleston.

For years, local political and business leaders have discussed the possibility of commuter rail as a transportation option that could help thin traffic congestion on Interstate 26. Still, the reality is that commuter rail has yet to move beyond the study phase.

In a June 2006 report commissioned by the Charleston Area Regional Transportation Authority, the price for rail service between Summerville and downtown Charleston was pegged at $45.8 million. That amount did not include the cost of utility modifications, land acquisition or construction.

The same company that wrote the report, North Charleston-based Wilbur Smith Associates, is now conducting a second study examining the feasibility of extending service to Moncks Corner on behalf of the Berkeley-Charleston-Dorchester Council of Governments. There are no available cost estimates for the service.

None of the studies has looked at the possibility of rail service connecting to Mount Pleasant, but the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge was designed in such a way that a rail line could be added beneath the bridge for light-rail service, Smith said.

A commuter rail service in the Charleston area would likely run on existing freight rail lines, specifically the Norfolk Southern Corp. line that runs parallel to I-26 from near Summerville to downtown and the CSX Corp. rail line that runs along U.S. Highway 52 to Moncks Corner.

'One of the challenges is to work out an operating schedule with the freight operator,' said Jeffrey Burns, senior planner with COG. Additionally, Burns said, COG is about to kick off another study funded through a $450,000 federal grant that will examine ridership interest in the tri-county area. The firm selected to administer the study will interview regular CARTA bus riders and also conduct phone polls to gauge interest in commuter rail service.

The intensive study phase is necessary, Burns said, because there is relatively stiff competition among cities for Federal Transportation Authority funds to implement commuter rail service. The federal government generally funds about 80% of capital construction costs, but on a discretionary basis, Burns said.

'We’re on course,' he said. 'I think this is a huge step in our region’s development.'"

For the full Charleston Regional Business Journal article: http://charlestonbusiness.com/pub/14_3/news/11316-1.html

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