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The U.S. Dept. of
Transportation has released $49.5 million in design funding
it froze last year for Seattle's planned Central Link light
rail line after DOT's inspector general raised questions about
the project's costs and financing.
DOT Secretary Norman Mineta, who
announed the release of the design funds on Aug. 21, put a
hold on the money for Seattle in April 2001, not long after
he became head of the department.
Ron Sims, chairman of Seattle's
Sound Transit authority, said, "This is a crystal-clear signal
from the federal government that Sound Transit is on track
for building Central Link light rail."
Sound Transit had planned a 23.5-mile
line that DOT's IG said last year would cost $4.2 billion,
up from a $2.5-billion estimate just seven months before.
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Last November, the authority's
board approved a new plan calling for a 14-mile minimum operating
segment, whose capital cost is estimated at $2.07 billion.
It would run from downtown Seattle to a point just outside
the boundary of Seattle Tacoma International Airport. The
light rail vehicles would share the existing downtown Seattle
transit tunnel with buses. The line then would be at grade
through South Seattle, except for a tunnel under Beacon Hill,
and become elevated near the southern end.
In July, Sound Transit submitted
a draft application to DOT for a $500-million federal grant,
which would cover about 25% of the initial segment's capital
cost. So far, the agency has spent $41 million of the $500
million, says Sound Transit spokesman Lee Somerstein.
Besides the Federal Transit Administration's
review of the application, Sound Transit's plan will face
another DOT IG study. Congress would have to appropriate the
funding as well.
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