Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The current budget for WAMTA is $5 billion for fiscal year (FY) 2025. WAMTA is now requesting additional taxpayer funding under a Proposal called DMVMOVES with four proposed spending levels. Option 1 requires an average of an additional $608 million per year (for FY26-FY35) just to complete the bare minimum level of maintenance. Option 2 is requesting an additional $719 million per year for slightly improved service. However, option 3 and 4 are still TBD and will require additional billions each year for expanded service. Does it even make sense to increase metro funding at this point due to the rising prevalence of remote work and considering the failure of the silver line? I’m concerned that at this proposals to increase the number of metro stations will result in a significant burden on taxpayers and have minimal impact on overall ridership levels.
https://dmvmoves.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/DMVMoves-Task-Force-Meeting-2_Presentation.pdf
https://images.app.goo.gl/UGdZ6W2PwtemJUxr6
Pretty hard to take you seriously when you are too dumb to get the acronym correctly.
I have dyslexia. Thanks for being a jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The current budget for WAMTA is $5 billion for fiscal year (FY) 2025. WAMTA is now requesting additional taxpayer funding under a Proposal called DMVMOVES with four proposed spending levels. Option 1 requires an average of an additional $608 million per year (for FY26-FY35) just to complete the bare minimum level of maintenance. Option 2 is requesting an additional $719 million per year for slightly improved service. However, option 3 and 4 are still TBD and will require additional billions each year for expanded service. Does it even make sense to increase metro funding at this point due to the rising prevalence of remote work and considering the failure of the silver line? I’m concerned that at this proposals to increase the number of metro stations will result in a significant burden on taxpayers and have minimal impact on overall ridership levels.
https://dmvmoves.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/DMVMoves-Task-Force-Meeting-2_Presentation.pdf
https://images.app.goo.gl/UGdZ6W2PwtemJUxr6
Pretty hard to take you seriously when you are too dumb to get the acronym correctly.
Anonymous wrote:The current budget for WAMTA is $5 billion for fiscal year (FY) 2025. WAMTA is now requesting additional taxpayer funding under a Proposal called DMVMOVES with four proposed spending levels. Option 1 requires an average of an additional $608 million per year (for FY26-FY35) just to complete the bare minimum level of maintenance. Option 2 is requesting an additional $719 million per year for slightly improved service. However, option 3 and 4 are still TBD and will require additional billions each year for expanded service. Does it even make sense to increase metro funding at this point due to the rising prevalence of remote work and considering the failure of the silver line? I’m concerned that at this proposals to increase the number of metro stations will result in a significant burden on taxpayers and have minimal impact on overall ridership levels.
https://dmvmoves.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/DMVMoves-Task-Force-Meeting-2_Presentation.pdf
https://images.app.goo.gl/UGdZ6W2PwtemJUxr6
Anonymous wrote:Fare evasion is a tiny part of WMATAs budget issues and they’ve gone ahead and installed new fare gates everywhere if that’s your issue
Anonymous wrote:Bike lanes are killing transit.
Anonymous wrote:On the one hand I am a big supporter of public transport and wish the US had much more.
On the other hand metro has been a mismanaged dumpster fire for decades and can’t even bother to collect fares.
Anonymous wrote:On the one hand I am a big supporter of public transport and wish the US had much more.
On the other hand metro has been a mismanaged dumpster fire for decades and can’t even bother to collect fares.