Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
"FY 2025. The FY 2025 budget highlights are:
• $835.5 million for the District Department of Transportation, to include: $410.7 million for federal Highway Trust Fund supported projects which includes $47.2 million for the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge Rehabilitation and $42.8 million for Benning Road Bridges and Transportation Improvements, $115.5 million for various locally funded projects including local street paving, streetlight management, sidewalks, alleys, stormwater and flood mitigation, fleet, equipment and transportation mitigation, $93.8 million for the H Street Bridge, $47.3 million for Streetscapes and Beautification, $48.3 million for safety improvements, $36.7 million for the 11th Street Bridge Park, $18.2 million for Urban Forestry, $18.1 million for Pepco Powerline Undergrounding, $16.3 million for Bridge Rehabilitation, and $16.7 million for Bus Priority and Efficiency;"
The 11th Street Bridge is the bike bridge.
If we eliminated the streetscapes, safety improvements, 11th St Bridge, and bus priority lanes plus the $32 million for the bike lanes that's almost $200 million of painless cuts.
The 11th St Bridge is a park dumb*ss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DDOT's current budget is detailed in the following presentation: https://ddot.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/ddot/release_content/attachments/FY%202025%20DDOT%20Budget%20Presentation%20%28April%202024%29.FINAL_.pdf
Bike lane construction accounts for $32 million of a $2 billion six year CIP.
Meanwhile, there is $675 million allocated for three (road) bridge projects and $391 million allocated for the maintenance of alleys, streets, and sidewalks.
One of those bridges is a bike bridge and some of those other costs are ancillary parts of bike lane construction projects.
But thank you for making my point.
So we can just take the billion out of the bike budget and we're good then right?
They need $600 million from the capital expenditures part of the budget. $32 million is $32 million that doesn't have to be cut from something important like school repairs. Take another $100 million from DDOT and we're starting to make progress.
Even on this, you are wrong. That $32 million will not, in any world, be spent by DC during the remainder of the 2024-25 fiscal year (which is what the CR will affect). It is what is planned to be spent over a SIX YEAR capital improvement plan. A few million, at the absolute most, would have been spent on bike lane construction before the end of the fiscal year and quite probably none at all. This is complete red herring fished up by someone who is on the verge of attributing the COVID-19 pandemic to the construction of bike lanes.
Nope. You are wrong and obnoxious. $600m has to come out of the Six Year CIP. $500m has to come out of the operating budget.
Do you have a source for that or is just made up like everything else you post on here?
I haven't told a single lie on any of things. You, on the other hand, cannot say the same thing.
https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/federal-spending-bill-cut-dc-budget-1-billion/3863004/
Anonymous wrote:
"FY 2025. The FY 2025 budget highlights are:
• $835.5 million for the District Department of Transportation, to include: $410.7 million for federal Highway Trust Fund supported projects which includes $47.2 million for the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge Rehabilitation and $42.8 million for Benning Road Bridges and Transportation Improvements, $115.5 million for various locally funded projects including local street paving, streetlight management, sidewalks, alleys, stormwater and flood mitigation, fleet, equipment and transportation mitigation, $93.8 million for the H Street Bridge, $47.3 million for Streetscapes and Beautification, $48.3 million for safety improvements, $36.7 million for the 11th Street Bridge Park, $18.2 million for Urban Forestry, $18.1 million for Pepco Powerline Undergrounding, $16.3 million for Bridge Rehabilitation, and $16.7 million for Bus Priority and Efficiency;"
The 11th Street Bridge is the bike bridge.
If we eliminated the streetscapes, safety improvements, 11th St Bridge, and bus priority lanes plus the $32 million for the bike lanes that's almost $200 million of painless cuts.
Anonymous wrote:
"FY 2025. The FY 2025 budget highlights are:
• $835.5 million for the District Department of Transportation, to include: $410.7 million for federal Highway Trust Fund supported projects which includes $47.2 million for the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge Rehabilitation and $42.8 million for Benning Road Bridges and Transportation Improvements, $115.5 million for various locally funded projects including local street paving, streetlight management, sidewalks, alleys, stormwater and flood mitigation, fleet, equipment and transportation mitigation, $93.8 million for the H Street Bridge, $47.3 million for Streetscapes and Beautification, $48.3 million for safety improvements, $36.7 million for the 11th Street Bridge Park, $18.2 million for Urban Forestry, $18.1 million for Pepco Powerline Undergrounding, $16.3 million for Bridge Rehabilitation, and $16.7 million for Bus Priority and Efficiency;"
The 11th Street Bridge is the bike bridge.
If we eliminated the streetscapes, safety improvements, 11th St Bridge, and bus priority lanes plus the $32 million for the bike lanes that's almost $200 million of painless cuts.
Anonymous wrote:
"FY 2025. The FY 2025 budget highlights are:
• $835.5 million for the District Department of Transportation, to include: $410.7 million for federal Highway Trust Fund supported projects which includes $47.2 million for the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge Rehabilitation and $42.8 million for Benning Road Bridges and Transportation Improvements, $115.5 million for various locally funded projects including local street paving, streetlight management, sidewalks, alleys, stormwater and flood mitigation, fleet, equipment and transportation mitigation, $93.8 million for the H Street Bridge, $47.3 million for Streetscapes and Beautification, $48.3 million for safety improvements, $36.7 million for the 11th Street Bridge Park, $18.2 million for Urban Forestry, $18.1 million for Pepco Powerline Undergrounding, $16.3 million for Bridge Rehabilitation, and $16.7 million for Bus Priority and Efficiency;"
The 11th Street Bridge is the bike bridge.
If we eliminated the streetscapes, safety improvements, 11th St Bridge, and bus priority lanes plus the $32 million for the bike lanes that's almost $200 million of painless cuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DDOT's current budget is detailed in the following presentation: https://ddot.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/ddot/release_content/attachments/FY%202025%20DDOT%20Budget%20Presentation%20%28April%202024%29.FINAL_.pdf
Bike lane construction accounts for $32 million of a $2 billion six year CIP.
Meanwhile, there is $675 million allocated for three (road) bridge projects and $391 million allocated for the maintenance of alleys, streets, and sidewalks.
One of those bridges is a bike bridge and some of those other costs are ancillary parts of bike lane construction projects.
But thank you for making my point.
So we can just take the billion out of the bike budget and we're good then right?
They need $600 million from the capital expenditures part of the budget. $32 million is $32 million that doesn't have to be cut from something important like school repairs. Take another $100 million from DDOT and we're starting to make progress.
Even on this, you are wrong. That $32 million will not, in any world, be spent by DC during the remainder of the 2024-25 fiscal year (which is what the CR will affect). It is what is planned to be spent over a SIX YEAR capital improvement plan. A few million, at the absolute most, would have been spent on bike lane construction before the end of the fiscal year and quite probably none at all. This is complete red herring fished up by someone who is on the verge of attributing the COVID-19 pandemic to the construction of bike lanes.
Nope. You are wrong and obnoxious. $600m has to come out of the Six Year CIP. $500m has to come out of the operating budget.
Do you have a source for that or is just made up like everything else you post on here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What happens with these funds if DC cannot spend them this year? They aren't federal funds that would be returned to the Treasury, right?
That's a very good question. There has been so much fear-mongering and so few details.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DDOT's current budget is detailed in the following presentation: https://ddot.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/ddot/release_content/attachments/FY%202025%20DDOT%20Budget%20Presentation%20%28April%202024%29.FINAL_.pdf
Bike lane construction accounts for $32 million of a $2 billion six year CIP.
Meanwhile, there is $675 million allocated for three (road) bridge projects and $391 million allocated for the maintenance of alleys, streets, and sidewalks.
One of those bridges is a bike bridge and some of those other costs are ancillary parts of bike lane construction projects.
But thank you for making my point.
So we can just take the billion out of the bike budget and we're good then right?
They need $600 million from the capital expenditures part of the budget. $32 million is $32 million that doesn't have to be cut from something important like school repairs. Take another $100 million from DDOT and we're starting to make progress.
Even on this, you are wrong. That $32 million will not, in any world, be spent by DC during the remainder of the 2024-25 fiscal year (which is what the CR will affect). It is what is planned to be spent over a SIX YEAR capital improvement plan. A few million, at the absolute most, would have been spent on bike lane construction before the end of the fiscal year and quite probably none at all. This is complete red herring fished up by someone who is on the verge of attributing the COVID-19 pandemic to the construction of bike lanes.
Nope. You are wrong and obnoxious. $600m has to come out of the Six Year CIP. $500m has to come out of the operating budget.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DDOT's current budget is detailed in the following presentation: https://ddot.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/ddot/release_content/attachments/FY%202025%20DDOT%20Budget%20Presentation%20%28April%202024%29.FINAL_.pdf
Bike lane construction accounts for $32 million of a $2 billion six year CIP.
Meanwhile, there is $675 million allocated for three (road) bridge projects and $391 million allocated for the maintenance of alleys, streets, and sidewalks.
One of those bridges is a bike bridge and some of those other costs are ancillary parts of bike lane construction projects.
But thank you for making my point.
So we can just take the billion out of the bike budget and we're good then right?
They need $600 million from the capital expenditures part of the budget. $32 million is $32 million that doesn't have to be cut from something important like school repairs. Take another $100 million from DDOT and we're starting to make progress.
Even on this, you are wrong. That $32 million will not, in any world, be spent by DC during the remainder of the 2024-25 fiscal year (which is what the CR will affect). It is what is planned to be spent over a SIX YEAR capital improvement plan. A few million, at the absolute most, would have been spent on bike lane construction before the end of the fiscal year and quite probably none at all. This is complete red herring fished up by someone who is on the verge of attributing the COVID-19 pandemic to the construction of bike lanes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DDOT's current budget is detailed in the following presentation: https://ddot.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/ddot/release_content/attachments/FY%202025%20DDOT%20Budget%20Presentation%20%28April%202024%29.FINAL_.pdf
Bike lane construction accounts for $32 million of a $2 billion six year CIP.
Meanwhile, there is $675 million allocated for three (road) bridge projects and $391 million allocated for the maintenance of alleys, streets, and sidewalks.
One of those bridges is a bike bridge and some of those other costs are ancillary parts of bike lane construction projects.
But thank you for making my point.
So we can just take the billion out of the bike budget and we're good then right?
They need $600 million from the capital expenditures part of the budget. $32 million is $32 million that doesn't have to be cut from something important like school repairs. Take another $100 million from DDOT and we're starting to make progress.
Anonymous wrote:What happens with these funds if DC cannot spend them this year? They aren't federal funds that would be returned to the Treasury, right?
Anonymous wrote:What happens with these funds if DC cannot spend them this year? They aren't federal funds that would be returned to the Treasury, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DDOT's current budget is detailed in the following presentation: https://ddot.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/ddot/release_content/attachments/FY%202025%20DDOT%20Budget%20Presentation%20%28April%202024%29.FINAL_.pdf
Bike lane construction accounts for $32 million of a $2 billion six year CIP.
Meanwhile, there is $675 million allocated for three (road) bridge projects and $391 million allocated for the maintenance of alleys, streets, and sidewalks.
One of those bridges is a bike bridge and some of those other costs are ancillary parts of bike lane construction projects.
But thank you for making my point.
Those three bridges are: H Street Bridge: ($313.3M); Theodore Roosevelt ($151.3M); and Benning Road ($210.3M). Which one of those is the "bike bridge"?
And exactly what part of alley, street, and sidewalk maintenance constitutes "ancillary parts of bike lane construction projects"? It's OK, I'll wait for you to figure it out.
The point your posts generally serve is to demonstrate that you have no idea whatsoever what you're talking about. I'd agree that this exchange has further reinforced that.
When one tears out a sidewalk and part of a road to create a bike lane then the ancillary parts are the subsequent repair and rebuilding of the sidewalk and road.