











|
Edition
of July 27, 2007
| Chasing
Down the Buses |
| Congressman Frank Wolf (R-10th) was at the forefront of
the push over the past decade or so to bring the Dulles rail
project closer to reality, and this week he continued to campaign
for an inexpensive transportation solution that he first suggested
for the Dulles corridor. |
| Wolf brought up the idea of using bus rapid transit in the
Dulles corridor back in the 1990s, when federal funding for
the project seemed a long way off and local and state funding
was nowhere in sight. Wolf has seen the system, which uses
buses designed to be like commuter trains along dedicated
roadways, in use in Brazil and thought it would be a good,
inexpensive solution for Northern Virginia. |
| Back then, I liked the idea as well. It's a lot cheaper
than rail, and it accomplishes the same purpose. This week,
Wolf proposed $500,000 in funding to study adding the bus
system, known as BRT, in the I-66 corridor outside of the
Beltway. |
| Having spent some years of my pre-Herndon and Reston life
living along the I-66 corridor, I am willing to be there is
a good deal of support for the idea of extending some sort
of transit line farther out on the I-66 corridor. |
| As before, BRT seems like an inexpensive way of adding mass
transit quickly. As I recall from the Dulles corridor discussions
in the 1990s, the bus system could have been put in place
for millions of dollars instead of billions—an astronomical
savings that would go far in Virginia's revenue-strapped transportation
planning system. |
| And, the bus system, which includes platform stations and
other features similar to rail, could be converted to a full
rail system years later when funding or ridership allows. |
Copyright © 2003 The Herndon
Publishing Company
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