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Ever wished you could take Dallas Area Rapid Transit to … oh … let’s say Tyler? Or Canton? Or Shreveport, even? Because, see, that’s the one-day-fingers-crossed dream shared by DART and North East Texas Regional Mobility Authority officials. Which is why DART president Gary Thomas, board chair Bill Velasco and NETRMA chair Jeff Austin III met today in Dallas — to sign an interlocal cooperation agreement that officially begins what they hope will be a long and fruitful relationship joining North Texas and East Texas and even points beyond.
Austin tells Unfair Park today he asked Thomas to come out to Tyler a few years back and lay out what DART had on the drawing board. At which point Austin took a look at the so-called Texas Triangle and wondered how “we can be a spoke in the hub, because in East Texas, we refer to the Texas Triangle as a rectangle.”
DART spokesman Morgan Lyons and Austin acknowledge: They’re years, more than likely decades, away from anything tangible coming from today’s signing. But it’s an important first step, they say, toward bringing in other cities and counties (and states, even), not to mention private investors and federal dollars, that might one day want to hook up with DART.
“It’s important for them to have easy access to
education and jobs and health care here, and they want to expand their
market there as well,” Lyons says. “They have a UT system school, an A&M system
school, so how can you make it easier for folks from Dallas to get there? A letter like this is important
in getting federal funding, which is DART’s legacy, because you can
bring a lot of different people with you and show a broad spectrum of
support.”
Says Austin, who points to U.S. 80 as the most likely existing route to follow, “We want to provide
long-term ridership with an alternative to I-20. The question is: How can we plan that. We have the authority and
ability to do that, and there’s not one right answer. We want to engage communities, economic development folks, cities, counties. How can it work, and if it did, what would
it look like? The real question is: Who’s gonna pay for it and how? Tha’ll come
when we determine the need, purpose and buy-in, but it’s a ground-up
initiative, not top-down. We’ve talked about it openly. We’ve had a lot of
people encourage it, and if we can come up with innovative ways of funding it, we’ll do it, and we may need outside financial partners.”
Lyons says, sure, parts of East Texas may seem a million miles away to those who never leave the loop, but it’s really no different than DART’s more immediate hopes of hooking in suburbs not presently part of DART.
“Allen
and Frisco have plans — and Allen even has some funding to tap into our
system,” Lyons says. He also points to a deal with a transit company in Sherman buses locals down to the Parker Road Station for a light-rail ride into Dallas. This, he says, wouldn’t be so different from that.
“What you’ve
seen the board do over the last year or so is say, ‘We need to start
looking beyond the boundaries of our service area,'” Lyons says. “Let’s acknowledge
there’s a lot of interest outside in connecting to our system, and this
is part of that.”
“You have to start somewhere,” Austin says. “We gotta
start planning it, and how do we shorten that gap of 20, 25 years. You gotta start planning. That’s what Texans do best.”