A
group in Upper Merion is drumming up dissent for a proposed extension of the
Norristown High Speed Line to King of Prussia.
Calling
themselves No KOP Rail, the neighbors have launched a Change.org petition and are asking local state
representatives and state senators, as well as Gov. Tom Wolf, to kill the
project.
The
proposed extension is in the planning stages, several years out from breaking
ground if it can secure enough federal, state and local funding to buck up to
the $1 billion price tag for construction.
Member
Dan Cowhey described the group "not very cohesive or organized" and
as "people who didn't like the rail line but didn't know how to speak up
about it."
Many
live in an area adjacent to three of the proposed five routes, according to
Cowhey, in wedge of residential development between Route 202, I-76 and the
Pennsylvania Turnpike.
Their
complaints range from the process of planning the extension to fears about the
outcome.
"I
get the impression that there are people sitting around a table with a map of
KOP and they're drawing lines where obviously a train can go" as opposed
to going out and examining the routes themselves, he said. "That's what
concerns me."
Other
concerns, as shared on the petition's website, include "additional
crime," "cluttering an already very busy highway (202)," and the
possibility it will "dramatically decrease home values." Cowhey said
the group, which draws on a neighborhood of about 60 residents, will focus on
unifying its message and may reach out to visible light rail critics such as
Randal O'Toole, a fellow at the libertarian think tank Cato Institute, to help
them make a compelling argument.
Eric
Goldstein, executive director of the King of Prussia District, a member of
pro-rail group the King of Prussia Rail Coalition, said SEPTA has been
recording and in some cases changing its proposal in response to public comment
taken at hearings over the last three years.
"What
I am hoping for is that their just be a constructive dialogue," said
Goldstein.
Opposition
to light rail is common during the planning process, but studies tend to support the assumption that proximity raises
property values, rather than lower them.
State
Sen. Daylin Leach (D-Montgomery County), one of the politicians the petition is
addressed to, said he believed some of the concerns were unfounded.
"I don't think having people come to shop is going to result in more
crime or more graffiti or anything like that."
Liz
Smith, SEPTA's director of long range planning, was out of the office Friday
when a call was placed for comment. According to SEPTA's planning documents, a
public hearing on the proposed routes should be coming up in early 2016.
The
King of Prussia Rail Coalition has launched
its own endorsement-gathering campaign to try to demonstrate
community support for a project dependent on political funding process.
Source: NewsWorks
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