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Agenda - Council - 02/12/2013
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Agenda - Council - 02/12/2013
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Council
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02/12/2013
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StarTribune.com 1 MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA <br />Editorial <br />September 22, 2002 <br />Two Ventura stars leave office <br />Tinklenberg, Smith <br />As transportation commissioner, Elwyn Tinklenberg told Minnesotans not necessarily <br />what they wanted to hear but what they needed to hear. His frequent explanations <br />helped lift the interwoven issues of roads, transit, housing and development to the top <br />of the state's agenda. <br />The essence of Tinklenberg's message was two -pronged: If Minnesotans want more <br />roads they must commit to actually paying for them; and they must realize that wider <br />freeways alone won't solve metro traffic congestion, but that transit must play a larger <br />role. <br />That message is widely understood in states as diverse as Georgia, Texas, Colorado <br />and Utah. Minnesota has been slow to accept it, largely because transportation has <br />become a partisan matter. Independents, Democrats and many Republicans tend to <br />agree with Tinklenberg, while GOP leaders insist that more roads can be squeezed <br />from existing money and that transit is just a welfare benefit for people without cars. <br />For his clarity and courage on these matters, Tinklenberg, who will leave his post Oct. <br />4, deserves the gratitude of Minnesotans. The preponderance of research and <br />professional opinion nationwide to bolster his views. <br />Entrenched, military -style bureaucracies like MnDOT's see commissioners come and <br />go, often to little effect. But a new breed of engineers agrees with Tinklenberg that the <br />interstate highway era is waning. A new world that demands quality -of -life for <br />commuters and in -time delivery for products requires a nimbler solution than just <br />adding pavement. The Minnesota Department of Transportation can no longer be just <br />the highway department. Nor can it waste time and money on unnecessary process. <br />Tinklenberg insisted on a faster track for road projects, trimming the average span by <br />one-third. <br />He failed on two important fronts, however. He couldn't convince the Legislature to <br />adequately fund the state's needs or to develop a source of dedicated money for <br />transit. <br />In this regard, Gov. Jesse Ventura, while giving Tinklenberg rein to speak the right <br />words, subverted his commissioner with political mistakes. Reducing license tab fees <br />in 2000 made it harder to build roads the state needed. Vetoing local road and bridge <br />projects in 1999 infuriated legislators who then vowed revenge against the governor's <br />transit priorities. <br />Indeed, opponents jeopardized a Minneapolis -Bloomington light -rail project, scrapped <br />a Minneapolis -St. Cloud commuter -rail line and tried to eliminate HOV lanes and ramp <br />meters. Disputes with the Department of Administration over highway contracts and a <br />mishandling of inflation -adjusted cost projections for light -rail transit further forced <br />
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