Anna Barry, the Deputy DOT Commissioner, left after a few minutes, but City of Hartford employees remained at the table with Frog Hollow and Asylum Hill residents and stakeholders for over two hours.
Barry’s contribution to the meeting was acknowledgement that the City has been engaged in “vigorous discussion” with the Connecticut DOT and that no conclusion has been reached between those parties about what is an acceptable path forward.
The remaining several hours were spent discovering how many different ways it is possible for all present parties — Barry excluded, as she removed herself from the Studio at Billings Forge before this conversation launched — to have independently developed a distrust of the State’s transportation agency.
Although the State agency essentially ruled against itself months ago, it is trying to appeal that ruling. If the DOT loses this appeal, it may stall CTfastrak progress and the State would have to give approximately half a million dollars back to the Federal government. There have been discussions between the State and City regarding the possibility of a settlement, but with the DOT’s use of noncommittal language, none of that lost trust was re-earned by those at Thursday evening’s meeting.
Residents questioned the likelihood of the DOT fulfilling any possible financial obligation, with some calling the agency “disrespectful” and others equating it with an “occupying force.” Some residents wondered aloud if civil disobedience would be a more effective way of dealing with the DOT.
Josh LaPorte
I was incredibly excited about the busway project (although I would have preferred rail), hoping it would finally start to establish a real public transportation infrastructure in the area. This Flower Street situation is massively frustrating. I simply cannot imagine a better way for the DOT to tarnish the image of its program before it is even built. It makes me wonder if those in charge at the DOT want the busway to fail so they can just build more highways.
Real Hartford » Temporary Closure of Flower Street for Pedestrians
[…] to the CTfastrak “Construction Bulletin,” “The current pedestrian crossing on Flower Street Amtrak […]