INDIANAPOLIS — IndyGo has canceled a segment of the Blue Line which would have run from Washington Street and Holt Road to the airport. This also ends 50 million dollars of infrastructure improvements that came with the project - including stormwater drainage and new sidewalks.
City-county councilor Jared Evans represents the West Side where the segment was canceled.
"To see this unravel after seven, six years of people working together to see this once-in-a-lifetime investment was going to happen, is beyond anything that I'll say on TV," he said.
The project has already been delayed multiple times due to pushback from some local business owners and legislators in the state. After costs ballooned, IndyGO had to rethink the plan. The plan was originally estimated to cost $220 million. But with inflation, costs have jumped to more than half a billion dollars.
Rachel Hawkins owns a business on Washington and says the changes would have blocked traffic to her business.
"No left turns, one lane each way, it was going to be honestly disastrous," Hawkins said.
Without the Blue Line, she says the city now needs to figure out its own way to make the west side safer for pedestrians.
"I hope that now that we're past this, where we realize the Blue Line is not going to pay for those improvements, now the city can start focusing on how to get the sidewalks done," she said.
Debbie Parish also lives on the West Side and helped to revitalize Shelton Heights Park. She says the Blue Line would help make the park more accessible without a car.
"Everybody has a right to go out and walk, and if you can't do that because you're going to get hit, that's pretty bad," she said.
Now she wonders if the walkability improvements will ever happen in her neighborhood.
"Everybody's saying, well we don't need IndyGo, we can do it ourselves. We can't do it without money," she said. "I get why people were afraid of the Blue Line, because everyone's afraid of change, but what we're going to miss out on is huge, and it would've actually made this place much more vibrant."
-
Speedway awarded $100K grant for 16th Street corridor study
The Town of Speedway has received a $100,000 planning grant from the Indianapolis Metropolitan Planning Organization (IMPO) to study improvements along 16th Street, from Mickley Avenue to Main Street.Community leaders push to keep east side liquor store closed, citing crime
Community leaders and business owners on Indianapolis’ east side are rallying to keep a controversial liquor store permanently closed, saying its absence has brought peace to the neighborhood.Rokita: "2020 Census fundamentally flawed," supports redistricting efforts
Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita released a statement on Tuesday voicing his support for redistricting efforts to take place now in the Hoosier State.More than half of Americans stress about money, NerdWallet has tips for coping
More than half of Americans say they worry about money, according to a new NerdWallet survey. Rising costs for housing, inflation and uncertainty around tariffs are among the top reasons.