Sentinel & Enterprise

Commuter rail, ferry operations gambit

Bill filed to pull control away from MBTA

- By Gayla Cawley

State Rep. William Straus filed two bills that would remove commuter rail and ferry operations fromthembt­a, and leave it solely responsibl­e for running the region’s bus and subway systems.

If the legislatio­n is approved, commuter rail operations, except for the Fairmount Line whichwould remain a part of the MBTA, would transfer to the rail and transit division of the Massachuse­tts Department of Transporta­tion.

The ferrywould be overseen by a new regional port authority, a political subdivisio­n of the commonweal­th created for the purpose of providing water transporta­tion services, similar to regional transit authoritie­s, the legislatio­n states.

“My goal is to have a smaller T, which is then allowed to focus on its core mission,” said Straus, House chair of the Joint Committee on Transporta­tion. “So, it would be buses and subway in the immediate Boston metro area, and that core mission is to safely get people back and forth throughout the day.

“A more targeted, less-broadmissi­oned T, I think, benefits everybody in the state on a number of different levels.”

Aside from Philadelph­ia, he said, “almost everywhere else” in the United States views its commuter rail differentl­y from its closed-in metropolit­an-area subway system, and has distinct oversight and governance for both.

“Whatever the circumstan­ces that got us to the MBTA being in charge of both, it doesn’t work anymore,” Straus said, asserting that the governor’s office is already more involved with commuter rail operations than the T.

According to Straus, themassDOT secretary of transporta­tion made the decision to hire Keolis Commuter Services as the MBTA’S commuter rail operator, despite that decision technicall­y beingmadew­ithin thet, by the general manager.

Commuter rail also moves people differentl­y from the subway, its capital infrastruc­ture needs are different, and the two systems answer to separate federal agencies for safety oversight, which are the Federal Railroad Administra­tion and Federal Transit Administra­tion, respective­ly, he said.

In addition, Straus said he doesn’t want to see capital needs for the subway system “in direct competitio­n” with commuter rail, particular­ly with electrific­ation of its diesel-powered fleet looming.

Similarly, he said safety oversight of the ferry is handled by the U. S. Coast Guard, and direct operation of three ferry routes in Boston Harbor is contracted out to a private company.

Ultimately, Straus is aiming for an MBTA that also delegates much of its major capital work, similar to what he said was done with South Coast Rail and the Green Line Extension.

A statutory change would not be necessary, and Straus sees a potential solution in the new high performanc­e unit created by former MASSDOT Secretary Jamey Tesler. Major capital projects could be run out of that secretaria­t, he said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD ?? A Massachuse­tts lawmaker filed legislatio­n that would remove commuter rail operations from the MBTA.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD A Massachuse­tts lawmaker filed legislatio­n that would remove commuter rail operations from the MBTA.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States