Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Ground broken in Ind. on South Shore West Lake expansion

4-year constructi­on project estimated at $945 million

- By Tim Zorn Tim Zorn is a freelance reporter for the Post-Tribune.

More than 30 years after the idea germinated, the project to build the South Shore Line’s West Lake Corridor expansion received its final official funding Wednesday.

Officials fromthe Federal Transit Administra­tion and the Northern Indiana Commuter Transporta­tion District signed the FTA’s $354.6 million agreement to help fund NICTD’s $944.9 million project.

The rest of the funding will come from state and local government­s, with more than $300 million of that from the state. The Northwest Indiana Regional Developmen­t Authority and most of the cities and towns in Lake County also have committed funds for the project.

“This is how it’s supposed to work,” Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb said of the bipartisan cooperatio­n on the West Lake project, which he called “the largest transit investment in Indiana history.”

West Lake will be a 7.8mile rail line between Hammond, Indiana, and the Munster/ Dyer border, along with four new stations. When completed in about four years, it will be the first new passenger rail line in northern Indiana since 1908, when the South Shore’s predecesso­r began operating.

West Lake trains will go into downtown Chicago. Passengers also can transfer in downtown Hammond to South Shore trains going east to the Indiana dunes, Michigan City and South Bend.

The trip from Dyer to downtown Chicago will take about 45 minutes, South Shore President Michael Noland said, adding: “I guarantee you can’t drive to Chicago from here in 45 minutes.”

Constructi­on equipment from the project’s Chicagobas­ed contractor­s, F.H. Paschen and Ragnar Benson Constructi­on, sat by at the project’s ceremonial groundbrea­king site, on property that will become West Lake’s Munster/Dyer station.

Holcomb, Noland and several other officials arrived at the ceremony aboard two South Shore cars pulled by South Shore locomotive­s, on CSX tracks that parallel the new West Lake route.

Elaine Chao, the U.S. Secretary of Transporta­tion, and Jane Williams, the FTA’s deputy administra­tor, participat­ed in the ceremony by remote TV links, as did US. Rep. Pete Visclosky, D-Gary, and Sens. Mike Braun and Todd Young.

After Williams signed the FTA’s funding agreement remotely, NICTD board Chairman Joe McGuinness signed a copy in person.

Earlier, Holcomb recalled being in the room when Visclosky spoke to then-Gov. Mitch Daniels about the West Lake project.

Visclosky was “passionate” about West Lake and what it would mean for Northwest Indiana tohave a new connection to the Chicago economy, Holcomb said.

“We knew it would take some courage, focus and teamwork,” Holcomb said.

Visclosky, now near the end of his more than 30 years in Congress, spoke on video about the future.

The next steps for the South Shore Line, he said, include getting an FTA agreement to help fund NICTD’s Double Track project between Gary and Michigan City, and ensuring that the West Lake project is “well- implemente­d, on time and, hopefully, a bit under budget.”

Visclosky also urged that those projects benefit “every citizen of Northwest Indiana,” that the housing in new developmen­ts around South Shore stations is available to all, and that the goal of a regional bus system not be abandoned.

The idea of building a new South Shore line in western Lake County began in the 1980s. In the 1990s, NICTD acquired the former Monon rail road right of way in Hammond and Munster, along which the new West Lake line will run.

Noland said Wednesday that when he took his job at the South Shore Line six years ago, he was handed a “visionary plan,” developed by his predecesso­rs, that included the West Lake Corridor and the Double Track projects.

Constructi­on work on West Lake will begin as soon as NICTD gives Paschen and Ragnar Benson the notice to proceed, Noland said. The contractor­s, working on a designbuil­d process, will determine where the work will begin, but he anticipate­d they’ll start in the middle of the project and work their way south, then north.

 ?? MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb speaks after the groundbrea­king ceremony for the South Shore LineWest Lake Corridor project onWednesda­y in Munster.
MICHAEL GARD/POST-TRIBUNE PHOTOS Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb speaks after the groundbrea­king ceremony for the South Shore LineWest Lake Corridor project onWednesda­y in Munster.
 ??  ?? Joe McGuinness, commission­er of the Indiana Department of Transporta­tion and NICTD chairman, celebrates after signing paperwork to launch the South Shore Line West Lake Corridor project onWednesda­y in Munster.
Joe McGuinness, commission­er of the Indiana Department of Transporta­tion and NICTD chairman, celebrates after signing paperwork to launch the South Shore Line West Lake Corridor project onWednesda­y in Munster.

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