Miami Herald

Despite traffic gridlock, Miami Beach leaders oppose Metromover extension

- BY AARON LEIBOWITZ aleibowitz@miamiheral­d.com

The Miami Beach City Commission unanimousl­y opposed a Miami-Dade County plan to extend the Metromover to South Beach, voting Wednesday to object to what could become the first masstransi­t option connecting Miami Beach to the mainland.

All six city commission­ers and Mayor Steven Meiner cosponsore­d a resolution opposing the Baylink plan and approved it without discussion.

The resolution calls for the county to pursue alternativ­e options — such as express bus lanes over the Julia Tuttle Causeway to Mid Beach — rather than sticking with the Metromover extension plan that would connect two existing stations in downtown Miami to two proposed stations along Fifth Street in South Beach via a track over the MacArthur Causeway. The Metromover, a free elevated transit system that operates in downtown Miami and Brickell, began service in 1986.

Homeowners in the South of Fifth and West Avenue neighborho­ods, which are directly south and north of the planned stations, have railed against the Baylink and pressed elected officials to do the same.

City Commission­er Laura Dominguez said Tuesday the Julia Tuttle Causeway alternativ­e would be much more preferable.

“You’re not affecting homes and businesses the way you would on the MacArthur,” Dominguez said. “A lot of times with projects, it really helps to have community support and buy-in, and the community really does not support this.”

The City Commission’s vote Wednesday came even as Miami Beach residents lament traffic gridlock in the city, a long-standing problem that most recently resurfaced last weekend during the Miami Internatio­nal

Boat Show.

At a virtual meeting with residents Tuesday evening, Meiner noted that the conversati­on had “shifted” over the past year. Meiner’s predecesso­r, Dan Gelber, praised the Baylink alternativ­e in November 2022 as “a more convenient and common-sense transit option” than a proposed monorail operated by casino owner Genting, a plan put on the table in 2019.

But in February 2023, amid opposition from some neighborho­od groups, Gelber and the City Commission declined to support the Metromover project, instead flagging concerns to the county about its implicatio­ns for developmen­t.

“It’s really this specific iteration of the Baylink that we’re saying, ‘This is not the right option,’ ” Meiner said Tuesday.

Miami Beach’s approval isn’t needed for the Metromover project, which is set to be funded with county and state dollars and under Miami-Dade control. Still, the opposition from the City Commission and affluent neighborho­ods along the proposed route set up the possibilit­y of well-funded legal challenges.

“We look forward to bringing them updated informatio­n,” MiamiDade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said in a brief interview at the Stephen P. Clark Government Center in Miami after the Miami Beach vote.

Fisher Island, where wealthy residents depend on a ferry station off the MacArthur, has also pushed back on the plan. Last year, a lawyer for the island’s community associatio­n said in a letter to the county and the U.S. Coast Guard that there are “significan­t shortcomin­gs” in environmen­tal studies needed for federal approval of the project.

‘WE ARE GETTING A BAD DEAL’

City officials have made an assortment of antiBaylin­k arguments, including that some of the city’s largest employers, such as Mount Sinai hospital and the Fontainebl­eau hotel, are located in Mid Beach, not South Beach. Officials have also cited concerns that the county could control zoning around new Metromover stations.

Commission­er Kristen Rosen Gonzalez said Tuesday that the Metromover is “old technology.”

“That makes no sense because taxpayers are paying a price tag for cutting-edge technology,” Rosen Gonzalez said in a text message. “We are getting a bad deal.”

Neighborho­od leaders have insisted they are opposed to the Baylink plan as it’s currently constructe­d, not to public transit in general.

Keith Marks, president of the South of Fifth Neighborho­od Associatio­n, said Tuesday that the Metromover would drop people off at Fifth Street “with nowhere to go,” although the county’s $1 billion predicted constructi­on price tag includes bus lanes linking the new stations with the Miami Beach Convention Center.

“Don’t twist it to say we’re against public transporta­tion,” Marks said. “We do believe that traffic needs to be improved. We’re not asking to stop the progress on that, just to do new studies and look at better alternativ­es.”

Tim Carr, president of the West Avenue Neighborho­od Associatio­n, said express bus lanes on the Julia Tuttle or the MacArthur would be a more cost-effective option than the Baylink. “We encourage mass transporta­tion, but we encourage smart transporta­tion,” he said. “We actually have the solutions in front of us right now.”

The groups have been steadfast in their opposition over the past year. Last February, South of Fifth residents voiced their displeasur­e during a meeting with County Commission­er Eileen Higgins at the Murano Grande luxury condo building, at one point chanting, “Stop the train!”

John Stimmel, president of an owners associatio­n for the Icon condo tower in South Beach, said at that meeting that the Metromover, the county’s only free transit option, could bring “more crime” and homelessne­ss to Miami Beach.

SUPPORT FOR A SOUTH BEACH CONNECTION

Matthew Gultanoff, the director of pedestrian and transit advocacy group Better Streets Miami Beach, said the arguments against the Baylink are flawed.

Utilizing the MacArthur Causeway makes sense, he said, because South Beach is the “economic engine” of Miami Beach and connects to transit options in downtown Miami. U.S. Census Bureau data show the highest concentrat­ion of jobs in the city is in South Beach.

“Everyone knows there’s an issue with traffic in the city, and it rears its ugly head during every high-impact special event,” Gultanoff said. “It’s clear that it’s the combinatio­n of large special events and a commuting workforce, many of whom work in these highend buildings where many of the detractors live.”

Many Miami Beach residents want the Baylink, added Gultanoff, who lives in the South of Fifth neighborho­od. Several neighborho­od associatio­ns, including Flamingo Park and Palm View in South Beach, expressed their support last year.

“There needs to be a conversati­on that’s inclusive of everyone in this city and not just a few,” Gultanoff said.

In a letter to the City Commission last February, the Palm View Neighborho­od Associatio­n wrote that “the traffic plaguing the neighborho­od and surroundin­g area has become untenable.”

“Our ability to access local services and nearby neighborho­ods on the mainland has become limited,” the group said. “We note that the only solution to this problem is to invest in more efficient transporta­tion infrastruc­ture.”

DECADES WITHOUT A SOLUTION

A mass-transit option between Miami and Miami

Beach has been on Miami-Dade’s wishlist since the 1980s. In 2004, Miami Beach voters endorsed a light-rail system over the MacArthur, but the project never advanced.

More recently, city officials have pursued a host of steps to try to address traffic gridlock. They have worked with the county and state to monitor traffic so they can alert residents of backups in real time, adjusted trafficsig­nal timing at key intersecti­ons to synchroniz­e lights and hired new officers dedicated to directing traffic.

At a meeting last October, officials said none of those steps addresses the root of the problem: too many cars on the road. The Florida Department of Transporta­tion considers several of the city’s main traffic arteries — including the MacArthur Causeway, 41st Street and parts of the Julia Tuttle Causeway — to be at a “failing” level of service, meaning travel demand exceeds roadway capacity.

“The issue is one of capacity,” Miami Beach Transporta­tion Director José González said at the October meeting. “Signal timing alone provides only marginal improvemen­ts and cannot solve capacity issues we have in our city and our region.”

Officials are also working with a private company to revive a ferry service between Sunset Harbour and downtown Miami. And the state has been working on providing faster bus service across the Julia Tuttle Causeway by having buses use the shoulder as an express lane. Miami Beach has committed $5.1 million toward the effort.

SLOW PROGRESS ON BAYLINK

Meanwhile, progress on the proposed Metromover extension has been slow. Higgins and Levine Cava released a video in November 2022 announcing the Miami-Dade administra­tion was killing a stalled plan for a monorail line to the beach and moving forward with plans for a Metromover extension.

At the time, Levine

Cava announced an expedited bidding process that would get a developmen­t contract to county commission­ers within 12 months. That would have allowed constructi­on to begin as early as 2025, with operations expected in 2029.

But the project remains on the drawing board, and the county hasn’t released the bidding paperwork. The county’s budget still predicts constructi­on will begin in 2025.

THAT MAKES NO SENSE BECAUSE TAXPAYERS ARE PAYING A PRICE TAG FOR CUTTING-EDGE TECHNOLOGY. WE ARE GETTING A BAD DEAL. Miami Beach Commission­er Kristen Rosen Gonzalez, who says the Metromover is ‘old technology’

 ?? Miami-Dade County ?? A rendering of a monorail to Miami Beach along the MacArthur Causeway. Miami-Dade County plans to extend Metromover instead.
Miami-Dade County A rendering of a monorail to Miami Beach along the MacArthur Causeway. Miami-Dade County plans to extend Metromover instead.
 ?? JANNIS TOBIAS WERNER 2012 ?? The City Commission’s vote Wednesday came even as Miami Beach residents lament traffic gridlock in the city, a long-standing problem.
JANNIS TOBIAS WERNER 2012 The City Commission’s vote Wednesday came even as Miami Beach residents lament traffic gridlock in the city, a long-standing problem.
 ?? Miami-Dade County ?? If Miami-Dade County builds a Metromover link to Miami Beach, the station on Fifth Street and Washington Avenue in South Beach could look like this.
Miami-Dade County If Miami-Dade County builds a Metromover link to Miami Beach, the station on Fifth Street and Washington Avenue in South Beach could look like this.

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