St. Paul residents demand Central Corridor project

University Ave. rally
Dozens of residents rallied on University Avenue in St. Paul today to call on the governor to restore funding for the proposed Central Corrdior light rail project. Gov. Tim Pawlenty recently vetoed $70 million out of a bonding bill for the project. It was one of 52 items Pawlenty struck from a $925 million borrowing plan that he said was too large.
MPR Photo/Jess Mador

Neighborhood activists in St. Paul are calling on the Legislature and the governor to restore funding for the Central Corridor light rail project. The line would run along University Avenue in St. Paul.

Gov. Tim Pawlenty recently used his line-item veto authority to cut $70 million for the project out of a bonding bill.

Metric Giles from the Community Stabilization Project held a rally Thursday on University Avenue to protest the cuts. He said the light rail route must be fully funded.

University Ave. protests
Dozens of residents rally on University Avenue in St. Paul to call on the governor to restore funding for the proposed Central Corrdior light rail project. Gov. Tim Pawlenty recently vetoed $70 million out of a bonding bill for the project. It was one of 52 items Pawlenty struck from a $925 million borrowing plan that he said was too large.
MPR Photo/Jess Mador

"Going down University Avenue is an important thing, and it's going to be very important that we send a clear message, not just here but in our daily conversation, that we do want that $70 million restored," he said.

Pawlenty spokesman Brian McClung said the governor cut the funding out of concern over the state budget. He said funding for the light rail project remains an option.

"Governor Pawlenty is willing to listen to DFL legislators, if they'd like to come back and talk about Central Corridor, but we have some issues about the project and the operating costs and other things that we want to resolved," McClung said. "We also want to see how they are going to deal with our overall budget deficit and ensure that there is some fiscal responsibility across the board."

The Central Corridor funding was one of 52 items the governor cut from the $925 million bonding bill, which he said was too large.

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