La Follette Avenue
High-Speed Rail Corridor Group

Waubesa Street to Winnebago Street and Anziger Court
aka most of City Ward 33 and Census Track 20-Block Group 4, per the 2000 census

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Neighbors, city staff, state representative walk corridor

Follow-up to walk

Representative Joe Parisi has invited Dan Melton, Karen Faster and Marsha Rummel and maybe other neighborhood representatives to a meeting in his office with Wisconsin Department of Transportation officials to talk about ways to improve communication with neighbors about the high-speed rail project. Suggestions from neighbors to improve communication should be sent to rail@ohioavenue.com by Wednesday, November 3.

Melton is on the corridor management plan focus group organized by the DOT and its consultants. Faster is part of the La Follette Avenue High-Speed Railroad Corridor Group. Rummel represents District 6 on the Madison city council, including the La Follette Avenue portion of the corridor.

— By Karen Faster

Arc of the tracks

As the group stood beside the rail corridor near Jackson Street's dead end on Wednesday, Chris Klein from the mayor's office pointed out how the curve of the tracks from Waubesa to Division limits a pedestrian's view.

That limited sightline coupled with the expected speed of 40 miles an hour and limited noise is an example of why the DOT and its consultants emphasize fencing the portions of the corridor to keep trespassers out, according to Klein.

Because of the curve, one cannot see Division Street from Waubesa Street.

That demonstration gives me pause in regard to the fence. When I am trying to cross North Shore Drive at Bedford Street, near the Findorff building, I have a hard time gauging the speed of the motor vehicles traveling the curve of North Shore Drive.

Would the speed of a high-speed train be harder to judge? At least with my bike I can hope off and become a pedestrian in a crosswalk where drivers are legally obligated to yield to me.

I'd like to hear from neighbors about whether there should be a fence along the portion of the corridor that parallels La Follette Avenue.

We need to lobby the city to request a pedestrian-bicycle crossing to be added somewhere between Division and Waubesa streets, especially if the State recommends closing Corry Street. We do not want to lose touch with our neighbors on either side of the tracks.

The irony is not lost on me that I didn't see the curve or recognize its significance until I stood on the tracks on a quiet fall morning with neighbors and others worried about our quality of life as individuals and as a holistic neighborhood.

A 1997 paper map of the city of Madison shows our curve of the tracks to be a Chicago and Northwestern track, so the high-speed rail route would be switching from what the map shows to be Soo Line from the northeast to Chicago and Northwestern at the curve in Wirth Court Park, known as Junction A in railroad consultant parlance.

If the train kept to the Soo Line, it would take up the current paved bike path that is a straight shot to the station at the state Department of Administration Building. I wonder if that route would lead to fenced neighborhoods. I wonder if the bike path could be rerouted.

— By Karen Faster

By Dan Melton
Ten Atwood train corridor neighbors, State Rep. Joe Parisi, Mayor's Office staff Chris Klein, and Chris Petykowski of City Engineering walked the train tracks Wednesday morning (October 27) from the Division Street-Union Corners Bike Path to Corry Street — talking along the way about how the Milwaukee-Madison train might affect abutting properties, trees and crossings.

Rep. Parisi and Klein said they were disturbed and concerned at the apparent lack of communication between WisDOT and neighbors who directly abut the train corridor. When Rep. Parisi asked neighbors on the corridor walk if they'd received info directly from WisDOT — if anyone had knocked on their door and talked to them, every neighbor said no. "No. No," they said. "We feel we've been left in the dark." "No one's told us anything," "We just want to know what's going on," "We don't even know who to talk to."

Klein said he'd call WisDOT immediately to talk to them about improving communication. "They [WisDOT] are going to have to do a better job walking the corridor," Klein said. "They need to talk to everybody." After the walk, Rep. Parisi immediately got in touch with WisDOT and lined up a meeting next week with WisDOT officials in his State Capitol office to talk about improving communication.

At Division-LaFollette, at the first house on the walk, Klein stopped to take note of how close to the owners' back door a fence might go. At the Jackson dead-end, Klein and Petykowski listened to the owner of the last house on Jackson — that directly abuts the train tracks — stopped to look up and down the corridor to see where exactly the RR right-of-way-property lines appear to extend to — and where a fence might go.

At the Jackson dead-end, Klein pointed up the tracks towards Goodman Community Center, said the new Milwaukee-Madison trains, and new bed and track, may be so much quieter than what people are used to, that if you cross the tracks at this point, for example, you may not even hear the train until it's on top of you.

At the Ohio dead-end, Klein and Parisi saw the well-worn dirt path-an 'institution' neighbors use to cross between the north and south sides of the tracks--that curves from the Ohio dead-end, through the bushes, to the dead-end of Farwell.

Klein was upset he'd been told the Union Corners Bike Path was not official — that it didn't "go anywhere"; he'd been assured it wasn't on any maps. Standing at the Farwell dead-end, he saw the green "Union Corners Bike Path" sign — saw how it runs along the south edge of Union Corners — connects the S side of the tracks to the north side of the tracks — saw how it serves a practical function as a transportation link.

"What are they talking about?" Klein said. "No document that the path exists? Look. There's a (green) city street sign, right there, that says 'Union Corners Bike Path'. It's an official part of the city bike path network."

Petykowski said one thing they might be able to do is rather than have a separate Division Street-Union Corners Bike Path railroad crossing, with its own signals and gate, maybe move the bike path closer to Winnebago so it could work with the Winnebago signals and gates.

Standing at Corry Street as it crosses the tracks, when asked about WisDOT possibly closing Corry Street — to eliminate a grade crossing, Klein said he wants Fire Chief Amesqua to come out and look at the situation — to see if any of the possible street closings might increase ambulance- fire response times.

Klein and Petykowski said one thing WisDOT may decide to do— to eliminate a grade crossing — is make the Marquette Street Bike Path a tunnel under the tracks and move it northeast away from the curve where it crosses the tracks at grade now — at the edge of Wirth Court Park.

Above article posted October 29

 

 


La Follette Avenue High-Speed Rail Corridor Group

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Web site is published by Karen Faster, 133 Ohio Avenue, Madison WI 53704
rail@ohioavenue.com

Posted September 14, 2010