By Alec MacGillis
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 8, 2006; B05
In the vision of Fairfax County political and business leaders, Leesburg Pike in Tysons Corner would be transformed from a car-clogged strip of auto dealers and shopping plazas into an urban boulevard with a tree-filled median and sidewalks lined with shops and cafes.
But now it's official: Running down the middle of the street will be an elevated train track, 35 feet high, with concrete pillars every 70 to 100 feet. Construction of the line, which is to reach Reston in 2012, will require a complete overhaul of Leesburg Pike (Route 7), one of the busiest streets in the region.
Fairfax residents and officials reacted with disappointment and finger-pointing yesterday to the announcement Wednesday by Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D-Va.) that the planned Metrorail extension from West Falls Church to Dulles International Airport would run through Tysons on an elevated track instead of below ground. Critics zeroed in on federal standards for public transit funding, which they called overly rigid. Others questioned whether Kaine could have won approval for a tunnel if he had handled things differently.
The decision, tunnel supporters said, represented a setback for Fairfax's hopes for turning Tysons into a walkable, vibrant downtown similar to Arlington's Rosslyn-Ballston corridor. An elevated track, they said, will make it harder to walk around Tysons, add a new street grid and build to the edge of sidewalks, all keys to creating a successful downtown.
"It's sad. The last thing Tysons needs is another silly barrier, and that's what it's getting," said Clark Tyler of McLean, chairman of a county task force drafting a new master plan for Tysons. "We've got the Beltway and Route 123 and Route 7, and now we'll get this thing sticking up that you can see from Pittsburgh."
Kaine's decision came after federal transit officials and Northern Virginia Republican Reps. Frank R. Wolf and Thomas M. Davis III warned him that switching to a tunnel for the four-mile Tysons stretch of the line, as Kaine was close to doing, would imperil the entire 23-mile, $4 billion project. The delay caused by the design change, federal officials told Kaine, could jeopardize the $900 million that the federal government is expected to provide, because the money might be lost in a future funding cycle.
Even more important, federal officials said, was the likelihood that the extra cost of a tunnel -- estimated at $250 million by an engineers' panel convened by Kaine -- would put the project in violation of "cost effectiveness" standards used by the Federal Transit Administration. These standards, which Congress first adopted 20 years ago, are essentially a formula that determines how much time is saved by transit users for each dollar spent.
The formula looks at a project's total cost, not just the federal share. Even if Virginia found extra money from local or private sources to pay for a tunnel, without seeking more federal money, it would risk exceeding the cost standards and losing the $900 million expected federal share.
Lawmakers say the rules help ensure that limited funds for public transit go only to sensible projects and not boondoggles. But effectively, the standards allow the federal government to influence the design of a project, like Dulles rail, for which it is covering less than a quarter of the cost.
To tunnel supporters, it's simple: Public transit projects are being held to cost-benefit standards more stringent than those applied to highway projects. Federal funding of new transit projects is $1.5 billion a year, a fraction of highway spending.
"I don't see why we have such trouble holding onto funds for rail in Northern Virginia when Alaska has done a great job of holding onto its money for the 'Bridge to Nowhere,' " Tysons resident Neil Sullivan said, referring to a $223 million bridge that will serve a town of 50.
FTA officials pointed yesterday to the agency's long-standing rules for funding only projects that are "meritorious" but declined to comment about the Dulles project.
Other supporters of a tunnel asked why Kaine waited to meet directly with federal officials until the last days before announcing his decision, after much enthusiasm had built for a tunnel. Perhaps, they said, the state might have won approval if it had taken the cost standards more seriously earlier. As it was, state officials were able to present the federal agency with only a few pages of cost estimates provided by companies seeking to build the tunnel.
"Some of us from months ago knew the federal funding issue was a huge unknown, and I am surprised [the governor's office] did not get those answers much earlier," said Del. Thomas Davis Rust (R-Fairfax). "He may have gotten caught up in the moment. A lot of people were pushing it, and he may have just gotten caught up in it and thought, 'We can work around this.' "
Kaine defended his handling of the decision. He said his office had been aware of the cost standards all along but had thought that they could be overcome after learning from the engineers' panel late in July that the extra cost of a tunnel would be less than previously estimated. At first, he said, Federal Transit Administration officials indicated that a cost difference of $250 million might be acceptable. Only more recently did officials make clear that a tunnel would not get federal backing, he said.
"When we first made presentations [of the panel's findings] to both FTA and congressional staff, they had the same reaction: 'Huh? That's not nearly as bad as we thought,' " Kaine said. "Over the course of the next four weeks, even that level of differential did become problematic." This account differs from that offered by Davis, who says FTA officials never put much stock in the engineer panel's tunnel estimate.
Some critics argued that an elevated track is so undesirable that Fairfax should revisit the possibility of serving Tysons with a separate streetcar line linked to a Metro line running straight to Dulles.
But a few officials argued that going with an elevated track should not be seen as disastrous because the decision for that design was made years ago after much deliberation. It was only recently that a tunnel again became an option, when Metro officials raised the possibility of using a potentially more efficient tunneling method that had not been considered before.
"None of these decisions were made in haste," said J. Kenneth Klinge, a political consultant who chaired the initial task force to plan transit in the Dulles corridor in the late 1990s. "When this idea, that you could build a tunnel more cheaply, started six months ago, I remember saying: 'These people are crazy. I don't know if they understand what they're getting into. The federal rules are going to kill this project if they keep this up.' "