Title: Infrastructure Planning and Finance in Greater Boston
1Infrastructure Planning and Finance in Greater
Boston
- Stephanie Pollack
- Associate Director
- Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy
2The Dukakis Center
The Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy
conducts interdisciplinary research, in
collaboration with civic leaders and scholars
both within and beyond Northeastern University,
to identify and implement real solutions to the
critical challenges facing urban areas throughout
Greater Boston, the Commonwealth, and the nation.
3Infrastructure spending and the economy
Source Political Economy Research Institute,
2009
4US infrastructure spending
5Bostons geography water
6Bostons rivers and harbor
- Boston sits at the confluence of the Charles,
Neponset and Mystic Rivers - The combined watersheds of the three rivers
include 57 cities and towns and drain an area of
more than 400 square miles - These rivers come together at Boston Harbor,
which is experiencing a renaissance following a
clean-up effort that took more than a decade and
cost almost 4 billion - The 30 islands dotting the Harbor have been
joined into the Boston Harbor Islands National
Park
7Bostons geography a city on a peninsula
8There are many types of infrastructure
- Parks and open spaces (green infrastructure)
- Transportation
- Roads and bridges
- Trains and subways
- Water and sewer
- Drinking water
- Wastewater treatment
9Infrastructure is planned and financed at all
levels of government
- Parks and open spaces (green infrastructure)
- Transportation
- Roads and bridges
- Trains and subways
- Water and sewer
- Drinking water
- Wastewater treatment
10Bostons parks and open spaces
- The City of Boston has an extensive network of
more than 7,000 acres of publicly- and
privately-owned open spaces - The Citys Parks and Recreation Department owns
and manages more than 215 parks and playgrounds - A state agency, the Massachusetts Department of
Conservation and Recreation, manages 2,200 acres
of parks as well as recreational facilities such
as swimming pools and ice rinks - There are also open spaces owned by private
groups such as the Boston Natural Areas Network,
which manages 175 community gardens and more than
1,400 acres of urban wilds
11History of Boston metropolitan park system
- The Metropolitan Park System was created by the
Massachusetts state legislature in 1893 and was
the first regional organization of public open
space in the United States - The Metropolitan Park Commission was renamed the
Metropolitan District Commission in 1919 and the
MDC was merged with the state park agency in 2004
to create the Department of Conservation and
Recreation - DCRs Division of Urban Parks and Recreation now
runs the Metropolitan Park System in greater
Boston, which includes - 18 saltwater and 3 freshwater beaches
- Recreational facilities including 23 skating
rinks, 25 tennis courts, 19 swimming pools, 2
golf courses and 1 downhill ski area - 6 bicycle/jogging paths
- 52 playgrounds
- 4 harbor islands
- 162 miles of parkways linking the parks and
reservations
12History of metropolitan Boston water and sewer
system
- The Metropolitan Water Supply Commission operated
from 1926 to 1946 and created the Quabbin and
Wachusett reservoirs - The Metropolitan Sewerage District was formed to
build one of the first regional sewerage systems
in the country in 1899 its responsibilities were
turned over to the Metropolitan District
Commission in 1919 - In 1946 the MDC also took over the water supply
system and operated both water and sewer systems
for metropolitan Boston until 1985
13Creation of the Massachusetts Water Resources
Authority (MWRA)
- In 1985, after a lawsuit was brought to stop the
pollution of Boston Harbor by the MDCs treatment
plants, the newly created MWRA assumed control of
water and sewer systems from the MDC - The MWRA is a Massachusetts public authority
established by an act of the Legislature in 1984
to provide wholesale water and sewer services in
61 metropolitan Boston communities - MWRA statistics
- 2.55 million people served
- 890,000 households served
- 5,500 businesses served
- 215 million gallons per day of water supplied
(average) - 350 million gallons per day of sewage treated
(average)
14Deer Island Sewage Treatment Plant
15Transportation is often provided by Federal,
state and regional agencies
- The regions extensive public transit network is
operated by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation
Authority (MBTA), which provides bus, rapid
transit and commuter rail service in a regional
service area that includes 175 cities and towns - The MBTA network includes 11 commuter rail lines
with 125 stations and 5 rapid transit lines with
150 stations, along with an extensive network of
local and express busses, and a small but
important water ferry system - Inter-city trains are
- operated by a
- Federal authority,
- Amtrak
16How do we pay for transportation infrastructure?
- User fees
- Fares for transit riders
- Tolls on some (but not most) roadways
- Debt
- General obligation bonds
- Revenue bonds
- Usually backed by gasoline tax or user fee
revenues
17Bostons Big Dig
22 billion
18Bostons Big Dig
- The project includes 161 lanes miles of highway
in a 7.5 mile corridor, about half in tunnels,
including four major highway interchanges - The old road had 27 on- and off-ramps, while the
new one has just 14 - The elevated highway carried about 75,000
vehicles a day comfortably when it opened in 1959
but by 2000, it carried more than 190,000, quite
uncomfortably - The underground Central Artery can carry about
245,000 vehicles a day
19The financial legacy of the Big Dig
20New models for financing transportation
infrastructure
- Public-private partnerships
- User fees based on miles driven and/or congestion
fees - Privatization of transportation infrastructure