Monday's
DC Examiner reports: "
The Transportation Planning Board added more than $1 billion in projects for the District to the region's long-range transportation plan, according to officials. The stratagem, called the
Constrained Long Range Plan, estimates about $4.5 billion will be available each year for the next 24 years to complete projects in Maryland, Virginia and the District. Projects can only be added to the board's long range plan if there is a solid funding mechanism in place. "
Three of the DC projects will impact Near Southeast: the rehabilitation of
South Capitol Street including transformation of the street into an at-grade boulvard from I Street to N Street and the construction of a new
Frederick Douglass Bridge (costing $625 million and completed in 2015); the reconfiguration and reconstruction of the
11th Street Bridges (costing $377 million and completed in 2011); and $3 million for the Anacostia Streetcar Study, which would run light rail across the 11th Street Bridges from Anacostia down
M Street SE to South Capitol Street. (The first phase of actual construction of the Streetcar Project has been added to the CLRP as well.) Here's an
explanation of the CLRP as well as the
Transportation Improvement Plan, which describes the schedule for federal funds obligated to state and local projects.