
Mayor Dickens puts Beltline Eastside Trail transit on back burner
Mayor Andre Dickens has changed course on Beltline rail, scrapping support for MARTA's streetcar expansion to the Eastside Trail in the near future.
Why it matters: The surprise announcement at yesterday's MARTA board meeting marks a major inflection point in the development of the wildly popular linear park system and Atlanta's future growth.
The big picture: The roughly 20-year-old vision of running transit along the Beltline, including the Eastside Trail, helped sell the project to the public and drove dense development along the path, fueling a real estate boom.
The vision was not, however, universally accepted. In recent years, neighboring residents and developers organized to block the plan to extend the Downtown streetcar along the Eastside Trail to reach Ponce City Market.
Driving the news: On Thursday, Courtney English, Dickens' chief policy officer and senior advisor, told the MARTA board that the first phase of City Hall's transit plan no longer includes that expansion.
"We are committed to building rail on the Beltline," English said. "However, not in the form that has been previously discussed."
State of play: Under the proposal unveiled yesterday, the administration aims to prioritize rail development along the Southside Trail to Murphy Crossing to promote equity, spark mixed-income housing and build a dedicated ridership.
The rebooted transit vision, parts of which Dickens first announced in 2024's State of the City address, calls for the city to focus on "improving" the Downtown streetcar, building bus rapid transit across town and developing new infill stations to make the Beltline more accessible for more Atlantans.
It also calls for extending the existing Downtown streetcar to the Eastside Trail, but as of yesterday's update, no further.
A future phase includes extending the Downtown streetcar line west to the Atlanta University Center, Georgia Tech and the Beltline's western edge.
Zoom in: The Southside Trail, which stretches from Glenwood Avenue to southwest Atlanta's Pittsburgh neighborhood, has "activity nodes" not served by existing MARTA heavy rail, the administration said.
Yes, but: Matthew Rao of Beltline Rail Now told Axios that changing the vision now would delay the city's long-awaited transit expansion projects even longer and waste the significant time and money spent studying the prospect.
"You will be blamed for a failure, not the mayor," Rao said, referring to the MARTA board. "He will be long gone after these projects are completed. What are you going to do now?"
The intrigue: Walter Brown of Better Atlanta Transit, the group opposing rail on the Eastside Trail, made the "wise and courageous decision to defund the expensive, unnecessary and inequitable."
BAT wants Dickens to instead build a "wheels and heels" parallel path to separate bicyclists and scooter users from walkers and joggers.
Zoom out: The change in plans comes amid an ongoing dispute between MARTA and the Dickens administration over the turtle-slow speed of the city's transit expansion project, how that funding is being accounted for, and the design of the Five Points station $250 million makeover.
The station reconstruction will not be ready before the 2026 World Cup, transit officials have said, and continued delays could risk failing to be ready for the 2028 Super Bowl.
What we're watching: Dickens said the administration will hold community meetings to discuss the new vision, which the city must formalize with MARTA. Officials have not yet released a timeline or cost estimates.
The bottom line: The Eastside Trail extension is delayed, not necessarily dead.
However, considering the amount of time needed to build transit and limited funding, Dickens effectively passed the decision to a future mayor.
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