A collective "Why?" went up over the east metro area Monday after Gov. Tim Pawlenty vetoed $70 million for the Central Corridor light-rail project.
Officials were puzzled -- and some were angry -- that the governor would nix a project that he had put in his own bonding proposal and that had a price he and the Legislature could agree on.
"I'm just absolutely outraged that the governor's playing politics with the Central Corridor," said St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman. "I can't figure it out."
But after the initial shock and head-scratching, reality set in: It's politics.
There's still a month left in the session, there's still room to talk and there's still a lot of commitment to get the train rolling.
"It's what you call negotiations," said Ramsey County Commissioner Tony Bennett.
"I guess I wasn't even expecting it," said Russ Stark, a St. Paul City Council member who represents an area that the 11-mile, downtown-to-downtown line will go through. "The mixed messages are really unfortunate."
Metropolitan Council Chairman Peter Bell said he would've liked to have seen the $70 million survive the cuts. "However, it should come as no surprise that the governor had to line-item veto a number of projects in the bonding bill due to its size," he said. "Nevertheless, the Central Corridor project has not been derailed."