An agreement to dissolve a five-county transit board means Hennepin County will be called on to contribute an additional $103.5 million toward construction of the $1.9 billion Southwest light-rail line.
The Hennepin County Regional Railroad Authority has already signed on to contribute about $186 million for Southwest. The new agreement brings the county's total to about $289 million.
The pact also means that a controversial method of financing big public projects using "certificates of participation" will no longer be part of Southwest's tenuous funding puzzle.
The proposed 14.5-mile line between downtown Minneapolis and Eden Prairie would operate entirely in Hennepin County, stopping in St. Louis Park, Hopkins and Minnetonka along the way. If built, the line is expected to open for passenger service in 2021.
The increased financial commitment from the state's most-populous county is part of a deal struck in recent days that calls for the dissolution of the Counties Transit Improvement Board (CTIB), a key funding source for the Twin Cities' transit network.
By breaking up, the five counties that make up CTIB — Hennepin, Ramsey, Dakota, Anoka and Washington — can raise a local sales tax to a half cent for transportation projects, up from a quarter cent. Only Hennepin and Ramsey counties are expected to increase the tax by that amount. Increased taxes in Ramsey County would go toward transit projects there.
CTIB's demise removes the state from funding light rail projects like Southwest, where it was supposed to pay 10 percent of the cost. But Republican lawmakers at the Capitol have balked at doing so, leaving the funding blueprint for regional transit projects like the SWLRT uncertain.
Faced with a hole in the transit budget, the Metropolitan Council stepped in last year and grudgingly said it would issue $103.5 million in certificates of participation. The council would have assumed more debt at a time it was facing a $74 million hole in its own budget.