These
articles here are reprinted from various sources, including
the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times,
internal
CTA®
publications and other reputable sources. They are arranged
with the newest article at the top, then going back
chronologically from date of original publication.
The articles here taken directly from published sources are
acknowledged in the article and are reproduced here for
informational purposes only.
|
2004
| 2003
| 2002
| 2001
| 2000
| 1999
| 1998
| 1990-1997
| 1980-1989
| 1947-1979
Blue-Green Line Link
Considered
Date of Publication: July 19, 2004
Source: Chicago
Tribune
CTA Cermak-branch Cuts
Hit
Date of Publication: July 20, 2004
Source: Chicago
Tribune
West Siders Demand
Blue Line on Weekends
Date of Publication: July 20, 2004
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® is studying new
rail service--tentatively called the Silver Line--linking the Blue
and Green Lines in neighborhoods near downtown and forming the
first piece of the ambitious Circle Line concept. But residents of
the West Side who have long sought better transit in their
communities say they fear that the proposed Silver Line would
prompt further service reductions on the Cermak branch of the Blue
Line, where train schedules were cut in 1997 and have not been
restored. However, CTA®
President Frank Kruesi said there would be "serious reductions" on
all rail lines next year unless state legislators boost
funding.
How to avoid
eye contact? CTA tests new L seating
Date of Publication: May 16, 2004
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- In May 2004, the CTA®
rolled out a new configuration for its "L" cars, including New
York-style seats that face into the rail cars and hanging fabric
straps for passengers to get a grip. If they're a hit, the agency
could use the configuration on the more than 300 new cars it plans
to buy in the coming years,
CTA® President Frank Kruesi
said.
Brown Line Set to
Get $530 Million Renovation
Date of Publication: April 14, 2004
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- On April 13, 2004, CTA®
officials, Gov. Rod Blagojevich, Mayor Richard Daley, U.S. Sen.
Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), U.S. Rep. Rahm Emmanuel (D-Ill.) and
other elected officials celebrated the federal government's Full
Funding Grant Agreement to pay for almost 80 percent of the Brown
Line renovation. Grants from Washington will total $423.1 million.
The rest of the money will come from the Regional Transit
Authority, $56 million; the Illinois Department of Transportation,
$49.7 million; and the CTA®,
$1 million.
Revamped Kedzie
Stop Welcomes First Riders
Date of Publication: March 30, 2004
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- At its peak in 1945, the Blue Line's Kedzie L station in North
Lawndale processed more than 939,000 passengers -- more than 26
times the 35,000-some people who got on trains there last year.
But on March 29, 2004 -- after unveiling a revamped Kedzie station
that underwent $15 million in improvements --
CTA® President Kruesi vowed
to return the stop and the rest of the Blue Line's long-neglected
Cermak-Douglas Branch to its glory days.
CTA Taking the
Next Step to Have Plastic Pay Way
Date of Publication: January 16, 2004
Source: Chicago
Tribune
New CTA Fare
Card May Someday Work on Metra, Too
Date of Publication: January 16, 2004
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
New CTA Card
Reloads on Credit
Date of Publication: January 15, 2004
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Starting January 19, 2004, "L" riders were able to use the
Chicago Card PlusTM, which works
as either a 30-day or a pay-per-use pass. Like the current Chicago
CardTM, the new card can be
swiped across a fare box or turnstile, rather than inserted into a
fare collection machine. A demonstration was held at a press
conference on January 15 using a
CTA® fare box at the
agency's headquarters.
Skokie Swift
Extension Gets Backing of Mayor
Date of Publication: January 8, 2004
Source: Skokie
Review
- The Skokie Swift extension proposal was enthusiastically
backed by Mayor George Van Dusen in 2003 from two teams -- Parsons
Brinkerhoff Quade and Douglas and the Chicago Area Transportation
Study -- who reviewed the concept in two separate transit studies,
though some in the community living near the proposed right-of-way
still opposed it.
Next Stop:
History
Date of Publication: January 6, 2004
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- In 2002, CTA® car 6719
was a nearly half-century-old relic sitting on the scrap line at
Skokie yards awaiting reduction to a $1,200 pile of junk metal.
Instead, it now sits in a place of honor at the Smithsonian
Institution as a symbol of an important part of American history
-- one of the centerpieces of a huge new permanent exhibition
hall. How this came about can be explained in just two words:
Bonnie Lilienfeld.
Santa express
delights kids -- commuters, too
Date of Publication: December 22, 2003
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times \ Associated
Press
- Santa is just one of the features of the Chicago Transit
Authority's Holiday Train, which zips through the city's subway
tunnels and on top of its elevated tracks this time of year,
surprising commuters and delighting youngsters each holiday
season.
Stop and go on
the Skokie Swift?
Date of Publication: November 17, 2003
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- If two north suburbs have their way, two or more stations
could open along the Yellow Line, with or without an
already-proposed extension to the Old Orchard. A study
commissioned by the Village of Skokie recommends establishing a
stop at Oakton Street, while the City of Evanston wants a stop
created at Dodge Avenue, and a study about to get under way will
determine whether there's demand there and elsewhere.
Blue Line beauty
in eye of buffs
Date of Publication: October 27, 2003
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Chicago-L.org's 5th Annual Historic "L" Station Tour,
conducted on October 26, 2003 on a four-car charter train, focused
on the oft-overlooked subtleties of Blue Line station design.
-
- Editor's Note: This article, all about the Historic
"L" Station Tours, mentions and quotes this site and its
administrator!
Swift Line
Extension Draws Input
Date of Publication: July 3, 2003
Source: Skokie
Review
- About 50 Skokie residents attended a public hearing to learn
more about a proposal to expand the Skokie Swift line to Old
Orchard and to add a station at Oakton, a project that could cost
more than $300 million and take well over a decade to complete,
according to a consultant hired by the Village of Skokie.
Loop
Dreams
Date of Publication: June 2, 2003
Source: Crain's
Chicago Business
- When private developers built Chicago's first elevated rail
lines in the late 19th century, their strategy was simple: Run the
routes where the most people live. Their creation also put Chicago
in the league of the world's great metropolises, but the "L" is
more than a photogenic scene-setter: Although there were years
when steep ridership declines and serious deterioration of the
infrastructure might have given that impression, today, the CTA is
in rebound mode, with some of the most ambitious expansion plans
for the transit system since its first route was opened in
1892.
CTA Straightens
Out System
Date of Publication: May 20, 2003
Source: Medill
News Service
- In the interest of progress, the
CTA® is straightening out
one of the tightest knots in the system, the 90 degree Harrison
Curve. The conversion, which was activated over Memorial Day
weekend, allows trains to enter the loop at 35 mph instead of
slowing to 10 mph to safely make the turns. The project will
reduce noise, allow more trains to enter the Loop every hour and
shorten the commute for 58,000 South Side residents.
-
- Editor's Note: This site and its administrator are
mentioned and quoted in this article!
-
CTA riders should be
feeling less of a jolt
Date of Publication: May 16, 2003
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® plans to start
buying trains with AC technology, which is increasingly used at
transit systems. The conversion from DC will come incrementally as
rail cars are replaced and
CTA® officials said the
switch-over will have practical benefits for riders, including
smooth acceleration and braking. Officials also claim maintenance
and power costs will be lowered.
Mayors Back
Metra Rail Plan
Date of Publication: May 15, 2003
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- After six years of debating mass transit options, a consortium
of northwest suburban mayors endorsed Metra's proposed STAR line
Wednesday as the way to usher suburb-to-suburb commuting into the
21st Century. Northwest municipal leaders announced their
unanimous preference for STAR line over proposals from the
CTA® and Pace.
Still on
Board
Date of Publication: January 26, 2003
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- In late January 1963, a Chicago, North Shore and Milwaukee
Railroad train made the final run along the 90-mile line from
Chicago to Milwaukee. Now, on the 40th anniversary of that
abandonment, the line is remembered in a number of ways. In
mid-January, the nearly 80-year-old Skokie Terminal (formerly
known as the Niles Center) near the Yellow Line Dempster stop was
moved 120 feet to the east. Renovation work on the
4,000-square-foot structure also was slated to begin.
Neighbors Criticize
Fullerton "L" Plan
Date of Publication: January 24, 2003
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Neighbors and community groups vented frustration at a meeting
over a proposed redesign of one of the Chicago Transit Authority's
busiest rail stations, complaining their concerns about the
project have been ignored. The meeting, focusing on the redesign
of the Fullerton station in Lincoln Park, was the seventh forum
the CTA® has held this month
to inform communities about the coming rehab of 18 stations as
part of the Brown Line reconstruction.
Brown Line to Get
Open, Airy L Stations
Date of Publication: January 9, 2003
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- Canopies over L platforms will be wider, transparent in parts
and, after dark, illuminated dimly. The first-floor interior of
stations will be "wide open" and visible from the street to
improve safety. Elevated portions of the Fullerton and Belmont
stops will include glass-block floors that allow sunlight onto the
pavement below, while many other platforms will have wooden
floors. Those are among the highlights in the
CTA's® near-final designs
for the Brown Line, an aging but busy route that starting this
year will be overhauled as part of a $476 million project.
Smithsonian Raises
'L' to New Level
Date of Publication: January 9, 2003
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The Smithsonian is currently working on a new "permanent
transportation exhibition called "America On the Move", to open in
November at the National Museum of American History. The exhibit
will feature a section on 1950s transportation in Chicago,
including authentic and reproduction elements from the
CTA® elevated system.
Skokie Restores '20s
Rail Station
Date of Publication: November 27, 2002
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- To save a piece of its history, Skokie is restoring the
Dempster Station, a train building that captures both the
influence of architect Frank Lloyd Wright and the popular bungalow
style that swept Chicago in the 1920s. The building at Dempster
Street and Bronx Avenue should be open for retail occupancy by
spring or early summer.
Airport Shortcut Gets
a Boost
Date of Publication: November 24, 2002
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- One of the most ambitious mass-transit projects in decades,
providing efficient travel from the Northwest Side to the
Southwest Side, has moved up on the agenda, with Chicago officials
planning to acquire needed land. The proposal is called the
Mid-City Transitway and Chicago officials want to buy property --
mostly idle railroad land -- to preserve the corridor for a rail
or bus network.
Daley Goes Down
Crosstown Road
Date of Publication: November 4, 2002
Source: Crain's
Chicago Business
- City Hall is revisiting one of the legendary battles in recent
Chicago political history, commissioning a pair of outside studies
to help it decide how to improve transportation in the so-called
Crosstown Corridor adjacent to Cicero Avenue. Under consideration
by planners is everything from an
"L"TM line linking O'Hare and
Midway airports to a truck-and-bus-only highway.
Howard El Plans
Unveiled by CTA
Date of Publication: October 18, 2002
Source: Daily
Northwestern
- Plans to overhaul the Howard Street El station are one-third
complete, according to CTA®.
The use of clear elevators and large windows in the design of the
new three-story main station should increase visibility and lessen
the potential for crime, but the residents at the meeting said
those measures might not be enough.
Station Entrance
Closes, Project Work Gears Up
Date of Publication: October 17, 2002
Source: Skokie
Review
- Skokie closed the Dempster Street entrance to the Skokie Swift
station's south parking lot Wednesday, as work on the station
complex's Operation Green Light Project -- and eastward relocation
of the historic train station there -- gears up.
Surprise CTA
Detour
Date of Publication: October 4, 2002
Source: Daily
Herald
- A new CTA® proposal to
extend the Blue Line train to Schaumburg would send trains through
O'Hare International Airport and DuPage County, marking a surprise
deviation from previously discussed routes. The new proposal is
one of two CTA® options,
both of which would tunnel under O'Hare to link with a proposed
western airport terminal.
Landmarks Group
Fears Brown Line Remodeling
Date of Publication: September 13, 2002
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The Chicago Transit Authority's renovation of the
Ravenswood/Brown Line may leave few of the quirky historical
details that add to the character of the elevated line's
platforms, a leading Illinois landmarks advocacy group warns in a
report to be released Friday. But the
CTA® counters that it is
working with state and federal preservation agencies on plans for
the rehab.
CTA to Seek Federal
Funds to Build 'Super Loop' Line
Date of Publication: September 12, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- Illustrating how serious the
CTA® is about building a
"super Loop" rail line that wasn't even conceived until last year,
the agency's president said Wednesday that coveted federal "New
Start" dollars will be pursued for the Circle Line project.
CTA plans to fix
its own 'strangler'
Date of Publication: August 5, 2002
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- There is a mass transit equivalent of the Hillside Strangler
traffic bottleneck, and CTA®
riders on the Red, Brown and Purple/Evanston Express rail lines
travel through it in slow-motion each day. Like the Strangler,
this rail choke-point is going to get a remake. The tie-ups occur
at Clark Junction. It is the busiest
CTA® rail crossing on a
24-hour basis, serving 876 trains each weekday.
Village OKs
Swift Expansion Study
Date of Publication: July 18, 2002
Source: Skokie
Review
- One key proposal submitted to the CATS 2030 Share the Path
plan is extension of the Chicago Transit Authority's Skokie Swift
el line, but Skokie and CTA®
officials hope trains will be rolling north of Dempster Street
long before 2030.
Brown Line Work
Won't Start Until '03, CTA Says
Date of Publication: July 17, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- Major renovations that were supposed to begin this year on the
bustling but aging Brown Line L probably won't start until 2003,
the CTA® is acknowledging.
And the preservation battle at the root of the delay has pushed
the transit agency nervously close to a deadline for federal
funding.
The Voice That Moves
Millions
Date of Publication: April 24, 2002
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- You hear his voice every time you step on a
CTA® train. You just don't
know him by name. So who is this anonymous announcer, this
automated mensch of mass transit? Learn all about "CTA
Guy"...
City's Big Idea:
2nd Transit Loop
Date of Publication: April 22, 2002
Source: Crain's
Chicago Business
- City Hall is mapping plans for a "massive upgrade" of the
downtown public transportation system, one that would add a new
subway line, underground busways and other improvements to serve
hundreds of thousands of new jobs expected to be added in the Loop
in the next two decades. The transit proposal calls for the city
to construct a new loop formed by building a mile-long subway
under Clinton Street, connecting to the existing Blue Line subway
at two points.
CTA Line Goes from
Rickety to Robust in 45 Hours
Date of Publication: April 22, 2002
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- An Overview Piece About the Douglas Rehab Project: Each
weekend, work crews race the clock, tearing down the rusted,
century-old structure holding up the elevated tracks on the
branch, then rebuilding the line a couple of feet at a time to get
the tracks reopened before the Monday rush.
Daley likes L
proposal, would help find funds
Date of Publication: March 12, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- Mayor Daley was vague on how a new circular rail line proposed
by the CTA® would be
financed but said he's willing to put his lobbying muscle behind
the search for funds. Local transit, planning and government
officials said they were intrigued by the idea of a new
"L"TM line but expressed concern
about, among other things, where the money would come from.
CTA floats Circle
Line plan
Date of Publication: March 11, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® is planning
another "Loop," a billion-dollar-plus circular rail line that
would connect to existing "L"TM
and Metra routes while winding through Chicago's
downtown, and neighborhoods as far away as several miles. The
"Circle Line" would include 6.6 miles of new subway and elevated
track, and another 6 or so miles of existing track. The route
would cut through downtown and go as far south as Bridgeport, as
far north as Old Town and as far west as the United Center. It
would link with every L line except the Skokie Swift and, if Metra
agreed to the CTA's®
concept, all Metra lines.
Village OKs
Swift Expansion Study
Date of Publication: February 21, 2002
Source: Skokie
Review
- Skokie moved ahead on its quest to extend the Skokie Swift
line, hiring a consultant to study the idea. The feasibility
study's results could be used by village officials to help
convince state and federal authorities to invest in more Swift
track and stations. Trustees unanimously agreed to award
Chicago-based consultant Parsons Brinkerhoff/DLK up to $160,000 to
complete a study of the Chicago Transit Authority line. It's
expected to take a year to complete.
'L' Station Gets
a Look Perfect for Chinatown
Date of Publication: January 31, 2002
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- A ceremony welcomed the Chicago Chinatown Chamber of Commerce
as the 27th participant in the
CTA's® Adopt-A-Station
program, which lets groups or individuals rehab one of the
CTA's® 144
"L"TM stations to reflect the
surrounding neighborhood's history and diversity.
Green Line's Cermak Stop
May be Rebuilt
Date of Publication: January 29, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The Green Line's Cermak
"L"TM station was torn down in
1978, a year after being shuttered so the cash-strapped
CTA® could save money. With
the financial picture much rosier, and new houses booming in
Chinatown and the South Loop, the agency may re-establish the
stop.
-
Swift Extension
Eyed; Lines Coming Down
Date of Publication: January 24, 2002
Source: Skokie
Review
- Skokie plans to hire next month a consultant to study
feasibility of extending the Skokie Swift transit line to Old
Orchard Center and adding an Oakton Street station. Plans by the
CTA® to rid the Swift of its
overhead power lines should ultimately make it easier to extend
the line.
Neighbors Fear
CTA Project
Date of Publication: January 17, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- Homes, restaurants, taverns and at least one church property
-- nearly 100 private parcels of land -- stand in the way of the
CTA's® $540 million
renovation of the Brown Line. The
CTA® says most Brown Line
riders will welcome the project because it will bring relief to
crowded trains and platforms, but few people whose land is being
eyed by the agency are looking forward to the work ahead.
Red Line to Get
Major Rehab
Date of Publication: January 15, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The Red Line's Dan Ryan branch will undergo a $238 million
renovation next year to refurbish its notoriously dingy stations
and improve the flow of electricity through the third rail, which
should speed trains.
Skokie Swift
High-Wire Act Ending
Date of Publication: January 15, 2002
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The overhead wires on the Skokie Swift -- a throwback to the
trolley and streetcar era -- will be taken down this summer and
replaced with a third rail that powers the
CTA's® other train
lines.
RTA
transit card plan will have to wait
Date of Publication: October 30, 2001
Source: Chicago
Tribune
Universal
fare card unpopular
Date of Publication: October 30, 2001
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The head of the Regional Transportation Authority on Monday
said the area's three transit systems cannot do much to improve
coordination between bus and train operations or provide riders
with a universal fare system because the recent terrorist attacks
have caused a decline in sales-tax collections while forcing the
agencies to spend more money on security.
Reconstruction
Begins on CTA Blue Line Branch
Date of Publication: September 10, 2001
Source: Chicago
Tribune
Rehab of Douglas
L to Start, at Long Last
Date of Publication: September 10, 2001
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The four-year, $482 million reconstruction of the 100-year-old
elevated line kicked off with
CTA® Chairman Valerie B.
Jarrett and President Frank Kruesi led a ceremonial groundbreaking
at the line's Pulaski
station.
"L" rehab ready to
roll
Date of Publication: July 10, 2001
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- On July 11, 2001, the
CTA® board is expected to
award a contract to the joint venture of Kiewit Construction Co.
of Omaha and Delgado Erectors Inc. of south suburban Lansing as
the Douglas project's principal contractor. Hoping to avoid the
same mistakes it made during the Green Line rail renovation almost
a decade ago, the Chicago Transit Authority on Wednesday plans to
put the final pieces in place to begin the rehabilitation of the
105-year-old Douglas branch of the Blue Line.
CTA gives its
newest 'L' stop bit of past
Date of Publication: June 28, 2001
Source: Chicago
Tribune
New L station
blossoms on Green Line
Date of Publication: June 28, 2001
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- On Saturday, June 28, 2001, the
CTA® opened a new elevated
station using a relocated, historic building. The Conservatory-Central
Park Drive stop on the Green Line is part of a wider attempt
by the City of Chicago to help spur redevelopment of the
surrounding East and West Garfield Park, two neighborhoods that
have suffered for decades from lack of investment, high crime and
a loss of population.
Chicago is Spelled
With an ''L''
Date of Publication: April 18, 2001
Source: Baltimore
Sun
- Just one station, Garfield,
remains from the SSRT's extension to the 1893 World's Fair. To
protect this final link to the
"L"'sTM beginnings and the
oldest station on the system, the city is considering declaring
the station a historic landmark, protecting it from potential
demolition.
-
- Editor's Note: This site and its administrator are
mentioned and quoted in this article!
Vandals, Thieves Stop Museum
in Its Tracks
Date of Publication: April 18, 2001
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- At the Illinois Railway
Museum, a recent rash of vandalism of
former-CTA®
"L"TM cars and thefts of
valuable artifacts has brought some museum unwanted attention and
unnecessary hardship as the museum's volunteers try to provide a
quality museum environment.
Red Line delayed most
often, Yellow least
Date of Publication: January 15, 2001
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- A Sun-Times study and
analysis found that, among other facts, the
CTA's® busiest rail route,
the Red Line, also is its most delay-prone, while the Skokie Swift
adheres best to posted schedules. Last year, 97% of all
"L"TM trains arrived within
three minutes of schedule,
CTA® figures show.
Landmark
Status Likely for "L" Stop on South Side
Date of Publication: December 13, 2000
Source: Chicago
Tribune
Oldest L Stop
Vies for Landmark
Date of Publication: December 13, 2000
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The South Side station at Garfield
Boulevard on the Green Line likely will receive preliminary
landmark status from a city advisory commission. The station and
its overpass were part of Chicago's original "Alley 'L'", the
beginnings of which were built in 1892. It is one of the
oldest--perhaps the oldest--intact public transit stations in the
country, according to a report by the city's Commission on
Landmarks.
Blue Line Plans Inch
Forward
Date of Publication: September 11, 2000
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® plans to submit
formal designs for station and track improvements on the Douglas
branch to the Federal Transit Administration as part of the
application process for funding. The federal government has
virtually assured the CTA®
that it will get $320 million under the New Start program to
rebuild the dilapidated, century-old West Side branch. But before
the CTA® can get the cash,
it must fulfill certain requirements of what is called a "full
funding grant agreement." Submitting designs is one of the final
steps.
Swift End Could be Near
for Historic Skokie Depot
Date of Publication: July 19, 2000
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The original Skokie "L"TM
station will be demolished unless someone agrees to move the
75-year-old building, championed by preservationists as an
architectural gem and part of Skokie's fabric, after Skokie's
Village Board voted Monday night to tear down the old
station.
Brown Line Will Extend
Loop Weekend Service
Date of Publication: May 4, 2000
Source: Chicago
Tribune
Brown Line will increase
weekend service to Loop
Date of Publication: May 4, 2000
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- In one of several moves that transit officials say will pay
for itself because of strong gains in ridership, the
CTA® board on Wednesday
voted to restore weekend service on the Brown Line to the Loop,
effective July 16. In addition, 14 rail stations that now are open
only part time will be open to passengers 24 hours a day, several
express bus routes will have their hours extended, and bikes are
welcome back on the "L"TM.
Blue Line rehab, Metra
extension get federal push
Date of Publication: March 18, 2000
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Federal officials on Friday "highly recommended" full-funding
grants in next year's budget for the Chicago Transit Authority's
planned rebuilding of the Blue Line's Douglas branch and for an
11-mile extension of Metra's SouthWest Service to Will
County.
CTA Board votes to
pay $4 million more for security
Date of Publication: February 9, 2000
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The cost of private security guards on the city's public
transit system has ballooned by more than $4 million, putting
pressure Monday on CTA®
officials to walk the line between controlling expenses and
ensuring that security hasn't suffered despite a series of violent
crimes this year.
-
- News of the higher costs came at a meeting Monday in which the
CTA® also announced that it
will eliminate conductors from subway trains on March 27 to save
$2 million a year.
Muffled CTA
message nears end of the line
Date of Publication: February 9, 2000
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- Those muffled, often-incoherent announcements that purportedly
inform CTA® riders of
approaching stops are gradually being replaced by automated
messages.
Federal Funds Prompt
CTA To Speed Up
Date of Publication: February 8, 2000
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- CTA® officials promised
to put the transit agency's two high-priority rail projects - the
Douglas Line Renovation and the Ravenswood Expansion Project - on
a fast-track construction schedule after the release Monday of the
Clinton administration's spending blueprint for 2001.
CTA expands security
after attacks
Date of Publication: February 8, 2000
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® will install
security cameras on select train platforms and stairwells, and
private security guards who now protect fare card machines will
start patrolling L stations in response to recent attacks on
riders, officials said Monday.
Douglas Blue Line to
get major overhaul
Date of Publication: February 4, 2000
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The decrepit Douglas Branch of the Blue Line would receive a
major overhaul under a $315 million deal to be announced in
Chicago today.
CTA to
take the preventive route
Date of Publication: October 15, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
A Cool Way to
Travel
Date of Publication: October 15, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® has presented a
2000 budget that maps out ways to remedy the system's
state-of-repair with the help of nearly $400 million in additional
state and federal funding. In addition to basic improvements,
ranging from new rail cars to air conditioning on all buses to
keeping stations cleaner, a key element of the
CTA's® rebuilding effort
focuses on repairing equipment before it breaks down and strands
passengers.
CTA's new line cut from
different cloth
Date of Publication: October 8, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
CTA's new line a real
put-on
Date of Publication: October 8, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® unveiled a
variety of CTA-themed items as part of its new Gift Express retail
program. High-quality cufflinks, key chains, and tie tacs are all
available for transit admirers. Other featured items include
system map ties and t-shirts, a selection of Transit Card holders,
and CTA-patterned office supplies.
Free Rail Transfers To
Be Transferred to CTA Transit Cards
Date of Publication: October 4, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The machines that provide free rail transfers to riders at the
busy State/Lake elevated
station and Lake-Randolph subway station downtown will soon go the
way of the CTA® fare token.
Passengers using a transit card will still get a free transfer by
simply inserting their card in the machine. Those riders who will
lose out will be the folks who continue paying their fares with
cash.
City Gets Short End of
Transit Aid Stick
Date of Publication: October 1, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
Funding plan ignores
city, aids Metra
Date of Publication: October 4, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The transportation spending package approved September 30th by
House and Senate negotiators offered the Chicago Transit Authority
$7 million for the Douglas and Ravenswood rail projects,
disappointing members of the state's congressional delegation who
said the amount fell far short of what is needed.
CTA won't raise fares in
2000
Date of Publication: September 28, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® will hold the
line on fares next year in hopes of building on two straight years
of ridership gains that reversed a 15-year customer exodus, Board
Chairman Valerie Jarrett said.
Tour Gives Riders "L" of a
Good Time
Date of Publication: September 22, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- An article about an inquiring group that set out for seven
hours aboard the "L," an outing set up by Concordia University, in
River Forest, as part of an adult education program for people who
wanted to heighten their sense of community by exploring it.
Get ready for winter,
panel warns CTA
Date of Publication: August 31, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- According to a report by the Washington-based trade group
American Public Transit Association, the
CTA® should streamline its
winter emergency plan and speed up a rehab project on half of its
2600-series rail cars to
avoid a repeat of the sort of mechanical and communication
breakdowns that crippled the
CTA® during January's
blizzard.
CTA's ridership
surges
Date of Publication: June 17, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- CTA® ridership is up 10
million in less than two years as college students and other
mass-transit bargain shoppers fuel a growth rate that hasn't been
seen in years, officials said Wednesday.
-
- And the pace of improvement is accelerating.
Senators Ride On Not So
Fine Douglas Line
Date of Publication: June 8, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- U.S. Sen. Peter Fitzgerald (R-Ill.) and U.S. Sen. Slade Gorton
(R-Wash.), who is a member of the Senate Transportation
Appropriations Subcommittee, got a firsthand look Monday morning
at the deteriorating Douglas branch of the Blue Line and the
efforts being made to keep it accessible.
Ryan plan is only way to
avoid cuts, CTA chief warns
Date of Publication: May 12, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- More and deeper service cuts for city and suburban
CTA® riders are "impossible
to avoid" if state legislators fail to pass Gov. Ryan's
transportation funding package, president Frank Kruesi warned
Tuesday.
CTA Allows Bicyclists to
Ride "L" During Test
Date of Publication: May 10, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The CTA® will decide in
the next few weeks whether to operate a summer pilot project
allowing riders to bring bicycles onto city train lines on
weekends after bicyclists rode the rails for the first time as 12
volunteers from the Chicagoland Bicycle Federation participated in
a test with the CTA® to look
for potential problems.
Blue Line would remain
open
Date of Publication: May 6, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The Douglas Blue Line will be rebuilt--and will be kept open
during construction to avoid ridership losses--thanks to Gov.
Ryan's massive public works project.
City, suburbs seek $7
billion for transit
Date of Publication: April 30, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- Worried that the state will again fail to provide adequate
transportation funding, city and suburban officials Thursday stood
near a crumbling Metra railroad bridge in Morton Grove to
dramatize their demand for at least $7 billion in state money for
roads and mass transit.
CTA shows legislators
why "L" needs repairs
Date of Publication: April 20, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- In a serious show of support for rehabbing the
"L"TM, Kruesi, Jarrett and other
CTA® officials led a
delegation of state lawmakers on a tour of the dilapidated transit
system to lobby for state appropriations.
End of the line for
Douglas "L"?
Date of Publication: April 7, 1999
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® has released a
report stating that the Douglas Line can not be rehabbed like the
Green Line but rather must be rebuilt from the ground up or
abandoned and demolished within the next five years. Federal and
local money is lined up, but the state is wavering and if
appropriations don't come in the Spring session, it'll lose its
chance...
Hispanic Officials
Press State to Help Save Douglas "L"
Date of Publication: March 31, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- A group of local Latino politicians called on state
legislators to allocate state funds needed to match federal funds
for repairs to the Douglas branch of the Blue Line in an attempt
to keep this vital transportation link open.
Communities wage battle
to keep Douglas "L" open
Date of Publication: March 23, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Citizens groups in Pilsen, Little Village and Lawndale -
neighborhoods along the Douglas branch of the Blue Line - are
challenging the CTA's®
statement that it will have to close the Douglas Line if state
funds are not forthcoming to repair it, charging racial
discrimination under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.
Boost for Orange Line
Riders
Date of Publication: February 18, 1999
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The CTA® said that it
will add about 600 parking spaces near two rail stations, Cicero
and Kedzie, on the Orange/Midway Airport Line--and run longer
trains--to make it easier for Southwest Side and nearby suburban
motorists to ride the "L"TM
during the reconstruction of the Stevenson Expressway.
-
Editor's Note: The
CTA® recently said
they will not be adding the spaces at Cicero due to
difficulty obtaining sufficient space.
Track
connects L's past
Date of Publication: November 27, 1998
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- A nice piece about the history and current status of the
Paulina Connector, a stretch of old
"L"TM track, formally part of
the Logan Square Line, that now serves as the only connection
between the Blue Line and the rest of the system, used for
non-revenue train movements.
-
Thanks to John F. Kuczaj for contributing this
article.
Instead of Cutting
Back, CTA Adds to Its Service
Date of Publication: November 13, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- After more than a year of service cuts that affected thousands
of riders, the CTA® has
announced Brown Line trains soon will run until midnight and
service will be improved on about a dozen bus routes.
Remember to Check
Expiration Dates on CTA Transit Cards--Really
Column: Getting Around
Date of Publication: October 12, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- This edition of the regular Chicago Tribune column
"Getting Around" covers the problems cropping up with the
expiration dates on many Transit Cards, as well as the beginning
of the deep cleaning project on the Dearborn Street Subway.
Not just president, he's
also a client
Column: Getting Around
Date of Publication: September 21, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- A wonderful fluff piece about how President Frank Kruesi is a
man of the people. He rides the
"L"TM to work every day, he
picks up trash at "L"TM
stations, he chases unauthorized vendors off buses... and still
has time to run the
CTA®!
CTA Plans Super "L"
Station for Loop
Date of Publication: September 11, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- CTA® plans to demolish
the historic stations at State/Lake, Randolph/Wabash and
Madison/Wabash and construct a "super station" at Randolph,
requiring reconstruction of the Loop structure from Lake to
Washington.
CTA Approves Contract
for Design of Cermak Branch Blue Line Renovation
Date of Publication: August 25, 1998
Source: Chicago
Transit Authority web site
- On August 5th, the CTA®
approved a contract to rebuild part of the Cermak (aka Douglas)
Line using Federal TEA-21 funds. Besides redoing the tracks, new
stations are scheduled to be built at Kildare and 54/Cermak.
CTA prepares to reopen
7 entrances at rail stops
Date of Publication: August 7, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The CTA® will reopen
seven auxiliary entrances and exits to various
"L"TM stations closed several
decades ago due to high costs and crime. Some will reopen by
September, 1998, others will follow.
CTA to build West
Side 'L' station
Date of Publication: June 3, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
W. Siders protest
plan to rebuild CTA station
Date of Publication: June 3, 1998
Source: Chicago
Sun-Times
- The CTA® has unveiled a
plan to dismantle the historic 1893 Homan Avenue elevated station
on the Lake Street Line and reassemble its outer shell two blocks
west at Central Park Avenue, where there is no bus service, to
serve the Garfield Park Conservatory. The first article is from
the Chicago Tribune, the second from the Chicago Sun-Times.
Late deal swings funds
for CTA line, Stevenson
Date of Publication: May 23, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Despite a deep cut in federal transit assistance, several
critical Chicago-area projects received major federal funding from
a $204 billion transportation package Congress passed May 22,
including the projected $420 million cost of rehabilitating the
Douglas branch of the Chicago Transit Authority's Blue Line. Other
projects include lengthening of Ravenswood platforms and
reconstruction of the Stevenson Expressway.
RTA Backs Corridor
Study Plan
Date of Publication: May 6, 1998
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The RTA has decided to help finance and conduct a feasibility
study for extending the Blue Line north from O'Hare International
Airport to Woodfield Shopping Center.
The Red Line Gets a
Shine
Date of Publication: Spring, 1998
Source: Chicago
Transit Authority web site
- The CTA® has invested in
new power cleaning equipment and has begun a comprehensive
scrubbing of the entire "L"TM
system, beginning with the Red Line State Street subway.
CTA
Board Backs Demolition of Green Line Woodlawn Leg
Date of Publication: June 6, 1996
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- After debating and procrastinating since 1995, the
CTA® quietly and covertly
reached its decision September 27, 1997 on the fate of the
Woodlawn section of the Green Line, which has been closed since
1994 when the Green Line was rehabilitated. The line has been
razed from Cottage Grove to Dorchester, with mixed reactions.
Razing 'L' Would Hurt
Woodlawn
Date of Publication: May 8, 1996
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- A great letter that argues not only is
"L"TM not the reason for
Woodlawn's blight, but it could be an important tool for
revitalization efforts. Unfortunately, the
CTA® didn't take this one to
heart..
CTA Plans Skip-Stop
Phaseout
Date of Publication: January 10, 1995
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- In 1995, the CTA®
abandoned the last remnants of the A/B skip stop express train
stopping pattern that had first taken effect back in 1948.
2 New Stops Planned
for Green Line
Date of Publication: May 7, 1994
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- During the Green Line rehabilitation, amid the controversy of
station closings, CTA®
President Belcaster announced a plan to rebuild two stations:
Laramie on the West Side Lake Line and Harvard on the South Side
Englewood Branch. Unfortunately, the latter never got built.
Some in Woodlawn Favor
Demolishing a Part of Jackson Park 'L'
Date of Publication: April 27, 1994
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The first rumblings of what would later become a big
controversy, when certain South Side community leaders suggest
Woodlawn and East 63rd Street would be better off without the
Jackson Park "L"TM
structure.
CTA to close some
stations on Green Line
Date of Publication: December 24, 1993
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Just before closing the Green Line, the
CTA® announced that not all
of the stations would reopen when the line came back into service.
Why? Part financial, and part, according the President Belcaster,
because "some of these stations are within two blocks of each
other. That's not a rapid transit system..." Um, are you
sure?
Midway 'L' finally ready
to roll
Date of Publication: October 31, 1993
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Over fifty years after first being suggested and 13 years
after the project began, the Midway (Orange) Line begins
operation.
A colorful
inspiration at the CTA
Date of Publication: September 25, 1992
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- To make the system more user-friendly, the
CTA® gave all of its line
color designations.
CTA to
Close Dilapidated Train Station
Date of Publication: October 16, 1987
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The CTA® wanted to close
the Indiana Avenue station after finding it to be structurally
deficient in a routine maintenance check.
CTA Throws 40th
Birthday Bash, but Not Everyone is Celebrating
Column: About the Town
Date of Publication: October 6, 1987
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The CTA® threw a
week-long 40th birthday bash in Daley Plaza, with a rally, fashion
show of uniforms and displays of vintage vehicles. But not
everyone was signing the
CTA's® praises...
Quincy-Wells Stop to
Offer a Return Trip to the Past
Date of Publication: November 28, 1985
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The CTA® restored
Quincy/Wells back to its original 1987 appearance--scraping off
layers of old paint and putting on a new coat in the same shade of
brown and installing light fixtures that imitate the original
hardware, fancy stamped sheet metal and new versions of original
oak doors and moldings--under a program costing more than $30
million.
3 Jackson 'L' stations
open again
Date of Publication: December 13, 1982
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- The Jackson Park branch reopens after nine months, but a
little shorter than before: instead of repairing the Dorchester
Bridge, the CTA® opted to
simply close the line east of University. But, 63rd Street got a
$72 million rehabilitation project as a consolation prize.
Bridge Faults Shut Part
of S. Side 'L'
Date of Publication: March 5, 1982
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- Part of the Jackson Park rapid transit line, from the Stony
Island terminal to 61st, was ordered closed by the Chicago Transit
Authority because of a suspected structural defect in the
Dorchester Bridge.
12
Dead in 'L' Crash
Date of Publication: February 5, 1977
Source: Chicago
Tribune
- On February 4, 1977 the worst accident in
"L"TM history occurred at the
sharp curve on the Loop elevated at Wabash Avenue and Lake Street
when eleven people died (the headline's number was later revised)
and over 180 were injured.
CTA
Sign Language
Date of Publication: 1st Quarter, 1977
Source: CTA Quarterly
- In 1977, the CTA®
embarked upon a project to replace all of the signage used on the
elevated system as part of a federally-funded program. This
article is reprinted from the CTA Quarterly magazine's 1st
quarter, 1977 issue.
City's Traction Lines
Merged for New Epoch
Date of Publication: October 1, 1947
Source: Chicago
Daily Tribune
- October 1, 1947, Chicagoans awoke to the Chicago Transit
Authority, a new semiautonomous agency chartered to take over the
privately-owned Chicago Surface Lines and Chicago Rapid
Transit.