DART (Dallas Area Rapid Transit) has been expanding — slowly — but the politics around it are complicated.
Current state of DART:
- 93 miles of light rail (largest in the US by mileage). Source: dart.org
- 4 rail lines: Red, Blue, Green, Orange
- Bus network across service area
- Silver Line (regional rail) under construction
- Coverage: Dallas, Plano, Richardson, Garland, Irving, and a few others
The debate:
Pro-expansion argument:
- DFW traffic is unsustainable. 7.5 million people, mostly in cars. Source: NCTCOG population data.
- DART reduces car dependency for those who use it
- Environmental benefits
- Every major city needs robust transit for long-term growth
- The Silver Line will finally connect to DFW Airport properly
Anti-expansion argument:
- Multiple cities have LEFT DART (Arlington, Mesquite, others) because they didn't see ROI
- The 1-cent sales tax DART collects is significant
- Ridership hasn't matched projections at some stations
- Bus routes may be more cost-effective than rail in a sprawl city
- Critics argue DART serves downtown Dallas at the expense of suburban riders
Cities NOT in DART:
- Fort Worth (has Trinity Metro, separate system)
- Arlington (opted out years ago)
- Frisco (opted out)
- McKinney (not a member)
The Frisco/McKinney gap:
- The fastest-growing areas in DFW have no DART service. This creates a transit dead zone in Collin County.
Sources:
- DART.org — system map and ridership data
- NCTCOG — regional transportation planning
- Dallas Morning News transit coverage
Should DFW invest more in DART or focus on roads? Discuss.