Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

Bill to halt new light rail projects stalls on House Floor

Rep. Kristin Robbins presents HF14 on the House Floor Feb. 24. The bill would establish a temporary moratorium on certain light rail transit expenditures. (Photo by Michele Jokinen)
Rep. Kristin Robbins presents HF14 on the House Floor Feb. 24. The bill would establish a temporary moratorium on certain light rail transit expenditures. (Photo by Michele Jokinen)

As costs have risen for light rail projects in the Twin Cities metropolitan area, so have concerns among some legislators about whether the benefits are worth the outlays.

One of them is Rep. Kristin Robbins (R-Maple Grove).

She’s the sponsor of HF14, which would temporarily prohibit Metropolitan Council spending on any other light rail transit projects until the Southwest LRT Green Line extension project is completed.

The primary project affected would be the METRO Blue Line extension, which is proposed to operate on 13.4 miles of light rail track between downtown Minneapolis and Brooklyn Park. That project is still in the design phase, with construction currently slated to begin in 2027.

A Green Line train in St. Paul. (House Photography file photo)

HF14 was debated on the House floor Monday and failed by a 67-66 vote. But the House then approved a motion to reconsider and voted to table the bill.

[MORE: Find details about the bill here]

“The lesson from Southwest Light Rail is that it’s way over budget — a 232% increase from when it was originally proposed — and almost a decade over the time expected for operations,” Robbins said. “For the Blue Line, we have the chance not to make those same mistakes.”

Rep. Jon Koznick (R-Lakeville) successfully proposed an amendment that — as further amended and amended again — would require the Metropolitan Council to perform an analysis that would evaluate bus rapid transit as an alternative. Koznick argued that two bus rapid transit lines currently serve much of the same area through which the proposed Blue Line extension would travel.

“Minnesota’s light rail lines have become a bottomless money pit,” Koznick said. “We need to end these boondoggles.”

Rep. Zack Stephenson (DFL-Coon Rapids) unsuccessfully proposed an amendment to the amendment that would require the Metropolitan Council analysis to include the potential financial impacts of federal tariffs and retaliatory tariffs.

Rep. Jim Nash (R-Waconia) said the Blue Line extension should be stopped.

“It’s not going to be on time, it’s not going to be on budget, it’s not going to be done efficiently, and it’s not going to do the thing that you had hoped it would do,” he said.

But Rep. Mike Freiberg (DFL-Golden Valley) spoke of the overwhelming support for the project from the Hennepin County Board and the city councils of the municipalities through which it would travel.   

“All this bill does is burn millions of dollars in order to make a point about fiscal responsibility,” he said.


Related Articles


Priority Dailies

Full House convenes for first time in 2025, elects Demuth speaker
Rep. Jeff Backer, left and Rep. Matt Norris greet each other on the House floor Feb. 6. House DFLers returned to the House Chamber for the first time during the 2025 session after leaders struck a power-sharing agreement. (Photo by Michele Jokinen) DFL, Republicans convene with a quorum for the first time in 2025 session after agreeing to a power-sharing deal.
Walz proposes slimmed-down 2026-27 state budget, sales tax changes
Gov. Tim Walz speaks last month during a news conference following the release of the November Budget and Economic Forecast. The governor on Thursday proposed a slimmed-down $66 billion state budget for the 2026-27 biennium. (Photo by Michele Jokinen) This is an odd-numbered year, and so the Legislature is constitutionally required to craft a budget to fund the state government for the next two fiscal years. Gov. Tim Walz...

Minnesota House on Twitter