By Julia Conley, Common Dreams.ย Originally published onย Common Dreamsย underย CCย BY–SAย 3.0ย US.
The city of Phoenix dealt a decisive blow to a Koch Brothers-backed measure on Tuesday when voters rejected a proposition that would have banned any expansion of the city’s light railย system.
Proposition 105, which was partially drafted by the head of a Koch-funded non-profit, would end expansion of the public transit system that was built in 2008 and prohibit any future building-out of the system, which servesย 50,000 residentsย each day in one of the United States’sย fastest-growingย andย least sustainableย cities.ย ย ย
The proposition wasย rejected by 62 percentย of voters. The defeat will allow the city to expand the light rail to lower-income neighborhoods populated by many black and Latinx Phoenix residents. Proponents say the growth of public transportation will help cut down on the city’s high levels of air pollution and carbon emissions while making the city center more accessible to marginalizedย communities.
Phoenix just said yes to the future. For those following the Koch-backed ballot measure to kill light rail in the city, Prop 105 is going down in flames https://t.co/0hWtHGn9UM pic.twitter.com/gNVgklEV4g
โ Alissa Walker (@awalkerinLA) August 28, 2019
Local and national observers applauded the effort to defeat the measure after the Arizona Free Enterprise Club, a non-profit which isย backedย by Americans for Prosperity and other Koch-funded organizations, became involved in supporting Proposition 105, aiming to divert money to roadย projects.
Scot Mussi, president of the group,ย donatedย $40,000 to the movement to pass the ban and spearheaded efforts to get the question on the ballot. Heย toldย local reporters in July that the project would involve โrampant cost overrunsโ funded by taxpayers andย draftedย the language in the bill which went further than simply banning the recently-proposed expansion to lower-income neighborhoods โ prohibiting light rail growthย entirely.ย ย
Fantastic news, tinged with a bit of sadness that David Koch didnโt live to see Phoenix voters reject his poisonous vision: https://t.co/oFjkhv7pdE
โ Hayley Richardson (@bagatelleno12) August 28, 2019
Groups affiliated with David and Charles Koch, who made billions of dollars funding fossil fuel projects and togetherย contributedย $127 million to groups that deny the climate crisis up untilย David’s deathย on August 23, have also shut down efforts to build public transportation in Nashville; Little Rock, Arkansas; and other cities across the country in recent years. The anti-public transportation moves are part of an effort on the part of the Koch family to keep the country reliant on the fossil fuel industry while climate action advocates push for a shift to sustainable infrastructure and energyย sources.
The defeat of Proposition 105 served as a blow to the powerful, deep-pocketed network the Kochs have established as the family invests in climate-warming fossil fuels, and those who worked to stop the measure’s passage called on residents to remain wary of efforts to threaten sustainable, forward-looking infrastructureย projects.
Phoenicians-we did it. From the outset, it was clear that Props 105 and 106 were about more than a difference in opinionโit was more fundamental than that. This election was about what we want our city toย be.
โ Mayor Kate Gallego (@MayorGallego) August 28, 2019
โThis is not the first time that outside influences have sought to mislead Phoenix votersโand I doubt it will be the last,โย tweetedย Mayor Kate Gallego Tuesday night. โWe are a diverse city made up of residents willing to fight for our future and who refuse to let our trajectory be dictated by anyone other thanย Phoenicians.โ
โWe will have to step up to protect PHX again in the future but we should be encouraged that, together, we continue to move forward,โ sheย added.
Main image:ย Phoenix Metro Light Rail atย Central Avenue. Credit: Nick Bastian,ย CC BY–NDย 2.0
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