After presenting two long-range plans earlier this year as part of the MetroNext planning process, the Houston area's Metropolitan Transit Authority unveiled its latest long-range draft plan this month following several public meetings.

The latest plan, Plan A Plus, is the most ambitious yet with an estimated price tag of roughly $7.5 billion, including expected state and federal funding. The 20-year vision includes 20 miles of light rail extensions, including to Hobby Airport, 75 miles of new bus rapid transit along five lines, an expanded regional express network, targeted service enhancements and systemwide improvements. And it promises big impacts, including roughly doubling ridership and expanding access, including increasing the share of low-income households within a half-mile of frequent transit by 281 percent.

"It drastically changes access for a whole bunch of folks," Clint Harbert, vice president of system and capital planning, told the board at the December 11 workshop.

The agency will seek further public input and also anticipates putting forward a $3 billion bond during the November 2019 election. Though the election would grant the agency the authority to borrow that amount, the board anticipates borrowing incrementally, as it has done in the past.

"We're hoping to be able to do a plan this robust because Houston really needs it," said Carrin Patman, Metro board chairwoman at the December workshop.

The plan will likely continue to evolve following further public meetings and input.

"It's still a draft plan, still subject to change," said Patman. "The various corridors could change, the modes could change but this is what we have based on really very extensive input from the community."

The latest plan represents the agency's most optimistic vision thus far, expanding and improving on many of the elements present in the agency's Plan A. "It takes them further out and it does more with those dollars," said Harbert.