Red Line (Baltimore)

Red Line
Overview
Type Light rail
System Maryland Transit Administration
Status Canceled
Locale Baltimore, Maryland
Termini Center for Medicare/Medicaid Services, Woodlawn, Baltimore County (West)
Johns Hopkins Bayview Campus, Baltimore City (East)
Stations 19 (planned)
Daily ridership 54,000 (2030 projection)
Operation
Planned opening Construction slated to begin late 2015–early 2016
Opened 2022 (2022) (planned)
Operator(s) Maryland Transit Administration
Technical
Line length 14.1 mi (22.7 km)
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification 750 V DC overhead
Operating speed Average 18 mph
Route map
Legend
 
Locally Preferred Alternative
Center for Medicare/
Medicaid Services
Parking Security Square Mall
I-695
Woodlawn Drive
Social Security Administration
Parking I-70 Park and Ride
Cooks Lane tunnel
Parking Edmondson Village
Allendale Street
Rosemont
Parking West Baltimore Penn Line
Harlem Park
Poppleton
University Center Baltimore Light Rail Blue Line
Charles Center Metro Subway Green Line
Inner Harbor
Harbor East
Fells Point
Canton
Parking Canton Crossing
Highlandtown/Greektown
Parking Bayview Penn Line
Bayview Campus

The Red Line was a planned east-west mass transit light rail line for Baltimore, Maryland. Although it had been granted federal approval to enter the preliminary engineering phase, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan declared on June 25, 2015 that he would not provide state funds for the project.[1] The line's construction had been estimated to begin in late 2015–early 2016, subject to funding, with a completion date set for late 2021–early 2022.

Background

In 2001, then-Secretary of Transportation John Porcari appointed a 23-member independent commission, the Baltimore Region Rail System Plan Advisory Committee, to make suggestions for new rail lines and expansions of existing lines. The proposals used a unified branding scheme for the existing lines and the proposed new lines, identifying each line by a color, as the Washington Metro and many other transit agencies do.[2]

The suggested system was composed of six color-coded lines with an overall length of 109 miles (175 km) and 122 stations, including Baltimore's existing Metro Subway and Light Rail lines. In the commission's report, the Red Line was an east-west line that would begin at the Social Security Administration offices in Woodlawn in Baltimore County, travel through West Baltimore with an intermodal stop at the West Baltimore MARC station, pass through downtown where it would intersect the existing Metro Subway and Light Rail lines, and pass through East Baltimore with stops in the gentrified neighborhoods of Fells Point, Canton, and the area around Patterson Park. The Red Line was designated by the commission as the starting component for new work on the 6-line system.[3]

Out of the commission's various proposals, the Red Line was taken up with the most enthusiasm by area officials. Progress was slowed by a debate between state Secretary of Transportation Robert Flanagan on one side, and the Baltimore City government and Congressional delegation on the other over the mode: Flanagan favored a bus rapid transit (BRT) solution with separate right-of-way components like Boston's Silver Line, while the other officials favored a light rail rapid transit line or heavy rail and insisted that both modes of rail transit be included in studies.[4]

Heavy rail was dismissed by Flanagan as an alternative, due to an estimated cost of $2.2 billion to $2.6 billion. With ridership of only 45,000 on Baltimore's existing Metro system at the time of his appointment, he did not expect the Red Line to reach the 140,000 to 150,000 ridership level necessary to attract federal funding for a new heavy rail line.[4]

Red Line alternatives

No. Alternative Length
(miles)
Cost (millions)
(2007 prices)
Travel time
end to end
(minutes)
Average
Weekday
Ridership
1 No Build 13.9 n/a 80 n/a
2 TSM 14.3 $281 76 17,600
3A BRT, surface only 13.8 $545 62 31,400
3B BRT, downtown tunnel 14.9 $1,019 56 37,400
3C BRT, downtown tunnel,

Cooks Lane tunnel

14.7 $1,151 53 37,400
3D BRT, maximum tunnel 13.7 $2,404 43 41,500
3E BRT, surface only,

Johnnycake Rd. alignment

14.8 $571 69 29,300
3F BRT, TSM surface,

downtown tunnel

14.8 $755 65 34,300
4A LRT, surface only 13.9 $930 55 34,600
4B LRT, downtown tunnel 14.6 $1,498 43 41,100
4C LRT, downtown tunnel,

Cooks Lane tunnel

14.6 $1,631 41 42,100
4D LRT, maximum tunnel 13.7 $2,463 36 42,300

Modified alternative 4C selected by governor

In August 2009, Governor O'Malley selected a modified version of the Light Rail Alternative 4C, which became known as the "Locally Preferred Alternative (LPA)." The modification eliminated two stations and a small parking lot from the original Alternative 4C plans, but included an expansion of parking at the West Baltimore MARC station.

Two features of the original Alternative 4C plan, considered important by the Citizens Advisory Council, remained part of the Locally Preferred Alternative:

With the Federal Transit Administration's approval in June 2011 to start preliminary engineering, the project made its first step beyond the concept stage; however, the FTA estimated daily ridership for the completed system at 57,000 and expected it to cost a total of $2.2 billion with inflation included. Henry Kay, MTA's deputy administrator, estimated the cost of preliminary engineering at $65 million. The state would have had to pay preliminary engineering costs, but Kay said that these and other upfront costs would be eligible for federal reimbursement.[6]

Cancelled funding

Governor Larry Hogan, who was elected in 2014, announced on June 25, 2015 that he had cancelled funding for the Red Line. During his 2014 campaign, Hogan had complained about the cost of the proposed Red Line for Baltimore and a proposed Purple Line for the Maryland suburbs of Washington, DC; however, he said that the Purple Line would continue at a reduced level of funding.[1]

Proposed route and stations

The alignment for the Red Line would have followed an east-west path. Starting from the west, the proposed stations were as follows:

Station Name Parking Connection
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services No
  • Bus: 15, 20, qb40, 44, 57
Security Square Mall Yes
  • Bus: 15, qb40, 44, 57, 77, 99
Social Security Administration Yes (authorized employee parking)
  • Bus: 15, 44, 57, 77
I-70 Park and Ride Yes
  • Bus: 15, qb40
<< Tunnel portal at city/county line under Cooks Lane and resurface along Edmondson Avenue >>
Edmondson Village Yes
  • Bus: 20, 23, 38, qb40, 150
Allendale No
  • Bus: 23, 38, qb40
Rosemont No
  • Bus: 15, 16, 23, 38, qb40, qb47
West Baltimore MARC Yes
Harlem Park/Poppleton No
  • Bus: 1
Lexington Terrace Yes (residential parking)
  • Bus: 15
<< Tunnel portal along MLK Jr. Blvd. >>
Howard Street/University Center Yes (pay-to-park)
  • Bus: 1, 5, 7, 8, 10, 19, 20, 23, 26, 27, 31, 35, 36, qb40, qb46, qb48, 91 120, 160, 310, 320, 410, 411, 420
  • Rail: Light Rail
Charles Center
  • Bus: 1, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 19, 20, 23, 26, 27, 35, 36, qb40, qb46, qb48, 61, 64, 91, 120, 150, 160, 410, 411, 420
  • Rail: Metro Subway
  • CCC: Purple
Inner Harbor
  • Bus: 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 19, 20, 23, 26, 27, 35, 36, qb40, qb46, qb48, 91
  • CCC: Orange, Purple
Harbor East
  • Bus: 31
  • CCC: Orange, Green
Fells Point No
  • Bus: 10, 13
<< Tunnel portal along Boston Street >>
Canton Yes Bus: 13, 31
Canton Crossing Yes
  • Bus: 7, 13, 31
Highlandtown/Greektown No
  • Bus: 10, 22
<< Aerial bridge between Highlandtown station & Bayview MARC station >>
East Baltimore/Bayview MARC Yes
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Yes (facility parking)
  • Bus: 22, 23, qb40
<< Future Extension to Dundalk.[3] >>
Eastern Avenue No
  • Bus: 10, 23, qb40
O'Donnell Street No
  • Bus: 10, 26, 31
Dundalk Center Place Yes (residential parking)
  • Bus: 4, 10, 31

Red Line system features

Feature Proposed alignment
Overall length 14.5 mi (23.3 km)
Surface length 9.8 mi (15.8 km)
Tunnel length 3.9 mi (6.3 km)
Aerial length 0.8 mi (1.3 km)
Stations 20 total (15 surface, 5 underground)
Parking 6 stations with parking areas
Travel time 44 minutes (Woodlawn to Bayview)
Vehicles 34 light rail vehicles
Service frequency 8 minutes peak, 10 minutes off peak

Citizens' Advisory Council

Establishment of Council

The "Citizens' Advisory Council for the Baltimore Corridor Transit Study - Red Line" was established by the Maryland General Assembly in 2006.[7][8]

Governor Robert Erlich vetoed the bills which originally created the Citizens' Advisory Council on May 26, 2006, and replaced it with the "Red Line Community Advisory Council." This 15-member Council was appointed entirely by the Governor.[9][10]

At a special session in June 2006, the Legislature overrode the Governor's veto.[7][8] The Council established by the Legislature also had 15 members, but only two could be appointed by the Governor. Five of the other Council members were appointed by the Senate President, five by the Speaker of the House, two by the Baltimore City Mayor and one by the Baltimore County Executive. Two co-chairs for the Council could be chosen by the Governor or the Maryland Transit Administrator from up to four nominees selected by the Senate President and Speaker of the House.

On July 30, 2007, an executive order by Governor Martin O'Malley restored the name originally selected by the Legislature.

First annual report to General Assembly

On September 9, 2008, the Red Line Citizens' Advisory Council voted unanimously to adopt its first report to the General Assembly, which included the statement that "Preparation of a SDEIS [Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement] should begin now, as a collaborative effort between the MTA and the public in finding the best ways to invest over a billion dollars in Baltimore's transportation infrastructure in keeping with the vision of the 2002 Plan."

Council dispute over Alternative 4C

A recommendation for Alternative 4C (light rail with a downtown tunnel and a Cooks Lane tunnel) was approved by a vote of five to two at the Citizens' Advisory Council meeting on December 11, 2008. Two of the nine members present abstained.

Red Line Community Compact

This document, signed by city and state officials, and 72 leaders of community organizations on September 12, 2008, described how they intended to build and operate the Red Line for the benefit of Baltimore and its communities. The Community Compact emphasized four main points:

Mayor Sheila Dixon appointed leaders from city government, non-profit and citizen groups, and the business community to a 40-member steering committee to implement each part of the Community Compact. The Red Line Community Compact Steering Committee held their first meeting on February 19, 2009; the group was scheduled to meet quarterly throughout the life of the project.

The decision at the meeting on December 11, 2008 was disputed at another Advisory Council meeting on July 9, 2009, where 11 members were present. A six to five vote favored rescinding the previous decision for Alternative 4C. Council Chair Angela Bethea-Spearman ruled that the motion to rescind failed, because the vote was less than a 2/3 majority. She cited "Robert's Rules" as the criteria for requiring a 2/3 majority and denying the rescision.

Community opposition to Alternative 4C

Beginning in late 2008, Baltimore City favored the "4C Alternative" selected by Governor O'Malley in 2009, which was endorsed by Mayor Sheila Dixon; however, the 2008 Citizens Advisory Council annual report commented on the opposition of community groups to surface rail alignments through residential neighborhoods.

A letter from the Allendale Community Association, read at a meeting of the Citizens Advisory Council on December 11, 2008, expressed the Association's opposition to Alternative 4C and any surface rail construction along Edmondson Avenue.

The West-East Coalition (WEC) Against Red Line Alternative 4C, established in June 2009, represented community associations, homeowners groups, businesses, and religious groups opposed to the Alternative 4C. Its now-defunct website explained that the organization considered the proposed light rail alignment to be a detriment to communities on both the East and West sides of Baltimore.

In a letter to Governor Martin O'Malley, Senator Barbara Mikulski, Senator Benjamin Cardin, Congressman Elijah Cummings, Congressman John P. Sarbanes, and Mayor Sheila Dixon on July 13, 2009, the WEC described concerns about the effects of double-tracked surface rail, traffic congestion, and safety concerns.

In 2009, the WEC circulated a petition against the surface Red Line in the Canton neighborhood. It delivered 1,350 signed cards to Governor O'Malley on July 31, 2009.

Support for Red Line and Political Action Committee

In the summer of 2011 the Red Line Now Political Action Committee (PAC) was established to voice the support of residents of Baltimore City for the funding and construction of Alternative 4C. Its website stated that the organization was staffed on a volunteer basis and planned to support local politicians that supported the construction of the Red Line.[11] Red Line Now PAC was governed by a nine-member board of directors who were citizen volunteers who lived and/or worked along what would have been the Red Line corridor. The board members represented the Midtown, Edmondson, Canton, Fells Point, Patterson Park, and Greektown communities.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Michael Dresser (2015-06-25). "Hogan says no to Red Line, yes to Purple". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2015-06-25.
  2. Maryland Transit Administration. "Baltimore Region Rail System Plan Final Report" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-09-22.
  3. 1 2 Baltimore Red Line Mayor's Red Line information site. Retrieved 2010-1-8
  4. 1 2 Dori Berman (January 13, 2006). "New subway back in play?" (PDF). Daily Record. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  5. "Transportation Systems Management (TSM)" uses the existing bus system, with modifications to signalling, lane assignments, and controls.
  6. Michael Dresser (June 28, 2011). "Red Line gets a qualified go-ahead". The Baltimore Sun. p. 1.
  7. 1 2 Senate Bill 873 (2006) Maryland Department of Legislative Services, Library & Information Service. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  8. 1 2 House Bill 1309 (2006) Maryland Department of Legislative Services, Library & Information Service. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  9. Governor's veto letter, May 26, 2006 retrieved 2010-1-29
  10. Executive Orders 2006 Department of Legislative Services archives. See p. 13 for Executive Order 01.01.2006.04. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  11. Red Line Now PAC Political Action Committee that supports Red Line development. Retrieved 2011-09-26.
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