Sunday, September 13, 2020

The Death (and future rebirth?) of Baltimore’s Red Line

Just in case you were getting too cheery about how things are going these days, you should read the recent article in the Washington Post about the death, 5 years ago, of Baltimore’s Red Line transit project at the hands of Maryland Governor Larry Hogan (available here).  Seriously, you should read it, because although a major battle was lost then, I for one haven’t given up on the war.

 

As I have repeatedly said, the Red Line is a success story waiting to happen. The proposed east-west rapid transit line would link major employment and residential centers, generate significant economic activity, transform a set of transit lines into a real network that unites the metropolitan area, partly redress the inequities in transit access in the region, and leverage high-quality urban redevelopment. It is not too much to say that the Red Line is the key to Baltimore’s emergence as a vital 21st century city.

 

And yet here we are. 

 

Despite a lot of despair in the air, there is a bunch of stuff that supporters of the Red Line can do, such as:

·      Salt the Red Line into local and regional planning documents (too many missed opportunities for this),

·      Use city planning and zoning powers to orient development around proposed stations,

·      Enlist corporate and public “sponsors” to promote transit-ready development at station sites, and

·      Continue to encourage the Legislature to support transit in general and the Red Line in particular.

 

Many people have pointed out that our country is currently facing a “triple crisis” of Climate Change, an outcry for racial justice, and an economic mini-depression.  The Red Line can help us make progress on all three fronts at once.  We need to get busy! 



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