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Red Line (Baltimore)

The Red Line is a proposed east–west transit line for Baltimore, Maryland. The original project was granted federal approval to enter the preliminary engineering phase and the Maryland Transit Administration had spent roughly $300 million in planning, design and land acquisition, until Maryland Governor Larry Hogan declared his intent to not provide state funds for the project and shift state funding to roads in suburban areas.[1][2] The original Red Line had been projected to cost roughly $1.6 billion, $900 million of which would have been guaranteed federal funding.[1] Its construction had been estimated to begin in late 2015–early 2016, subject to funding, with a completion date set for late 2021–early 2022.

Red Line
Overview
StatusRoute/mode selection
LocaleBaltimore, Maryland
Termini
  • Center for Medicare/Medicaid Services, Woodlawn, Baltimore County (West)
  • Bayview MARC station (East)
Stations20–23
Service
TypeLight rail or bus rapid transit
SystemMaryland Transit Administration
Operator(s)Maryland Transit Administration
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Route map

Alternatives 1 & 3
Center for Medicare/
Medicaid Services
Security Square Mall
Social Security Administration
I-70 Park and Ride
Cooks Lane tunnel
Edmondson Village
Allendale
Rosemont
West Baltimore*
Midtown Edmondson*
Harlem Park*
Poppleton
Howard Street/University Center/
Baltimore Arena
Inner Harbor
Harbor East
Fells Point
Canton
Canton Crossing
Highlandtown/Greektown
Bayview
Bayview MARC

All stations are accessible
Alternatives 2A & 4A
Center for Medicare/
Medicaid Services
Security Square Mall
Social Security Administration
I-70 Park and Ride
Edmondson Village
Allendale
Rosemont
West Baltimore*
Midtown Edmondson*
Harlem Park*
Lexington Terrace*
Poppleton
Howard Street/University Center/
Baltimore Arena
Inner Harbor
Market Place
Harbor East
Fells Point
Chester
Canton
Highlandtown
Bayview
Bayview MARC

All stations are accessible
Alternatives 2B & 4B
Center for Medicare/
Medicaid Services
Security Square Mall
Social Security Administration
I-70 Park and Ride
Edmondson Village
Allendale
Rosemont
West Baltimore*
Midtown Edmondson*
Harlem Park*
Lexington Terrace*
Poppleton
Howard Street/University Center/
Baltimore Arena
Inner Harbor
Market Place
Harbor East
Fells Point
Aliceanna
Canton
Canton Crossing
Highlandtown/Greektown
Bayview
Bayview MARC

All stations are accessible

While campaigning for governor, Hogan characterized the project as a "boondoggle".[1] Hogan's shift of state priorities to road funding has resulted in the construction of several major projects near properties owned by his company, leading to allegations of corruption.[3] The Red Line cancellation was briefly investigated by the United States Department of Transportation for being in possible violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,[4] since his decision shifted a large quantity of state money from predominantly Black and low-income neighborhoods into affluent and predominantly white areas, but the investigation was closed with no finding.[5]

The project was classed as inactive; however, after several groups continued to campaign for its construction, the State, under Governor Wes Moore, brought back the project in June 2023. By that November, it was undergoing updated route evaluations and mode selection.

Background edit

Red Line
 
Overview
StatusCanceled by Governor Larry Hogan in June 2015[6]
LocaleBaltimore, Maryland
Termini
  • Center for Medicare/Medicaid Services, Woodlawn, Baltimore County (West)
  • Johns Hopkins Bayview Campus, Baltimore City (East)
Stations19 (planned)
Service
TypeLight rail
SystemMaryland Transit Administration
Operator(s)Maryland Transit Administration
Daily ridership54,000 (2030 projection)
History
Planned openingafter 2026
Technical
Line length14.1 mi (22.7 km)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC overhead
Operating speedAverage 18 mph
Route map

Alternative 4C (2009)
 
Center for Medicare/
Medicaid Services
 
 
Security Square Mall
 
 
Woodlawn Drive
 
Social Security Administration
 
 
I-70 Park and Ride
 
Cooks Lane tunnel
 
 
Edmondson Village
 
Allendale Street
 
Rosemont
 
 
West Baltimore
 
Harlem Park
 
 
Poppleton
 
Baltimore Arena
 
Charles Center
 
Inner Harbor
 
Harbor East
 
Fells Point
 
 
Canton
 
 
Canton Crossing
 
Highlandtown/Greektown
 
 
 
Bayview
 
Bayview Campus

In 2001, then-Maryland 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.[7]

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 SubwayLink and Light RailLink systems. 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 transfers to the existing Metro Subway and Light Rail lines would be possible), and pass through East Baltimore with stops in Fells Point, Canton, and Patterson Park. The Red Line was designated by the commission as the starting component for new work on the 6-line system.[8]

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 and the Baltimore City government and Congressional delegation over the mode of transportation; Flanagan favored a bus rapid transit (BRT) solution with separate right-of-way components like Boston's Silver Line, while the city officials favored a light rail or heavy rail line and insisted that both modes of rail transit be included in studies.[9]

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 Baltimore's existing Metro system at only 45,000 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 heavy rail.[9]

Red Line alternatives edit

 
Baltimore Rail Plan featuring the east–west Red Line.
 
The Red Line would connect to the Light Rail at University Center.
 
The Red Line would connect to the Metro Subway at Charles Center.
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 edit

 
Governor O'Malley oversaw much of the Red Line's planning and engineering.
 
Governor Hogan canceled the project in 2015, diverting funding away from Baltimore to rural Maryland.

In August 2009, then-Governor Martin O'Malley (who was also a former mayor of Baltimore) 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:

  • Much of the proposed route through West Baltimore ran generally along U.S. Route 40, including the depressed freeway section left over from the cancellation of Interstates 70 and 170 within the city limits. This freeway section was built to accommodate a transit line in the median, and the Red Line would most likely have used this route to achieve grade separation though the area. The western end of former I-170 was demolished in 2010 to allow for additional parking and median access for the Red Line. A similar modification was also planned for the eastern end of former I-70, where the MD 122/Security Boulevard interchange would be converted to an at-grade intersection, and a new Park & Ride lot would have been built to replace the one that sits east of said interchange. At the rebuilt intersection, the Red Line would have gone through the western portal of the Cooks Lane tunnel, MD 122 would have tied directly into Forest Park Avenue, and Cooks Boulevard would have been a westward extension of Cooks Lane, built as a surface road on the old I-70 alignment. Although the modifications have not yet occurred, I-70 from MD 122 to I-695 was decommissioned in 2014 and now ends at its stack interchange with I-695; the freeway east of I-695 carries the unsigned designation of MD 570.
  • The LPA provided for the line to go underground along Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard and to surface on Boston Street near the Can Company in Canton, bypassing downtown Baltimore's narrow streets and crowded traffic conditions. Another tunnel bypasses Cooks Lane, but the original LPA version reduced the tunnel to a single track alignment. Adjustments to the LPA were later made to allow a second track in the Cooks Lane tunnel.

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.[10]

Cancellation and federal investigation edit

Governor Larry Hogan, who was elected in 2014, announced on June 25, 2015 that he had canceled funding for the Red Line. During his 2014 campaign, Hogan had complained about the cost of the proposed Red Line for Baltimore, calling it a "boondoggle", and a proposed Purple Line for the Maryland suburbs of Washington, DC; however, he ultimately allowed the Purple Line to begin construction with reduced funding.[2][11]

Federal investigation edit

On December 21, 2015, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), together with the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland and Baltimore Regional Initiative Developing Genuine Equality (BRIDGE) filed a complaint pursuant to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 with the U.S. Department of Transportation Departmental Office of Civil Rights.[12] The complaint challenged Governor Hogan's decision to cancel the Red Line on the basis of discrimination against Baltimore's predominantly African American population that would have benefited from the infrastructure project.[13] Furthermore, the complaint highlighted that Governor Hogan's decision shifted funding away from public transportation dependent citizens, and instead was dedicated towards highway projects in primarily white rural and suburban areas of the state.[12]

On January 19, 2017, the last day of the Obama Administration, the Department of Transportation announced it expanded its investigation into Governor Hogan's decision to cancel the Red Line, as well as the rest of MDOT's programs to determine whether federal law was violated.[4][14] In addition, the DOT stated that the state transportation agency did not take the federal law into account or the adverse impact it would have on African-Americans, nor did the Governor seek any input from MDOT in making the decision.[14][15] In July 2017 the DOT announced that it was closing its investigation with no finding.[5]

Proposed route and stations edit

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 Station Location Points of Interest
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services no   79, 78, CityLink Blue, 31 Security Blvd / CMS Entrance Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services, General Services Administration
Security Square Mall     79, CityLink Blue, 31, 37, 107 Security Blvd / Belmont Av Security Square Mall, Security Station Shopping Center
Social Security Administration   (A)   79, 31, CityLink Blue Woodlawn Dr / Parallel Dr Social Security Administration, Southwest Academy, Woodlawn
I-70 Park and Ride     79, CityLink Blue Parallel Dr / Ingleside Av East Social Security Administration, Gwynns Falls Trail
Tunnel portal at city/county line under Cooks Lane and resurface along Edmondson Avenue
Edmondson Village     78, 77, 38, CityLink Blue, 150 Edmondson Av / Swann Av Edmondson Village Shopping Center, Enoch Pratt Free Library Edmondson Branch, Uplands, Westside Skills Center
Allendale no   77, 38, CityLink Blue Edmondson Av / Allendale St Gwynns Falls Leakin Park, Lyndhurst Park
Rosemont no   78, 29, 77, 38, CityLink Blue, 80 W. Franklin St/Poplar Grove St Franklintown Road Business Area, Rosemont Park, Western Cemetery
West Baltimore MARC     77, CityLink Blue/Orange/Green/Pink/, 80, 40, 163, 150
  MARC Penn Line,
W. Mulberry St / N. Smallwood St Bentalou Recreation Center, Grace Medical Center
Harlem Park no   CityLink Navy U.S. Route 40 / Carey St Edgar Allan Poe House & Museum, Franklin Square, Harlem Square Park, Lafayette Square
Poppleton   (R)   80 N. Fremont Av / W. Baltimore St. Baltimore Center Medical Examiner Office, Perkins Square, Lexington Terrace, Little Lithuania Park, Lithuanian Hall, University of Maryland BioPark
Tunnel portal along Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard
Howard Street/University Center   (P)   CityLink Navy, CityLink Purple, 65, CityLink Red, CityLink Yellow, CityLink Blue/Orange, 76, 120, 160, 310?, 320?, 410?, 411?, 420?

  Light Rail

W. Lombard St / S. Howard St Bromo Arts District, Camden Yards, Royal Farms Arena, University of Maryland, Westside
Inner Harbor   (P)   65, CityLink Red, CityLink Navy, 51, 54, 91
  Metro Subway

CCC: Orange, Purple

W. Lombard St / S. Charles St Downtown Baltimore, Financial District, Harborplace, Market Place, McKeldin Square, National Aquarium, Power Plant Live!, Pratt Street Power Plant, World Trade Center
Harbor East   (P)   31

CCC: Orange, Green

Fleet St / S. Central Av Harbor East Shopping District, Harbor Point, Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology, Little Italy Pier Six Pavilion, Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture
Fells Point no   CityLink Gold, CityLink Navy Fleet St / S. Broadway Broadway Market, Fells Point, Maritime Park, Thames Street Park, Upper Fell's Point
Tunnel portal along Boston Street
Canton     CityLink Navy, 65 Boston St / O'Donnell St The Can Company, O'Donnell Square, Patterson Park, Saint Casmir's Park
Canton Crossing     CityLink Navy, 65 Boston St / Conkling St Brewers Hill, Canton Crossing Shopping Center, Clarence H. "Du" Burns Arena, Canton Waterfront Park, Charm City Skate Park
Highlandtown/Greektown no   CityLink Navy, 22 Eastern Av / Janney St Enoch Pratt Free Library Southeast Anchor Branch, Greektown, Highlandtown, Kresson, Markets at Highlandtown
Viaduct between Highlandtown station and Bayview MARC station
Bayview   (F)   22, CityLink Orange/Blue Alpha Commons Dr / Bayview Blvd Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Johns Hopkins Asthma & Allergy Center, National Institute on Aging
East Baltimore/Bayview MARC     22, 59, 63, CityLink Orange/Blue

  MARC Penn Line

E. Lombard St (east of Bioscience Dr) East Baltimore/Bayview station, Pulaski Industrial Area, Joseph E. Lee Park, Patterson High School
Future extension to Dundalk[8]
Eastern Avenue no   CityLink Orange/Blue, 22, 40, 59, 63 Eastern Av / Dundalk Av Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
O'Donnell Street no   63, CityLink Navy Dundalk Av / O'Donnell St Amazon Warehouse, Mt. Carmel Cemetery
Dundalk Center Place   (R)   CityLink Navy, 62, 63, 65, 163 Dundalk Av / Center Pl CCBC Dundalk, Downtown Dundalk, St. Helena Park
NOTES
  • A authorized employee parking only
  • F facility parking only
  • P paid parking
  • R residential parking only
 
The Red Line would have occupied the central median of the infamous "Highway to Nowhere" (US 40).
 
The Inner Harbor station would connect to Charles Center (lower right) via an underground transfer.

Red Line system features edit

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 edit

Establishment of Council edit

The "Citizens' Advisory Council for the Baltimore Corridor Transit Study - Red Line" was established by the Maryland General Assembly in 2006.[16][17]

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.[18][19]

At a special session in June 2006, the Legislature overrode the Governor's veto.[16][17] 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 edit

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 edit

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 edit

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:

  • Put Baltimore to work on the Red Line: encourage and promote local and minority contract participation.
  • Make the Red Line green: include green space and environmental improvements into the project.
  • Community-centered station design, development and stewardship
  • Reduce impact of construction on communities

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 edit

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 edit

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.[20] 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.

Plans revived edit

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act contains a provision on project reentry which directs the United States Secretary of Transportation to "provide full and fair consideration to projects that seek an updated rating after a period of inactivity." This provision was sought by Maryland Senator Ben Cardin with the intent to allow for the Red Line and other canceled transit projects to be renewed.[21] On June 15, 2023, Governor Wes Moore announced that he would restart efforts to build the Red Line in a ceremony with Baltimore mayor Brandon Scott.[22] The state Department of Transportation plans to identify possible route alignments, gauge public feedback, and study the project's costs and benefits over the course of the rest of the year.[23] In the meantime, the MTA will provide limited-stop bus service between Catonsville and Essex beginning in August 2023.[24] Officials have not yet decided whether the route will be run by bus rapid transit or light rail.[25] MTA released six new alternative routes for the project that September – two alternatives featured tunnel segments and alignments similar to the canceled 2009 route.[26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Campbell, Colin (September 11, 2020). "Five years later, many across Baltimore bitterly lament Gov. Hogan's decision to kill the Red Line light rail". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved November 14, 2021.
  2. ^ a b Michael Dresser (June 25, 2015). "Hogan says no to Red Line, yes to Purple". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved June 25, 2015.
  3. ^ Kilgore, Ed (January 8, 2020). "Maryland Governor Accused of Rerouting State Funds to Benefit His Business". Intelligencer. Retrieved November 14, 2021.
  4. ^ a b Rivera, Yvette (January 19, 2017). "In response to two separate complaints..." (PDF). Letter to Larry Hogan and Pete K. Rahn.
  5. ^ a b "Federal officials close civil rights complaint about Baltimore light-rail project". Washington Post. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on July 13, 2018. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  7. ^ Maryland Transit Administration. "Baltimore Region Rail System Plan Final Report" (PDF). Retrieved September 22, 2014.
  8. ^ a b Baltimore Red Line Mayor's Red Line information site. Retrieved 2010-1-8
  9. ^ a b Dori Berman (January 13, 2006). "New subway back in play?" (PDF). Daily Record. Retrieved February 2, 2010.
  10. ^ Michael Dresser (June 28, 2011). "Red Line gets a qualified go-ahead". The Baltimore Sun. p. 1.
  11. ^ Cox, Erin; Laris, Michael (June 16, 2023). "Wes Moore relaunches Baltimore's Red Line, but big questions remain". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
  12. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 28, 2017. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
  13. ^ "Civil Rights Groups Challenge Maryland Gov. Hogan's Red Line Cancellation". Streetsblog USA. December 21, 2015. Retrieved April 26, 2021.
  14. ^ a b Linderman, Juliet (January 23, 2017). "DOT expands investigation into canceled rail line in MD". The Washington Times. Associated Press.
  15. ^ Duncan, Ian (January 23, 2017). "On last day, Obama administration announced civil rights review of Maryland transportation". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved April 26, 2021.
  16. ^ a b Senate Bill 873 (2006) Maryland Department of Legislative Services, Library & Information Service. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  17. ^ a b House Bill 1309 (2006) Maryland Department of Legislative Services, Library & Information Service. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  18. ^ Governor's veto letter, May 26, 2006 retrieved 2010-1-29
  19. ^ Executive Orders 2006 Department of Legislative Services archives. See p. 13 for Executive Order 01.01.2006.04. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  20. ^ "Red Line Now PAC". Retrieved September 26, 2011.[non-primary source needed]
  21. ^ "Infrastructure bill would boost Metro funding, reopen door to Baltimore's Red Line project". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved November 14, 2021.
  22. ^ Wood, Pamela (June 15, 2023). "Gov. Moore relaunches planning for Red Line transit in Baltimore". Baltimore Banner. Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  23. ^ Ng, Greg (June 15, 2023). "Moore relaunches Red Line east-west transit project in Baltimore". WBAL. Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  24. ^ Holt, Alex (June 21, 2023). "Red Line redemption: What Governor Moore's announcement means for Baltimore". ggwash.org. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
  25. ^ Olaniran, Christian (June 15, 2023). "Governor Moore announces plan to revive Baltimore Red Line project - CBS Baltimore". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  26. ^ Olaniran, Christian (September 28, 2023). "MTA unveils alternative routes for Red Line transit project". CBS News Baltimore. Retrieved November 4, 2023.

External links edit

  • Red Line Political Action Committee

line, baltimore, line, proposed, east, west, transit, line, baltimore, maryland, original, project, granted, federal, approval, enter, preliminary, engineering, phase, maryland, transit, administration, spent, roughly, million, planning, design, land, acquisit. The Red Line is a proposed east west transit line for Baltimore Maryland The original project was granted federal approval to enter the preliminary engineering phase and the Maryland Transit Administration had spent roughly 300 million in planning design and land acquisition until Maryland Governor Larry Hogan declared his intent to not provide state funds for the project and shift state funding to roads in suburban areas 1 2 The original Red Line had been projected to cost roughly 1 6 billion 900 million of which would have been guaranteed federal funding 1 Its construction had been estimated to begin in late 2015 early 2016 subject to funding with a completion date set for late 2021 early 2022 Red LineOverviewStatusRoute mode selectionLocaleBaltimore MarylandTerminiCenter for Medicare Medicaid Services Woodlawn Baltimore County West Bayview MARC station East Stations20 23ServiceTypeLight rail or bus rapid transitSystemMaryland Transit AdministrationOperator s Maryland Transit AdministrationTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeRoute mapLegend Alternatives 1 amp 3 Center for Medicare Medicaid Services Security Square Mall I 695 Social Security Administration I 70 Park and Ride Cooks Lane tunnel Edmondson Village Allendale Rosemont West Baltimore Midtown Edmondson Harlem Park Poppleton Howard Street University Center Baltimore Arena Inner Harbor Charles Center Harbor East Fells Point Canton Canton Crossing Highlandtown Greektown I 895 Bayview Bayview MARC All stations are accessible Alternatives 2A amp 4A Center for Medicare Medicaid Services Security Square Mall I 695 Social Security Administration I 70 Park and Ride Edmondson Village Allendale Rosemont West Baltimore Midtown Edmondson Harlem Park Lexington Terrace Poppleton Howard Street University Center Baltimore Arena Inner Harbor Charles Center Market Place Shot Tower Harbor East Fells Point Chester Canton Highlandtown I 895 Bayview Bayview MARC All stations are accessible Alternatives 2B amp 4B Center for Medicare Medicaid Services Security Square Mall I 695 Social Security Administration I 70 Park and Ride Edmondson Village Allendale Rosemont West Baltimore Midtown Edmondson Harlem Park Lexington Terrace Poppleton Howard Street University Center Baltimore Arena Inner Harbor Market Place Harbor East Fells Point Aliceanna Canton Canton Crossing Highlandtown Greektown I 895 Bayview Bayview MARC All stations are accessible This diagram viewtalkedit While campaigning for governor Hogan characterized the project as a boondoggle 1 Hogan s shift of state priorities to road funding has resulted in the construction of several major projects near properties owned by his company leading to allegations of corruption 3 The Red Line cancellation was briefly investigated by the United States Department of Transportation for being in possible violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 4 since his decision shifted a large quantity of state money from predominantly Black and low income neighborhoods into affluent and predominantly white areas but the investigation was closed with no finding 5 The project was classed as inactive however after several groups continued to campaign for its construction the State under Governor Wes Moore brought back the project in June 2023 By that November it was undergoing updated route evaluations and mode selection Contents 1 Background 1 1 Red Line alternatives 1 2 Modified alternative 4C selected by governor 2 Cancellation and federal investigation 2 1 Federal investigation 3 Proposed route and stations 3 1 Red Line system features 4 Citizens Advisory Council 4 1 Establishment of Council 4 2 First annual report to General Assembly 4 3 Council dispute over Alternative 4C 5 Red Line Community Compact 6 Community opposition to Alternative 4C 7 Support for Red Line and Political Action Committee 8 Plans revived 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBackground editRed Line nbsp OverviewStatusCanceled by Governor Larry Hogan in June 2015 6 LocaleBaltimore MarylandTerminiCenter for Medicare Medicaid Services Woodlawn Baltimore County West Johns Hopkins Bayview Campus Baltimore City East Stations19 planned ServiceTypeLight railSystemMaryland Transit AdministrationOperator s Maryland Transit AdministrationDaily ridership54 000 2030 projection HistoryPlanned openingafter 2026TechnicalLine length14 1 mi 22 7 km Track gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeElectrification750 V DC overheadOperating speedAverage 18 mphRoute mapLegend Alternative 4C 2009 nbsp Center for Medicare Medicaid Services nbsp nbsp Security Square Mall nbsp nbsp I 695 nbsp Woodlawn Drive nbsp Social Security Administration nbsp nbsp I 70 Park and Ride nbsp Cooks Lane tunnel nbsp nbsp Edmondson Village nbsp Allendale Street nbsp Rosemont nbsp nbsp West Baltimore nbsp nbsp Harlem Park nbsp nbsp Poppleton nbsp Baltimore Arena nbsp nbsp Charles Center nbsp nbsp Inner Harbor nbsp Harbor East nbsp Fells Point nbsp nbsp Canton nbsp nbsp Canton Crossing nbsp Highlandtown Greektown nbsp nbsp I 895 nbsp nbsp Bayview nbsp nbsp Bayview Campus This diagram viewtalkedit In 2001 then Maryland 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 7 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 SubwayLink and Light RailLink systems 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 transfers to the existing Metro Subway and Light Rail lines would be possible and pass through East Baltimore with stops in Fells Point Canton and Patterson Park The Red Line was designated by the commission as the starting component for new work on the 6 line system 8 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 and the Baltimore City government and Congressional delegation over the mode of transportation Flanagan favored a bus rapid transit BRT solution with separate right of way components like Boston s Silver Line while the city officials favored a light rail or heavy rail line and insisted that both modes of rail transit be included in studies 9 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 Baltimore s existing Metro system at only 45 000 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 heavy rail 9 Red Line alternatives edit nbsp Baltimore Rail Plan featuring the east west Red Line nbsp The Red Line would connect to the Light Rail at University Center nbsp The Red Line would connect to the Metro Subway at Charles Center No Alternative Length miles Cost millions 2007 prices Travel timeend to end minutes AverageWeekdayRidership 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 TSM Transportation systems management using the existing bus system with modifications to signalling lane assignments and controls BRT Bus rapid transit LRT Light rail transit Modified alternative 4C selected by governor edit nbsp Governor O Malley oversaw much of the Red Line s planning and engineering nbsp Governor Hogan canceled the project in 2015 diverting funding away from Baltimore to rural Maryland In August 2009 then Governor Martin O Malley who was also a former mayor of Baltimore 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 Much of the proposed route through West Baltimore ran generally along U S Route 40 including the depressed freeway section left over from the cancellation of Interstates 70 and 170 within the city limits This freeway section was built to accommodate a transit line in the median and the Red Line would most likely have used this route to achieve grade separation though the area The western end of former I 170 was demolished in 2010 to allow for additional parking and median access for the Red Line A similar modification was also planned for the eastern end of former I 70 where the MD 122 Security Boulevard interchange would be converted to an at grade intersection and a new Park amp Ride lot would have been built to replace the one that sits east of said interchange At the rebuilt intersection the Red Line would have gone through the western portal of the Cooks Lane tunnel MD 122 would have tied directly into Forest Park Avenue and Cooks Boulevard would have been a westward extension of Cooks Lane built as a surface road on the old I 70 alignment Although the modifications have not yet occurred I 70 from MD 122 to I 695 was decommissioned in 2014 and now ends at its stack interchange with I 695 the freeway east of I 695 carries the unsigned designation of MD 570 The LPA provided for the line to go underground along Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard and to surface on Boston Street near the Can Company in Canton bypassing downtown Baltimore s narrow streets and crowded traffic conditions Another tunnel bypasses Cooks Lane but the original LPA version reduced the tunnel to a single track alignment Adjustments to the LPA were later made to allow a second track in the Cooks Lane tunnel 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 10 Cancellation and federal investigation editGovernor Larry Hogan who was elected in 2014 announced on June 25 2015 that he had canceled funding for the Red Line During his 2014 campaign Hogan had complained about the cost of the proposed Red Line for Baltimore calling it a boondoggle and a proposed Purple Line for the Maryland suburbs of Washington DC however he ultimately allowed the Purple Line to begin construction with reduced funding 2 11 Federal investigation edit On December 21 2015 the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP together with the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland and Baltimore Regional Initiative Developing Genuine Equality BRIDGE filed a complaint pursuant to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 with the U S Department of Transportation Departmental Office of Civil Rights 12 The complaint challenged Governor Hogan s decision to cancel the Red Line on the basis of discrimination against Baltimore s predominantly African American population that would have benefited from the infrastructure project 13 Furthermore the complaint highlighted that Governor Hogan s decision shifted funding away from public transportation dependent citizens and instead was dedicated towards highway projects in primarily white rural and suburban areas of the state 12 On January 19 2017 the last day of the Obama Administration the Department of Transportation announced it expanded its investigation into Governor Hogan s decision to cancel the Red Line as well as the rest of MDOT s programs to determine whether federal law was violated 4 14 In addition the DOT stated that the state transportation agency did not take the federal law into account or the adverse impact it would have on African Americans nor did the Governor seek any input from MDOT in making the decision 14 15 In July 2017 the DOT announced that it was closing its investigation with no finding 5 Proposed route and stations editThe 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 Station Location Points of Interest Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services no nbsp 79 78 CityLink Blue 31 Security Blvd CMS Entrance Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Department of Health and Human Services General Services Administration Security Square Mall nbsp nbsp 79 CityLink Blue 31 37 107 Security Blvd Belmont Av Security Square Mall Security Station Shopping Center Social Security Administration nbsp A nbsp 79 31 CityLink Blue Woodlawn Dr Parallel Dr Social Security Administration Southwest Academy Woodlawn I 70 Park and Ride nbsp nbsp 79 CityLink Blue Parallel Dr Ingleside Av East Social Security Administration Gwynns Falls Trail Tunnel portal at city county line under Cooks Lane and resurface along Edmondson Avenue Edmondson Village nbsp nbsp 78 77 38 CityLink Blue 150 Edmondson Av Swann Av Edmondson Village Shopping Center Enoch Pratt Free Library Edmondson Branch Uplands Westside Skills Center Allendale no nbsp 77 38 CityLink Blue Edmondson Av Allendale St Gwynns Falls Leakin Park Lyndhurst Park Rosemont no nbsp 78 29 77 38 CityLink Blue 80 W Franklin St Poplar Grove St Franklintown Road Business Area Rosemont Park Western Cemetery West Baltimore MARC nbsp nbsp 77 CityLink Blue Orange Green Pink 80 40 163 150 nbsp MARC Penn Line W Mulberry St N Smallwood St Bentalou Recreation Center Grace Medical Center Harlem Park no nbsp CityLink Navy U S Route 40 Carey St Edgar Allan Poe House amp Museum Franklin Square Harlem Square Park Lafayette Square Poppleton nbsp R nbsp 80 N Fremont Av W Baltimore St Baltimore Center Medical Examiner Office Perkins Square Lexington Terrace Little Lithuania Park Lithuanian Hall University of Maryland BioPark Tunnel portal along Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard Howard Street University Center nbsp P nbsp CityLink Navy CityLink Purple 65 CityLink Red CityLink Yellow CityLink Blue Orange 76 120 160 310 320 410 411 420 nbsp Light Rail W Lombard St S Howard St Bromo Arts District Camden Yards Royal Farms Arena University of Maryland Westside Inner Harbor nbsp P nbsp 65 CityLink Red CityLink Navy 51 54 91 nbsp Metro Subway CCC Orange Purple W Lombard St S Charles St Downtown Baltimore Financial District Harborplace Market Place McKeldin Square National Aquarium Power Plant Live Pratt Street Power Plant World Trade Center Harbor East nbsp P nbsp 31 CCC Orange Green Fleet St S Central Av Harbor East Shopping District Harbor Point Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology Little Italy Pier Six Pavilion Reginald F Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History amp Culture Fells Point no nbsp CityLink Gold CityLink Navy Fleet St S Broadway Broadway Market Fells Point Maritime Park Thames Street Park Upper Fell s Point Tunnel portal along Boston Street Canton nbsp nbsp CityLink Navy 65 Boston St O Donnell St The Can Company O Donnell Square Patterson Park Saint Casmir s Park Canton Crossing nbsp nbsp CityLink Navy 65 Boston St Conkling St Brewers Hill Canton Crossing Shopping Center Clarence H Du Burns Arena Canton Waterfront Park Charm City Skate Park Highlandtown Greektown no nbsp CityLink Navy 22 Eastern Av Janney St Enoch Pratt Free Library Southeast Anchor Branch Greektown Highlandtown Kresson Markets at Highlandtown Viaduct between Highlandtown station and Bayview MARC station Bayview nbsp F nbsp 22 CityLink Orange Blue Alpha Commons Dr Bayview Blvd Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Johns Hopkins Asthma amp Allergy Center National Institute on Aging East Baltimore Bayview MARC nbsp nbsp 22 59 63 CityLink Orange Blue nbsp MARC Penn Line E Lombard St east of Bioscience Dr East Baltimore Bayview station Pulaski Industrial Area Joseph E Lee Park Patterson High School Future extension to Dundalk 8 Eastern Avenue no nbsp CityLink Orange Blue 22 40 59 63 Eastern Av Dundalk Av Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center O Donnell Street no nbsp 63 CityLink Navy Dundalk Av O Donnell St Amazon Warehouse Mt Carmel Cemetery Dundalk Center Place nbsp R nbsp CityLink Navy 62 63 65 163 Dundalk Av Center Pl CCBC Dundalk Downtown Dundalk St Helena Park NOTES A authorized employee parking only F facility parking only P paid parking R residential parking only nbsp The Red Line would have occupied the central median of the infamous Highway to Nowhere US 40 nbsp The Inner Harbor station would connect to Charles Center lower right via an underground transfer Red Line system features edit 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 peakCitizens Advisory Council editEstablishment of Council edit The Citizens Advisory Council for the Baltimore Corridor Transit Study Red Line was established by the Maryland General Assembly in 2006 16 17 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 18 19 At a special session in June 2006 the Legislature overrode the Governor s veto 16 17 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 edit 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 edit 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 editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message 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 Put Baltimore to work on the Red Line encourage and promote local and minority contract participation Make the Red Line green include green space and environmental improvements into the project Community centered station design development and stewardship Reduce impact of construction on communities 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 editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message 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 editIn 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 20 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 Plans revived editThe Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act contains a provision on project reentry which directs the United States Secretary of Transportation to provide full and fair consideration to projects that seek an updated rating after a period of inactivity This provision was sought by Maryland Senator Ben Cardin with the intent to allow for the Red Line and other canceled transit projects to be renewed 21 On June 15 2023 Governor Wes Moore announced that he would restart efforts to build the Red Line in a ceremony with Baltimore mayor Brandon Scott 22 The state Department of Transportation plans to identify possible route alignments gauge public feedback and study the project s costs and benefits over the course of the rest of the year 23 In the meantime the MTA will provide limited stop bus service between Catonsville and Essex beginning in August 2023 24 Officials have not yet decided whether the route will be run by bus rapid transit or light rail 25 MTA released six new alternative routes for the project that September two alternatives featured tunnel segments and alignments similar to the canceled 2009 route 26 See also editGreen Line a proposed rail line in Baltimore from Johns Hopkins Hospital to Morgan State University Yellow Line a proposed rail line from Hunt Valley to Columbia Town Center Charles Street Trolley a proposed trolley line in northern Baltimore backed by a non MTA group References edit a b c Campbell Colin September 11 2020 Five years later many across Baltimore bitterly lament Gov Hogan s decision to kill the Red Line light rail Baltimore Sun Retrieved November 14 2021 a b Michael Dresser June 25 2015 Hogan says no to Red Line yes to Purple The Baltimore Sun Retrieved June 25 2015 Kilgore Ed January 8 2020 Maryland Governor Accused of Rerouting State Funds to Benefit His Business Intelligencer Retrieved November 14 2021 a b Rivera Yvette January 19 2017 In response to two separate complaints PDF Letter to Larry Hogan and Pete K Rahn a b Federal officials close civil rights complaint about Baltimore light rail project Washington Post Retrieved August 3 2017 Hogan says no to Red Line yes to Purple Archived from the original on July 13 2018 Retrieved August 4 2017 Maryland Transit Administration Baltimore Region Rail System Plan Final Report PDF Retrieved September 22 2014 a b Baltimore Red Line Mayor s Red Line information site Retrieved 2010 1 8 a b Dori Berman January 13 2006 New subway back in play PDF Daily Record Retrieved February 2 2010 Michael Dresser June 28 2011 Red Line gets a qualified go ahead The Baltimore Sun p 1 Cox Erin Laris Michael June 16 2023 Wes Moore relaunches Baltimore s Red Line but big questions remain Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 24 2023 a b BALTIMORE REGIONAL INITIATIVE DEVELOPING GENUINE EQUALITY INC and EARL ANDREWS Individually vs STATE OF MARYLAND MARYLAND DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION MARYLAND TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION and MARYLAND STATE HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 28 2017 Retrieved January 30 2017 Civil Rights Groups Challenge Maryland Gov Hogan s Red Line Cancellation Streetsblog USA December 21 2015 Retrieved April 26 2021 a b Linderman Juliet January 23 2017 DOT expands investigation into canceled rail line in MD The Washington Times Associated Press Duncan Ian January 23 2017 On last day Obama administration announced civil rights review of Maryland transportation baltimoresun com Retrieved April 26 2021 a b Senate Bill 873 2006 Maryland Department of Legislative Services Library amp Information Service Retrieved 2010 01 29 a b House Bill 1309 2006 Maryland Department of Legislative Services Library amp Information Service Retrieved 2010 01 29 Governor s veto letter May 26 2006 retrieved 2010 1 29 Executive Orders 2006 Department of Legislative Services archives See p 13 for Executive Order 01 01 2006 04 Retrieved 2010 01 29 Red Line Now PAC Retrieved September 26 2011 non primary source needed Infrastructure bill would boost Metro funding reopen door to Baltimore s Red Line project Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved November 14 2021 Wood Pamela June 15 2023 Gov Moore relaunches planning for Red Line transit in Baltimore Baltimore Banner Retrieved June 15 2023 Ng Greg June 15 2023 Moore relaunches Red Line east west transit project in Baltimore WBAL Retrieved June 15 2023 Holt Alex June 21 2023 Red Line redemption What Governor Moore s announcement means for Baltimore ggwash org Retrieved June 24 2023 Olaniran Christian June 15 2023 Governor Moore announces plan to revive Baltimore Red Line project CBS Baltimore www cbsnews com Retrieved June 15 2023 Olaniran Christian September 28 2023 MTA unveils alternative routes for Red Line transit project CBS News Baltimore Retrieved November 4 2023 External links editRed Line Political Action Committee Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red Line Baltimore amp oldid 1222217675, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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