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MARC Train

MARC (Maryland Area Rail Commuter[4]) is a commuter rail system in the Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area. MARC (reporting mark MARC) is administered by the Maryland Transit Administration (MTA) and operated under contract by Alstom and Amtrak on track owned by CSX Transportation (CSXT) and Amtrak.[5] In 2021, the system had a ridership of 1,291,900, or about 9,100 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2022, much less than the pre-pandemic daily ridership of 40,000 per weekday.[6]

Maryland Area Regional Commuter Rail
A MARC HHP-8 leads an express train through Odenton
Overview
OwnerMaryland Transit Administration
LocaleBaltimore–Washington metropolitan area
Transit typeCommuter rail
Number of lines3
Number of stations42
Daily ridership9,100 (weekdays, Q3 2022)[1]
Annual ridership1,291,900 (2021)[2]
Chief executiveHolly Arnold[3]
Websitemta.maryland.gov/marc-train
Operation
Began operation1984; 39 years ago (1984) (as Maryland Rail Commuter)
Operator(s)Alstom (Camden and Brunswick Lines)
Amtrak (Penn Line)
Reporting marksMARC
Infrastructure manager(s)Amtrak, CSX
Technical
System length187 mi (301 km)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line, 12 kV, 25 Hz AC (Penn Line)
Top speed125 mph (201 km/h)

With trains reaching speeds of 125 miles per hour (201 km/h), MARC has the highest top speed of any commuter railroad in the United States.[7]

Operations

MARC has three lines that radiate from Union Station in Washington, D.C.: the Brunswick Line (18 weekday trains), the Camden Line (21 weekday trains), and the Penn Line (58 weekday trains). The Penn Line is the only line with weekend service, having 18 trains on Saturdays and 12 on Sundays. Service is reduced or suspended on certain Federal holidays.

All MARC trains operate in push-pull mode. The cab car is typically on the end of the train closest to Washington; on trains with diesel locomotives, this arrangement keeps exhaust further away from Union Station's terminal. Train lengths can vary from the typical three to five cars to 10 cars on Penn Line rush hour trains. Shorter trains typically consist of all single level or all bilevel passenger cars while longer trains may have a combination.

The MTA contracts out operations and maintenance of MARC trains to Amtrak for the Penn Line and Alstom for the Brunswick Line and Camden Line. As of March 2022, with the looming expiration of the Alstom contract, the MTA is soliciting proposals for operations and maintenance of the Brunswick and Camden lines.[8]

Brunswick Line

The Brunswick Line is a 74-mile (119 km) line that runs on CSX-owned tracks between Washington, D.C., and Martinsburg, West Virginia, with a 14-mile (23 km) branch to Frederick, Maryland. It is descended from Baltimore & Ohio Railroad (B&O) commuter service between Washington and its northern and western suburbs.

Camden Line

The Camden Line is a 39-mile (63 km) line that runs on CSX-owned tracks between Washington, D.C., and Camden Station in Baltimore. It is descended from B&O commuter routes running between Washington and Baltimore. The B&O began operating over portions of this route in 1830, making it one of the oldest passenger rail lines in the U.S. still in operation.[9]

Penn Line

The Penn Line is a 77-mile (124 km) line that runs along the far southern leg of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor between Washington, D.C., and Perryville, Maryland, via Baltimore Penn Station. Most trains operate along a 39-mile (63 km) stretch between Washington and Baltimore Penn, with limited service to Martin State Airport and Perryville. It is the fastest commuter rail line in North America, with equipment capable of operating at speeds up to 125 miles per hour (201 km/h).[7] Descended from Washington-Baltimore commuter routes operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad (hence the name), it is by far the busiest line, with almost twice as many trains and twice as many passengers as the other two lines combined. The Penn Line is the only line that operates on weekends.

Special Western Maryland service

MARC has run special weekend trips to and from Cumberland, Maryland for Western Maryland residents to attend sporting events in the Baltimore/Washington area, such as Baltimore Orioles, Baltimore Ravens, Washington Nationals or Washington Commanders games, and for Baltimore/Washington residents to attend Railfest in Cumberland and enjoy the scenic mountains and fall foliage of Western Maryland.[10]

Intermodal connections

Nearly all stations served by MARC connect with local bus or Metrobus service. Washington Union Station, New Carrollton, College Park, Greenbelt, Silver Spring and Rockville offer connections to the Metrorail subway; Baltimore Penn Station and Camden Station both offer connections to the Baltimore Light RailLink. Additionally, Washington Union Station and Baltimore Penn are the second- and eighth-busiest Amtrak stations in the country, respectively. BWI Airport, Aberdeen, New Carrollton, Rockville, Harpers Ferry and Martinsburg are shared with Amtrak as well. Washington Union Station also offers a connection to the VRE network into Northern Virginia.

History

 
A MARC EMD F7 APCU leads a service through Point of Rocks in 1987.

Origins

All three MARC lines date from the 19th century. Service on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) between Baltimore and Ellicott City began on May 24, 1830, over part of what is now the Camden Line.[11] B&O service between Baltimore and Washington, the modern Camden Line route, began on August 25, 1835.[9]

The B&O's main line was extended to Frederick Junction (with a branch to Frederick) in 1831, to Point of Rocks in 1832, to Brunswick and Harpers Ferry in 1834, and Martinsburg in 1842. The B&O completed its Metropolitan Branch in 1873; most service from Martinsburg and Frederick was diverted onto the Metropolitan Branch to Washington and the old main line became a secondary route. This established the basic route for what would become the Brunswick Line.

The Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad (PW&B) completed its line between Baltimore and Philadelphia in December 1838, save for the ferry across the Susquehanna River, which was not bridged until the 1860s. Although the B&O was chartered with the unspoken assumption that no competing line would be built between Baltimore and Washington, the Pennsylvania Railroad-owned Baltimore and Potomac Railroad (B&P) was completed between the two cities in 1872.[12] The PW&B was initially hostile to the Pennsylvania (PRR); however, the PRR acquired it in a stock battle with the B&O in 1881. The PW&B soon began operating PRR through service – the ancestor of Penn Line service – between Washington and Philadelphia in conjunction with the B&P. Meanwhile, the PRR ended B&O trackage rights over the PW&B in 1884, forcing it to open its own parallel route in 1886. The PW&B and the B&P were combined into the PRR's Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad in 1902.[13]

The B&O ended local service on the Frederick Branch in November 1949. All B&O passenger service between Baltimore and Philadelphia ended in 1958; local service from Washington was curtailed to Camden Station. The B&O continued to offer local service to Brunswick plus long-distance service, while the PRR operated a mix of local, intercity, and long-distance service on the Northeast Corridor. Local service north of Baltimore on the PRR ended around 1964.

Public takeover

 
A B&O train near the Capital Beltway in 1970, running on what is now the Camden Line
 
A Penn Central train near the Beltway in 1970, running on what is now the Penn Line

In the mid-20th century, passenger rail service declined owing to a variety of factors – particularly the advent of the automobile – even while commuting between suburban locations and urban business districts remained common. In 1968, the PRR folded into Penn Central, which took over its passenger operations.[14] On May 1, 1971, Amtrak took over most intercity passenger service in the United States, including some of Penn Central's former routes.[15] The B&O and Penn Central continued to operate their Washington–Baltimore and Washington–Brunswick commuter routes without subsidies.[16]

Amtrak initially operated (with federal subsidy) the Washington–Parkersburg West Virginian (later renamed Potomac Turbo then Potomac Special). The Potomac Special was cut back to a 146-mile (235 km) commuter-based Washington–Cumberland trip, the Blue Ridge, on May 7, 1973. In early 1974, the B&O threatened to discontinue its remaining unsubsidized commuter services, citing heavy losses. On March 1, 1974, the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) began a 50% subsidy of the B&O's Washington–Brunswick and Washington–Baltimore service – the first state-sponsored commuter rail service to Washington.[17][18] In 1975, the state signed an operating agreement with the B&O, under which the state provided rolling stock and reimbursed the railroad for all operating losses.[18] On October 31, 1976, Amtrak introduced the Washington–Cincinnati Shenandoah and cut the Blue Ridge to a 73-mile (117 km) Washington–Martinsburg trip.[19] In the late 1970s, West Virginia began to fund the B&O shuttles between Brunswick and Martinsburg; the shuttles were soon incorporated as extensions of Brunswick service in order to secure Urban Mass Transportation Administration subsidies.[20] In December 1981, MDOT purchased 22 ex-PRR coaches for use on B&O lines.[21] The Maryland State Railroad Administration (SRA) was established in 1986 to administer contracts, procure rolling stock, and oversee short line railroads in the state.[18]

Conrail took over the unsubsidized ex-PRR Baltimore–Washington service from Penn Central at its creation on April 1, 1976.[22] MDOT began subsidizing that service after Conrail threatened to discontinue service on April 1, 1977.[23] Prior to 1978, most ex-PRR Baltimore–Washington service was operated by aging MP54 electric multiple units, most dating back to the line's 1933 electrification. In 1978, Amtrak and the City of Baltimore negotiated with the New Jersey Department of Transportation to lease a number of new Arrow railcars to replace the MP54s.[24] With funding from Pennsylvania and Maryland, Amtrak used some of the cars to initiate a Philadelphia–Washington commuter trip, the Chesapeake, on April 30, 1978.[24] The Chesapeake stopped at some local stations but fewer than the Conrail service; it provided commuter service from north of Baltimore for the first time since the 1960s.

BWI Rail Station opened for Amtrak and Conrail trains on October 26, 1980.[25] In August 1982, Conrail trains began stopping at Capital Beltway station, used by intercity trains since 1970. Lanham and Landover stations were closed.[26] Two additional round trips – one in the peak direction, and one reverse for commuters working in Baltimore – were added on July 5, 1983.[27] On October 30, 1983, Amtrak and MARC moved from Capital Beltway into a new platform and waiting room at nearby New Carrollton station, served by Metro since 1978.[28][29][30] The Edmondson Avenue and Frederick Road stops in Baltimore were replaced by West Baltimore station on April 30, 1984.[31]

In 1981, MDOT began installing highway signs to point drivers to commuter rail stations.[32] The Northeast Rail Service Act of 1981 allowed Conrail to shed its commuter rail operations in 1983 in order to focus on its more profitable freight operations.[33] On January 1, 1983, public operators (including Metro-North Railroad, NJ Transit, and SEPTA Regional Rail) took over Conrail commuter rail systems in the Northeast.[34] MDOT began paying Amtrak to run the ex-PRR Washington–Baltimore service.[18][21] That service was branded as AMDOT (Amtrak Maryland Department of Transportation).[35] In October 1983, with low patronage and largely duplicated by the MDOT-subsidized service, the Chesapeake was discontinued. In 1984, the SRA introduced a unified brand for its three subsidized lines, MARC (originally short for Maryland Rail Commuter, later modified to Maryland Area Rail Commuter). Operations remained the same, but public-facing elements like schedules and crew uniforms were consolidated under the new name.[18][21] MARC soon began calling its three lines the Penn Line, Camden Line, and Brunswick Line.

Improved service

 
MARC train led by an EMD E9 (former Burlington Northern) at Jessup in 1994

In October 1986, MARC began testing an Amtrak AEM-7 locomotive, looking to use push-pull trains to replace the Arrows.[21] On February 27, 1989, MARC increased Washington–Baltimore service from 7 to 13 weekday round trips. A new park-and-ride station opened at Bowie State (site of Jericho Park station, closed in 1981) and Bowie station was closed.[21] Two more round trips were added in May 1989.[21]

On May 1, 1991, MARC service was extended north from Baltimore to Perryville with intermediate stops at Martin State Airport, Edgewood, and Aberdeen.[36] Between 1988 and 1993, MARC expanded service from 34 to 70 total daily trips across the system.[37] In 1995, 800 parking spaces were added to Odenton station.[38]

From 1989 to 1996, the Camden Line had high ridership growth and substantial changes to its stations. A new station at Savage just off Route 32 was opened on July 31, 1989.[39] MARC began service to Greenbelt station on May 3, 1993, seven months before Metro began serving the station.[40] On January 31, 1994, MARC expanded midday service on the Camden and Brunswick lines, opened Laurel Race Track station to relieve a parking shortage at Laurel station, and closed the underused Berwyn station on the Camden Line.[41] On December 12, 1994, Muirkirk station (originally planned as South Laurel) was opened to reduce congestion on nearby Route 1.[42] In 1996, a $1.2 million project added 600 parking spaces at Savage station to relieve crowding.[38] In July 1996, the Elkridge station was closed and replaced with Dorsey station, which has a larger parking area and a dedicated interchange with Route 100.[43][44]

On April 30, 1987, the B&O was merged into CSX. CSX continued to operate Camden and Brunswick Line service.[21] On July 6, 1987, MARC opened Metropolitan Grove station – the first new station on the Brunswick line in over a century.[45][46]

1996 Silver Spring collision

 
MARC Memorial in the grounds of the Brunswick train station.

On February 16, 1996, during the Friday evening rush hour, an eastbound train headed to Washington Union Station via the Brunswick Line collided with the westbound Amtrak Capitol Limited headed to Chicago via Pittsburgh. The collision occurred at Georgetown Junction on a snow-swept stretch of track just west of Silver Spring, Maryland. The crash left 11 people dead aboard the MARC train. Three died of injuries suffered in the impact alone, with the rest succumbing to the ensuing smoke and flames or a combination of the two. Engineer Ricky Orr and conductors Jimmy Major Jr. and Jim Quillen were among the victims. Eight Jobs Corps students also were killed during the accident.

The NTSB report concluded that the MARC crew apparently forgot the approach signal aspect of the Kensington color-position signal after making a flag stop at Kensington station. The MARC train was operating in push mode with the cab control car out front. The Amtrak locomotives were in the crossover at the time of the collision; the MARC cab control car collided with the lead Amtrak unit, F40PH #255, rupturing its fuel tank and igniting the fire that caused most of the casualties. The second unit was a GE Genesis P40DC #811, a newer unit that has a fuel tank that is shielded in the center of the frame. The official investigation also suggests that the accident might have been prevented if a human-factors analysis had been conducted when modifications to the track signaling system were made in 1992 with the closing of nearby QN tower.

Operations and maintenance contracting controversy

In June 2010, the MTA began looking for a new operations and maintenance contractor to replace CSX Transportation for the Camden and Brunswick lines.[47]

Controversy arose when the French-owned and Montgomery County, Maryland-based Keolis (already operating Virginia Railway Express trains) was the only bidder for the contract. The bidding process was suspended in late 2010 due to lack of competition. Before bidding reopened in 2011, Maryland passed a law (at the request of Leo Bretholz and other Holocaust survivors) requiring Keolis's majority owner, French state railway company SNCF,[48] to fully disclose its role in transporting Jews to concentration camps during World War II (while SNCF was under control of the Nazi government). This disclosure would need to meet the satisfaction of the Maryland state archivist before Keolis would be allowed to place a bid for MARC service. Keolis faced similar issues while bidding for VRE operations in 2009 before eventually being awarded the contract.

Keolis and SNCF lawyers claimed that all documentation required by the law had been produced long before.[49] This was also asserted by Don Phillips in the July 2011 issue of Trains Magazine. Phillips states that a full 914-page independent report and complete history of SNCF's role in the Holocaust, released in 1996, is currently being translated into English.[50] Phillips cites from the publicly available English introduction to the report, noting that while some SNCF workers worked with the Nazis, acts of sabotage were frequent, and the Nazis shot 819 SNCF workers for refusing to carry out the rail orders of the government. An additional 1200 railway workers were themselves sent to concentration camps over SNCF rails. Phillips also notes that SNCF does business with the Israel rail system and works without government prompting to educate the current generation about the war and Holocaust.

In June 2011, the future of Keolis's ability to bid on the MARC contract remained up in the air with the new disclosure law in place. No other bidder had emerged to replace CSXT. On June 5, 2011, The Washington Post ran an editorial critical of the disclosure law. The Post claimed that SNCF has been working for years on digitizing its records, and the Maryland law may require items or formats counter to SNCF's current system and/or French law. The article also stated that some in the Maryland Attorney General's Office worried the law was not Constitutional, may risk retaliation towards Maryland firms overseas, and may risk federal funding for Maryland "by imposing arbitrary procurement demands on a single company".[51][52]

MTA issued a new RFP for the operations and maintenance of MARC services on the Brunswick and Camden Lines on July 14, 2011, with a deadline for proposals on November 21, 2011. The terms specified a nearly six-year base contract with a five-year renewal option.[53] On October 17, 2012, the $204 million contract was awarded to the Canadian company Bombardier Transportation,[54] effectively ending the Keolis controversy. The pre-service transition period began on the Thursday of that week, during which time CSXT continued to operate MARC trains.[54][55] The five-year renewal was exercised in 2018.[56] The contract passed to Alstom in 2021 when they purchased Bombardier.

Rolling stock

The following tables summarize current and former MARC rolling stock.[57]

Locomotives

Current MARC Locomotives
Manufacturer Model Quantity Unit Numbers Image Notes
EMD GP39H-2 6 70–75   Entered service in 1988; used as spare engines. As of 2022, no. 72 is out of service and has entered a rebuilding program in Georgia. 74 is still in service pending rebuilding. 70, 71, 73, and 75 have been rebuilt and will re-enter service soon.
GP40PH-2A 1 4145 Purchased from New Jersey Transit in 2018; often used as a spare engine.
GP40WH-2 1 68   Entered service in 1992; used for non-revenue work duty, rescue use, and occasionally as a spare engine.
Bombardier– Alstom HHP-8 6 4910–4915  

Entered service in 1998; 125 mph (201 km/h) maximum speed; refurbished 2017–2018.

MPI MP36PH-3C 26 10–35  

Entered service 2009–2011; replaced GP40WH-2s[58]

Siemens SC-44 8[59] 80–87   Entered service in 2018; replaced AEM-7s; 125 mph (201 km/h) maximum speed[60][61]
Former MARC Locomotives
Manufacturer Model Quantity Unit Numbers Image Notes
EMD/ASEA AEM-7 4 4900–4903  

Retired as of April 2017; units placed in storage,[62] pending disposition

EMD GP40WH-2 19 51–67, 69  

Replaced by MP36PH-3Cs; nos. 67–69 were rebuilt from GP40 work locomotives 30–32; no. 68 continues in non-revenue work duty and rescue use; several units rebuilt into MPI MP32PH-Q for Central Florida's SunRail commuter train; remaining units in Columbia, Pennsylvania pending rebuild by MPI or Progress Rail, 69 was sold to CSX and renumbered 9969. 57 sold to PNLX in 2022 [63]

E9AM 10 60–69   Ex-Burlington Northern Railroad; originally built as E8As; nos. 67–68 renumbered to 91–92.
F9PH 5 81–85   Ex-Baltimore and Ohio Railroad; rebuilt by Morrison-Knudsen from former F7 locomotives; former MDOT 7181–7185.
F7 APCU 1 7100   Ex-Baltimore & Ohio Railroad F7 #4553, converted to an APCU and equipped with a generator for head-end power; occasionally substituted for a cab car in the early 2000s; preserved at the B&O Railroad Museum and used on the museum's railroad tour[64][65]

Passenger cars

Current MARC Passenger Cars
Manufacturer Model Quantity When Delivered Car Numbers Image Notes
Sumitomo/​Nippon Sharyo MARC IIA 4 coaches 1985–1987 Coaches: 7711–7714   Single level coaches. 7711-7714 are "Bike Cars" with 16 bike racks and 22 passenger seats
MARC IIB
  • 28 coaches
  • 18 cab cars
1991–1993 Coaches: 7716–7735, 7791–7799
Cabs: 7757–7762
Single level; overhauled in 2009–2011 by Bombardier; no. 7720 destroyed in 1996 Silver Spring collision
Kawasaki MARC III
  • 49 coaches
  • 14 cab cars
1999–2001 Coaches: 7800–7834, 7870–7876, 7890–7896
Cabs: 7845–7858
  MARC's first bilevel cars;[66] overhauled in 2018–2020 by Bombardier;[67][60] nos. 7826–7834 and 7855–7858 are ex-VRE purchased in 2000, acquired by MARC in 2008[68]
Bombardier MARC IV
  • 89 coaches
  • 20 cab cars
2014 Coaches: 8000–8038, 8060-8099
Cabs: 8039–8059
  Bombardier "MultiLevels"[69]
Former MARC Passenger Cars
Manufacturer Model Quantity When Delivered Car Numbers Image Notes
Budd RDC 16 1984 1, 3, 8, 9, 11, 12, 20, 22, 23, 800, 9801, 9802, 9805, 9918, 9921, 9941   Self-propelled cars inherited from various railroads
MARC I 22 1984 100–114, 130–134, 140–149, 150–154,160–169, 190–191[70]   Ex-Pennsylvania Railroad, Norfolk and Western Railway, NJ Transit, and SEMTA single level coaches; some used at the B&O Railroad Museum, others sold to private operators
Sumitomo/ Nippon Sharyo MARC IIA 10 cars 11 cab cars 1985–1987 Coaches: 7700-7710, 7715

Cabs: 7745–7756

  Single level coaches; nos. 7709 and 7752 destroyed in 1996 Silver Spring train collision; others retired in 2015–16 after being replaced by Bombardier Multilevel cars
Pullman Standard Gallery cars 12 2004 7900–7911   Ex-Metra gallery bilevel coaches often used on the Brunswick Line; replaced by Bombardier MARC IV in early 2015 and returned to Metra[71]

Proposals for service expansion

2007 plan

In the first decade of the 21st century, MARC ridership increased significantly, and the system neared capacity for its current configuration. With the area population growing and the BRAC process poised to bring new jobs to Aberdeen Proving Ground and Ft. Meade, both near MARC stations, the state saw the need to expand service. In September 2007, MTA Maryland unveiled an ambitious 30-year plan of system improvements. Though funding sources had not been established at that time, the plan represented the state's goals of increasing capacity and flexibility. Proposed improvements included:[72]

  • Acquisition of new equipment. 54 Bombardier MultiLevels were ordered to replace aging single-level cars.
  • Weekend service on the Penn Line. Service began on December 7, 2013, between Baltimore and Washington, D.C., with some trips extending to Martin State Airport. There are nine round trips on Saturdays (three begin and three then later end at Martin State Airport) and 6 round trips on Sundays (two begin and two then later end at Martin State Airport).[73]
  • Increased mid-day service and reverse commute service on the Camden and Brunswick Lines. As of 2015, there is a somewhat limited reverse commute service in effect on the Camden Line.
  • Extension of service past Union Station in Washington to L'Enfant and to Northern Virginia along tracks used by VRE trains, thus relieving pressure on the Washington Metro
  • More daily trips east of Baltimore's Penn Station, including improved service to Aberdeen Proving Ground
  • Service beyond Perryville to Newark or Wilmington in Delaware, providing a connection to SEPTA commuter trains to Philadelphia and beyond
  • New or expanded tunnels along the Northeast Corridor in Baltimore
  • New stations in Baltimore, providing direct connections with the Metro Subway, and service to Johns Hopkins Hospital and Bayview Medical Center
  • Rapid transit-like service through Baltimore

Some of the proposals were foreseen to take years or decades to implement, however others such as Penn Line weekend service could have begun in a matter of months, yet budgetary shortfalls prevented this. In Spring 2009, to offset such budget shortfalls, ticket sales employees at most non-Amtrak stations were replaced with Amtrak "Quik-Trak" touchscreen ticket machines, and some train services were eliminated or scaled back. Ticket machines were also added to stations that were not previously staffed, such as Halethorpe. The only remaining staffed stations, Odenton and Frederick, remained staffed by Commuter Direct.[74][75]

2010s: Extension to Delaware and SEPTA

In 2017, the Wilmington Area Planning Council submitted ridership studies to Cecil County, the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission, SEPTA and the Delaware Department of Transportation for the extension of MARC service from Perryville via Elkton[76] to Newark, Delaware, and possibly Wilmington.[77] The section from Perryville to Newark is the one of only three along the Northeast Corridor not covered by commuter train service (the others are between New London, Connecticut, and Wickford Junction, Rhode Island as well as New York Penn Station and New Rochelle, New York). The Route 5 bus operated by Cecil Transit formerly connected the two stations.[78]

References

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  37. ^ Lee, Edward (July 24, 1993). "MARC plans to raise fares 19 percent boost to be proposed". The Baltimore Sun.
  38. ^ a b Hedgpeth, Dana (June 22, 1995). "600 spaces to be added to MARC station parking lot by spring". The Baltimore Sun.
  39. ^ Worden, Amy (August 3, 1989). "Columbia Commuters Get a Station Break: Convenience Touted at New MARC Stop in Savage Station Opens in Savage". The Washington Post. ProQuest 139977789.
  40. ^ Meyer, Eugene L. (December 10, 1993). "LUKEWARM THRILL AT END OF LINE". The Washington Post.
  41. ^ Jensen, Peter (January 18, 1994). "MARC is off to the races Jan. 31". The Baltimore Sun.
  42. ^ Fehr, Stephen (December 12, 1994). "Commuter Lines Add Stations in Va. and Md". The Washington Post. p. D3. ProQuest 757194485.
  43. ^ Spellmann, Karyn (July 8, 1996). . The Washington Times. Archived from the original on September 11, 2016 – via Highbeam Research.
  44. ^ Logan, Mary (December 1, 2005). (PDF). Baltimore Metropolitan Council. p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 27, 2010.
  45. ^ "News and Upcoming Events" (PDF). Transit Times. Action Committee for Transit. 1 (2). Summer 1987.
  46. ^ "Md. Commuters Get Another Way to Go". The Washington Post. July 9, 1987. ProQuest 139235759.
  47. ^ "MARC to seek new operator for CSX-run routes". Trains Magazine. June 14, 2010. Retrieved June 14, 2010.
  48. ^ Shaver, Katherine (July 7, 2010). "Holocaust group faults VRE contract". The Washington Post.
  49. ^ "No way to run a railroad". WBAL TV. March 3, 2011. Retrieved September 1, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  50. ^ Phillips, Don (July 2011). "Lawsuits, Commuter Trains and the Holocaust". Trains. p. 11.
  51. ^ Lind, Michael (June 5, 2011). "No way to run a railroad". The Washington Post.
  52. ^ Rubin, Neil (February 10, 2012). "State archivist SNCF archives might not be enough". Baltimore Jewish Times.
  53. ^ Sohr, Nicholas (November 21, 2011). "MD MTA Keolis mum on bids to run MARC lines". The Daily Record via masstransitmag.com.
  54. ^ a b Weir, Kytja (October 17, 2012). "Bombardier wins $204m MARC commuter train contract". The Washington Examiner. Retrieved October 28, 2012.
  55. ^ Shaver, Katherine (October 17, 2012). "New company to operate some MARC trains". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 18, 2012.
  56. ^ Vantuono, William (March 26, 2018). "MARC extends Bombardier O&M contract". Railway Age. Retrieved March 14, 2022.
  57. ^ "Maryland Rail Commuter Roster". www.thedieselshop.us. Retrieved May 17, 2018.
  58. ^ . MTA Maryland Service Information. Archived from the original on March 31, 2009. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  59. ^ "Board Of Public Works Approves $58 Million Contract For Eight MARC Locomotives" (Press release). Baltimore, Maryland: Maryland Transit Administration. September 17, 2015. Retrieved January 23, 2018.
  60. ^ a b "MARC Riders Advisory Council Meeting Summary Minutes" (PDF). MTA Maryland. January 18, 2018. Retrieved June 2, 2019.
  61. ^ "Penn Line schedule change: April 23". MTA Maryland. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  62. ^ "MARC Riders Advisory Council Meeting Minutes" (PDF). MTA Maryland. April 20, 2017. Retrieved June 2, 2019.
  63. ^ "North Pole Express 2022 - Owosso to Ashley, MI - 12/10/22". YouTube.
  64. ^ "The MARC 7100 Returns! (November 1999 CSX Railfan Magazine)". TrainWeb. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on May 17, 2018. Retrieved May 17, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  66. ^ "Maryland Mass Transit Administration MARC-III Bi-level Coaches". www.kawasakirailcar.com. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  67. ^ "MARC Train Awards $36.8 Million Contract to Bombardier Transportation to Overhaul 63 Bi-Level Rail Cars" (Press release). Baltimore, MD: Maryland Transit Administration. February 4, 2016.
  68. ^ Michael Dresser (August 20, 2008). "New cars may ease MARC crowding". The Baltimore Sun. pp. 1B, 6B.
  69. ^ "Governor O'Malley Announces Marc to Purchase 54 Multi-level Passenger Cars". MTA Maryland. November 2, 2011. Retrieved September 1, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  70. ^ Amtrak Employee Timetable, 1990
  71. ^ Starcic, Janna (June 17, 2016). "Maryland's MARC Railroad Upgrades Fleet, Service to Bolster Ridership". Metro. Retrieved February 4, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  72. ^ (PDF). MTA Maryland. September 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 27, 2009. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  73. ^ "MARC Penn Line Full Timetable" (PDF). Maryland Transit Administration. March 4, 2019. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  74. ^ "Odenton station is now a Commuter Direct Store". MTA Maryland. September 2009.
  75. ^ "Commuter Direct Store Locations". Commuter Direct. March 2015.
  76. ^ Kroner, Brad (April 28, 2017). "MARC stop in Elkton moves forward, Perryville MARC facility stalls". Cecil Whig. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
  77. ^ Kroner, Brad (March 7, 2017). "Study to examine extending MARC line to Newark". Newark Post (Delaware). Retrieved March 4, 2019.
  78. ^ . Cecil Transit. Archived from the original on March 6, 2019. Retrieved March 4, 2019.

External links

Route map:

KML is from Wikidata
  • Maryland Transit Administration
  • Baltimore Area Transit & MARC System Map
  • MARC Current Train Status Using GPS Technology

marc, train, marc, maryland, area, rail, commuter, commuter, rail, system, baltimore, washington, metropolitan, area, marc, reporting, mark, marc, administered, maryland, transit, administration, operated, under, contract, alstom, amtrak, track, owned, transpo. MARC Maryland Area Rail Commuter 4 is a commuter rail system in the Baltimore Washington metropolitan area MARC reporting mark MARC is administered by the Maryland Transit Administration MTA and operated under contract by Alstom and Amtrak on track owned by CSX Transportation CSXT and Amtrak 5 In 2021 the system had a ridership of 1 291 900 or about 9 100 per weekday as of the third quarter of 2022 much less than the pre pandemic daily ridership of 40 000 per weekday 6 Maryland Area Regional Commuter RailA MARC HHP 8 leads an express train through OdentonOverviewOwnerMaryland Transit AdministrationLocaleBaltimore Washington metropolitan areaTransit typeCommuter railNumber of lines3Number of stations42Daily ridership9 100 weekdays Q3 2022 1 Annual ridership1 291 900 2021 2 Chief executiveHolly Arnold 3 Websitemta maryland gov marc trainOperationBegan operation1984 39 years ago 1984 as Maryland Rail Commuter Operator s Alstom Camden and Brunswick Lines Amtrak Penn Line Reporting marksMARCInfrastructure manager s Amtrak CSXTechnicalSystem length187 mi 301 km Track gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeElectrificationOverhead line 12 kV 25 Hz AC Penn Line Top speed125 mph 201 km h System mapMARC operates the Brunswick Line orange Camden Line green and Penn Line purple vteMARC TrainLegend Brunswick Line Amtrakto ChicagoMartinsburgDuffieldsHarpers FerryWest VirginiaMarylandPotomac RiverSouth Mountain TunnelBrunswickCatoctin TunnelPoint of Rocks TunnelPoint of RocksMonocacy FrederickMonocacy RiverDickersonBarnesville Penn Line Boyds PerryvilleGermantown Susquehanna RiverMetropolitan Grove AberdeenGaithersburg Bush RiverWashington Grove EdgewoodRockville Gunpowder RiverGarrett Park Martin AirportKensington Back RiverSilver Spring Union TunnelPenn StationB amp P TunnelWest Baltimore Camden Line Frederick Roadclosed 1984 Camden StationHalethorpe Gwynns FallsSt DenisPatapsco River Patapsco RiverElkridgeclosed 1996Dorsey BWI AirportJessupSavage OdentonLaurel Race TrackPatuxent River Bowie StateLaurel BowieclosedMuirkirk SeabrookGreenbelt LanhamclosedBerwynclosed 1991 Capital BeltwayclosedCollege Park New CarrolltonRiverdale LandoverclosedHyattsvilleclosed c 1980s MarylandWashington D C Northwest BranchAnacostia River Anacostia RiverMarylandWashington D C Union StationWith trains reaching speeds of 125 miles per hour 201 km h MARC has the highest top speed of any commuter railroad in the United States 7 Contents 1 Operations 1 1 Brunswick Line 1 2 Camden Line 1 3 Penn Line 1 4 Special Western Maryland service 1 5 Intermodal connections 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 Public takeover 2 3 Improved service 2 4 1996 Silver Spring collision 2 5 Operations and maintenance contracting controversy 3 Rolling stock 3 1 Locomotives 3 2 Passenger cars 4 Proposals for service expansion 4 1 2007 plan 4 2 2010s Extension to Delaware and SEPTA 5 References 6 External linksOperations EditMARC has three lines that radiate from Union Station in Washington D C the Brunswick Line 18 weekday trains the Camden Line 21 weekday trains and the Penn Line 58 weekday trains The Penn Line is the only line with weekend service having 18 trains on Saturdays and 12 on Sundays Service is reduced or suspended on certain Federal holidays All MARC trains operate in push pull mode The cab car is typically on the end of the train closest to Washington on trains with diesel locomotives this arrangement keeps exhaust further away from Union Station s terminal Train lengths can vary from the typical three to five cars to 10 cars on Penn Line rush hour trains Shorter trains typically consist of all single level or all bilevel passenger cars while longer trains may have a combination The MTA contracts out operations and maintenance of MARC trains to Amtrak for the Penn Line and Alstom for the Brunswick Line and Camden Line As of March 2022 update with the looming expiration of the Alstom contract the MTA is soliciting proposals for operations and maintenance of the Brunswick and Camden lines 8 Brunswick Line Edit Main article Brunswick Line The Brunswick Line is a 74 mile 119 km line that runs on CSX owned tracks between Washington D C and Martinsburg West Virginia with a 14 mile 23 km branch to Frederick Maryland It is descended from Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad B amp O commuter service between Washington and its northern and western suburbs Camden Line Edit Main article Camden Line The Camden Line is a 39 mile 63 km line that runs on CSX owned tracks between Washington D C and Camden Station in Baltimore It is descended from B amp O commuter routes running between Washington and Baltimore The B amp O began operating over portions of this route in 1830 making it one of the oldest passenger rail lines in the U S still in operation 9 Penn Line Edit Main article Penn Line The Penn Line is a 77 mile 124 km line that runs along the far southern leg of Amtrak s Northeast Corridor between Washington D C and Perryville Maryland via Baltimore Penn Station Most trains operate along a 39 mile 63 km stretch between Washington and Baltimore Penn with limited service to Martin State Airport and Perryville It is the fastest commuter rail line in North America with equipment capable of operating at speeds up to 125 miles per hour 201 km h 7 Descended from Washington Baltimore commuter routes operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad hence the name it is by far the busiest line with almost twice as many trains and twice as many passengers as the other two lines combined The Penn Line is the only line that operates on weekends Special Western Maryland service Edit MARC has run special weekend trips to and from Cumberland Maryland for Western Maryland residents to attend sporting events in the Baltimore Washington area such as Baltimore Orioles Baltimore Ravens Washington Nationals or Washington Commanders games and for Baltimore Washington residents to attend Railfest in Cumberland and enjoy the scenic mountains and fall foliage of Western Maryland 10 Intermodal connections Edit Nearly all stations served by MARC connect with local bus or Metrobus service Washington Union Station New Carrollton College Park Greenbelt Silver Spring and Rockville offer connections to the Metrorail subway Baltimore Penn Station and Camden Station both offer connections to the Baltimore Light RailLink Additionally Washington Union Station and Baltimore Penn are the second and eighth busiest Amtrak stations in the country respectively BWI Airport Aberdeen New Carrollton Rockville Harpers Ferry and Martinsburg are shared with Amtrak as well Washington Union Station also offers a connection to the VRE network into Northern Virginia History Edit A MARC EMD F7 APCU leads a service through Point of Rocks in 1987 Origins Edit All three MARC lines date from the 19th century Service on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O between Baltimore and Ellicott City began on May 24 1830 over part of what is now the Camden Line 11 B amp O service between Baltimore and Washington the modern Camden Line route began on August 25 1835 9 The B amp O s main line was extended to Frederick Junction with a branch to Frederick in 1831 to Point of Rocks in 1832 to Brunswick and Harpers Ferry in 1834 and Martinsburg in 1842 The B amp O completed its Metropolitan Branch in 1873 most service from Martinsburg and Frederick was diverted onto the Metropolitan Branch to Washington and the old main line became a secondary route This established the basic route for what would become the Brunswick Line The Philadelphia Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad PW amp B completed its line between Baltimore and Philadelphia in December 1838 save for the ferry across the Susquehanna River which was not bridged until the 1860s Although the B amp O was chartered with the unspoken assumption that no competing line would be built between Baltimore and Washington the Pennsylvania Railroad owned Baltimore and Potomac Railroad B amp P was completed between the two cities in 1872 12 The PW amp B was initially hostile to the Pennsylvania PRR however the PRR acquired it in a stock battle with the B amp O in 1881 The PW amp B soon began operating PRR through service the ancestor of Penn Line service between Washington and Philadelphia in conjunction with the B amp P Meanwhile the PRR ended B amp O trackage rights over the PW amp B in 1884 forcing it to open its own parallel route in 1886 The PW amp B and the B amp P were combined into the PRR s Philadelphia Baltimore and Washington Railroad in 1902 13 The B amp O ended local service on the Frederick Branch in November 1949 All B amp O passenger service between Baltimore and Philadelphia ended in 1958 local service from Washington was curtailed to Camden Station The B amp O continued to offer local service to Brunswick plus long distance service while the PRR operated a mix of local intercity and long distance service on the Northeast Corridor Local service north of Baltimore on the PRR ended around 1964 Public takeover Edit A B amp O train near the Capital Beltway in 1970 running on what is now the Camden Line A Penn Central train near the Beltway in 1970 running on what is now the Penn Line In the mid 20th century passenger rail service declined owing to a variety of factors particularly the advent of the automobile even while commuting between suburban locations and urban business districts remained common In 1968 the PRR folded into Penn Central which took over its passenger operations 14 On May 1 1971 Amtrak took over most intercity passenger service in the United States including some of Penn Central s former routes 15 The B amp O and Penn Central continued to operate their Washington Baltimore and Washington Brunswick commuter routes without subsidies 16 Amtrak initially operated with federal subsidy the Washington Parkersburg West Virginian later renamed Potomac Turbo then Potomac Special The Potomac Special was cut back to a 146 mile 235 km commuter based Washington Cumberland trip the Blue Ridge on May 7 1973 In early 1974 the B amp O threatened to discontinue its remaining unsubsidized commuter services citing heavy losses On March 1 1974 the Maryland Department of Transportation MDOT began a 50 subsidy of the B amp O s Washington Brunswick and Washington Baltimore service the first state sponsored commuter rail service to Washington 17 18 In 1975 the state signed an operating agreement with the B amp O under which the state provided rolling stock and reimbursed the railroad for all operating losses 18 On October 31 1976 Amtrak introduced the Washington Cincinnati Shenandoah and cut the Blue Ridge to a 73 mile 117 km Washington Martinsburg trip 19 In the late 1970s West Virginia began to fund the B amp O shuttles between Brunswick and Martinsburg the shuttles were soon incorporated as extensions of Brunswick service in order to secure Urban Mass Transportation Administration subsidies 20 In December 1981 MDOT purchased 22 ex PRR coaches for use on B amp O lines 21 The Maryland State Railroad Administration SRA was established in 1986 to administer contracts procure rolling stock and oversee short line railroads in the state 18 Conrail took over the unsubsidized ex PRR Baltimore Washington service from Penn Central at its creation on April 1 1976 22 MDOT began subsidizing that service after Conrail threatened to discontinue service on April 1 1977 23 Prior to 1978 most ex PRR Baltimore Washington service was operated by aging MP54 electric multiple units most dating back to the line s 1933 electrification In 1978 Amtrak and the City of Baltimore negotiated with the New Jersey Department of Transportation to lease a number of new Arrow railcars to replace the MP54s 24 With funding from Pennsylvania and Maryland Amtrak used some of the cars to initiate a Philadelphia Washington commuter trip the Chesapeake on April 30 1978 24 The Chesapeake stopped at some local stations but fewer than the Conrail service it provided commuter service from north of Baltimore for the first time since the 1960s BWI Rail Station opened for Amtrak and Conrail trains on October 26 1980 25 In August 1982 Conrail trains began stopping at Capital Beltway station used by intercity trains since 1970 Lanham and Landover stations were closed 26 Two additional round trips one in the peak direction and one reverse for commuters working in Baltimore were added on July 5 1983 27 On October 30 1983 Amtrak and MARC moved from Capital Beltway into a new platform and waiting room at nearby New Carrollton station served by Metro since 1978 28 29 30 The Edmondson Avenue and Frederick Road stops in Baltimore were replaced by West Baltimore station on April 30 1984 31 In 1981 MDOT began installing highway signs to point drivers to commuter rail stations 32 The Northeast Rail Service Act of 1981 allowed Conrail to shed its commuter rail operations in 1983 in order to focus on its more profitable freight operations 33 On January 1 1983 public operators including Metro North Railroad NJ Transit and SEPTA Regional Rail took over Conrail commuter rail systems in the Northeast 34 MDOT began paying Amtrak to run the ex PRR Washington Baltimore service 18 21 That service was branded as AMDOT Amtrak Maryland Department of Transportation 35 In October 1983 with low patronage and largely duplicated by the MDOT subsidized service the Chesapeake was discontinued In 1984 the SRA introduced a unified brand for its three subsidized lines MARC originally short for Maryland Rail Commuter later modified to Maryland Area Rail Commuter Operations remained the same but public facing elements like schedules and crew uniforms were consolidated under the new name 18 21 MARC soon began calling its three lines the Penn Line Camden Line and Brunswick Line Improved service Edit MARC train led by an EMD E9 former Burlington Northern at Jessup in 1994 In October 1986 MARC began testing an Amtrak AEM 7 locomotive looking to use push pull trains to replace the Arrows 21 On February 27 1989 MARC increased Washington Baltimore service from 7 to 13 weekday round trips A new park and ride station opened at Bowie State site of Jericho Park station closed in 1981 and Bowie station was closed 21 Two more round trips were added in May 1989 21 On May 1 1991 MARC service was extended north from Baltimore to Perryville with intermediate stops at Martin State Airport Edgewood and Aberdeen 36 Between 1988 and 1993 MARC expanded service from 34 to 70 total daily trips across the system 37 In 1995 800 parking spaces were added to Odenton station 38 From 1989 to 1996 the Camden Line had high ridership growth and substantial changes to its stations A new station at Savage just off Route 32 was opened on July 31 1989 39 MARC began service to Greenbelt station on May 3 1993 seven months before Metro began serving the station 40 On January 31 1994 MARC expanded midday service on the Camden and Brunswick lines opened Laurel Race Track station to relieve a parking shortage at Laurel station and closed the underused Berwyn station on the Camden Line 41 On December 12 1994 Muirkirk station originally planned as South Laurel was opened to reduce congestion on nearby Route 1 42 In 1996 a 1 2 million project added 600 parking spaces at Savage station to relieve crowding 38 In July 1996 the Elkridge station was closed and replaced with Dorsey station which has a larger parking area and a dedicated interchange with Route 100 43 44 On April 30 1987 the B amp O was merged into CSX CSX continued to operate Camden and Brunswick Line service 21 On July 6 1987 MARC opened Metropolitan Grove station the first new station on the Brunswick line in over a century 45 46 1996 Silver Spring collision Edit Main article 1996 Maryland train collision MARC Memorial in the grounds of the Brunswick train station On February 16 1996 during the Friday evening rush hour an eastbound train headed to Washington Union Station via the Brunswick Line collided with the westbound Amtrak Capitol Limited headed to Chicago via Pittsburgh The collision occurred at Georgetown Junction on a snow swept stretch of track just west of Silver Spring Maryland The crash left 11 people dead aboard the MARC train Three died of injuries suffered in the impact alone with the rest succumbing to the ensuing smoke and flames or a combination of the two Engineer Ricky Orr and conductors Jimmy Major Jr and Jim Quillen were among the victims Eight Jobs Corps students also were killed during the accident The NTSB report concluded that the MARC crew apparently forgot the approach signal aspect of the Kensington color position signal after making a flag stop at Kensington station The MARC train was operating in push mode with the cab control car out front The Amtrak locomotives were in the crossover at the time of the collision the MARC cab control car collided with the lead Amtrak unit F40PH 255 rupturing its fuel tank and igniting the fire that caused most of the casualties The second unit was a GE Genesis P40DC 811 a newer unit that has a fuel tank that is shielded in the center of the frame The official investigation also suggests that the accident might have been prevented if a human factors analysis had been conducted when modifications to the track signaling system were made in 1992 with the closing of nearby QN tower Operations and maintenance contracting controversy Edit In June 2010 the MTA began looking for a new operations and maintenance contractor to replace CSX Transportation for the Camden and Brunswick lines 47 Controversy arose when the French owned and Montgomery County Maryland based Keolis already operating Virginia Railway Express trains was the only bidder for the contract The bidding process was suspended in late 2010 due to lack of competition Before bidding reopened in 2011 Maryland passed a law at the request of Leo Bretholz and other Holocaust survivors requiring Keolis s majority owner French state railway company SNCF 48 to fully disclose its role in transporting Jews to concentration camps during World War II while SNCF was under control of the Nazi government This disclosure would need to meet the satisfaction of the Maryland state archivist before Keolis would be allowed to place a bid for MARC service Keolis faced similar issues while bidding for VRE operations in 2009 before eventually being awarded the contract Keolis and SNCF lawyers claimed that all documentation required by the law had been produced long before 49 This was also asserted by Don Phillips in the July 2011 issue of Trains Magazine Phillips states that a full 914 page independent report and complete history of SNCF s role in the Holocaust released in 1996 is currently being translated into English 50 Phillips cites from the publicly available English introduction to the report noting that while some SNCF workers worked with the Nazis acts of sabotage were frequent and the Nazis shot 819 SNCF workers for refusing to carry out the rail orders of the government An additional 1200 railway workers were themselves sent to concentration camps over SNCF rails Phillips also notes that SNCF does business with the Israel rail system and works without government prompting to educate the current generation about the war and Holocaust In June 2011 the future of Keolis s ability to bid on the MARC contract remained up in the air with the new disclosure law in place No other bidder had emerged to replace CSXT On June 5 2011 The Washington Post ran an editorial critical of the disclosure law The Post claimed that SNCF has been working for years on digitizing its records and the Maryland law may require items or formats counter to SNCF s current system and or French law The article also stated that some in the Maryland Attorney General s Office worried the law was not Constitutional may risk retaliation towards Maryland firms overseas and may risk federal funding for Maryland by imposing arbitrary procurement demands on a single company 51 52 MTA issued a new RFP for the operations and maintenance of MARC services on the Brunswick and Camden Lines on July 14 2011 with a deadline for proposals on November 21 2011 The terms specified a nearly six year base contract with a five year renewal option 53 On October 17 2012 the 204 million contract was awarded to the Canadian company Bombardier Transportation 54 effectively ending the Keolis controversy The pre service transition period began on the Thursday of that week during which time CSXT continued to operate MARC trains 54 55 The five year renewal was exercised in 2018 56 The contract passed to Alstom in 2021 when they purchased Bombardier Rolling stock EditThe following tables summarize current and former MARC rolling stock 57 Locomotives Edit Current MARC Locomotives Manufacturer Model Quantity Unit Numbers Image NotesEMD GP39H 2 6 70 75 Entered service in 1988 used as spare engines As of 2022 update no 72 is out of service and has entered a rebuilding program in Georgia 74 is still in service pending rebuilding 70 71 73 and 75 have been rebuilt and will re enter service soon GP40PH 2A 1 4145 Purchased from New Jersey Transit in 2018 often used as a spare engine GP40WH 2 1 68 Entered service in 1992 used for non revenue work duty rescue use and occasionally as a spare engine Bombardier Alstom HHP 8 6 4910 4915 Entered service in 1998 125 mph 201 km h maximum speed refurbished 2017 2018 MPI MP36PH 3C 26 10 35 Entered service 2009 2011 replaced GP40WH 2s 58 Siemens SC 44 8 59 80 87 Entered service in 2018 replaced AEM 7s 125 mph 201 km h maximum speed 60 61 Former MARC Locomotives Manufacturer Model Quantity Unit Numbers Image NotesEMD ASEA AEM 7 4 4900 4903 Retired as of April 2017 units placed in storage 62 pending dispositionEMD GP40WH 2 19 51 67 69 Replaced by MP36PH 3Cs nos 67 69 were rebuilt from GP40 work locomotives 30 32 no 68 continues in non revenue work duty and rescue use several units rebuilt into MPI MP32PH Q for Central Florida s SunRail commuter train remaining units in Columbia Pennsylvania pending rebuild by MPI or Progress Rail 69 was sold to CSX and renumbered 9969 57 sold to PNLX in 2022 63 E9AM 10 60 69 Ex Burlington Northern Railroad originally built as E8As nos 67 68 renumbered to 91 92 F9PH 5 81 85 Ex Baltimore and Ohio Railroad rebuilt by Morrison Knudsen from former F7 locomotives former MDOT 7181 7185 F7 APCU 1 7100 Ex Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad F7 4553 converted to an APCU and equipped with a generator for head end power occasionally substituted for a cab car in the early 2000s preserved at the B amp O Railroad Museum and used on the museum s railroad tour 64 65 Passenger cars Edit Current MARC Passenger Cars Manufacturer Model Quantity When Delivered Car Numbers Image NotesSumitomo Nippon Sharyo MARC IIA 4 coaches 1985 1987 Coaches 7711 7714 Single level coaches 7711 7714 are Bike Cars with 16 bike racks and 22 passenger seatsMARC IIB 28 coaches18 cab cars 1991 1993 Coaches 7716 7735 7791 7799Cabs 7757 7762 Single level overhauled in 2009 2011 by Bombardier no 7720 destroyed in 1996 Silver Spring collisionKawasaki MARC III 49 coaches14 cab cars 1999 2001 Coaches 7800 7834 7870 7876 7890 7896Cabs 7845 7858 MARC s first bilevel cars 66 overhauled in 2018 2020 by Bombardier 67 60 nos 7826 7834 and 7855 7858 are ex VRE purchased in 2000 acquired by MARC in 2008 68 Bombardier MARC IV 89 coaches20 cab cars 2014 Coaches 8000 8038 8060 8099Cabs 8039 8059 Bombardier MultiLevels 69 Former MARC Passenger Cars Manufacturer Model Quantity When Delivered Car Numbers Image NotesBudd RDC 16 1984 1 3 8 9 11 12 20 22 23 800 9801 9802 9805 9918 9921 9941 Self propelled cars inherited from various railroadsMARC I 22 1984 100 114 130 134 140 149 150 154 160 169 190 191 70 Ex Pennsylvania Railroad Norfolk and Western Railway NJ Transit and SEMTA single level coaches some used at the B amp O Railroad Museum others sold to private operatorsSumitomo Nippon Sharyo MARC IIA 10 cars 11 cab cars 1985 1987 Coaches 7700 7710 7715 Cabs 7745 7756 Single level coaches nos 7709 and 7752 destroyed in 1996 Silver Spring train collision others retired in 2015 16 after being replaced by Bombardier Multilevel carsPullman Standard Gallery cars 12 2004 7900 7911 Ex Metra gallery bilevel coaches often used on the Brunswick Line replaced by Bombardier MARC IV in early 2015 and returned to Metra 71 Proposals for service expansion Edit2007 plan Edit In the first decade of the 21st century MARC ridership increased significantly and the system neared capacity for its current configuration With the area population growing and the BRAC process poised to bring new jobs to Aberdeen Proving Ground and Ft Meade both near MARC stations the state saw the need to expand service In September 2007 MTA Maryland unveiled an ambitious 30 year plan of system improvements Though funding sources had not been established at that time the plan represented the state s goals of increasing capacity and flexibility Proposed improvements included 72 Acquisition of new equipment 54 Bombardier MultiLevels were ordered to replace aging single level cars Weekend service on the Penn Line Service began on December 7 2013 between Baltimore and Washington D C with some trips extending to Martin State Airport There are nine round trips on Saturdays three begin and three then later end at Martin State Airport and 6 round trips on Sundays two begin and two then later end at Martin State Airport 73 Increased mid day service and reverse commute service on the Camden and Brunswick Lines As of 2015 there is a somewhat limited reverse commute service in effect on the Camden Line Extension of service past Union Station in Washington to L Enfant and to Northern Virginia along tracks used by VRE trains thus relieving pressure on the Washington Metro More daily trips east of Baltimore s Penn Station including improved service to Aberdeen Proving Ground Service beyond Perryville to Newark or Wilmington in Delaware providing a connection to SEPTA commuter trains to Philadelphia and beyond New or expanded tunnels along the Northeast Corridor in Baltimore New stations in Baltimore providing direct connections with the Metro Subway and service to Johns Hopkins Hospital and Bayview Medical Center Rapid transit like service through BaltimoreSome of the proposals were foreseen to take years or decades to implement however others such as Penn Line weekend service could have begun in a matter of months yet budgetary shortfalls prevented this In Spring 2009 to offset such budget shortfalls ticket sales employees at most non Amtrak stations were replaced with Amtrak Quik Trak touchscreen ticket machines and some train services were eliminated or scaled back Ticket machines were also added to stations that were not previously staffed such as Halethorpe The only remaining staffed stations Odenton and Frederick remained staffed by Commuter Direct 74 75 2010s Extension to Delaware and SEPTA Edit In 2017 the Wilmington Area Planning Council submitted ridership studies to Cecil County the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission SEPTA and the Delaware Department of Transportation for the extension of MARC service from Perryville via Elkton 76 to Newark Delaware and possibly Wilmington 77 The section from Perryville to Newark is the one of only three along the Northeast Corridor not covered by commuter train service the others are between New London Connecticut and Wickford Junction Rhode Island as well as New York Penn Station and New Rochelle New York The Route 5 bus operated by Cecil Transit formerly connected the two stations 78 References Edit Transit Ridership Report Third Quarter 2022 PDF American Public Transportation Association November 22 2022 Retrieved February 1 2023 Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2021 PDF American Public Transportation Association March 10 2022 Retrieved June 7 2022 StackPath www masstransitmag com Retrieved January 26 2022 2020 Maryland Statutes Transportation Title 7 Mass Transit Subtitle 2 Maryland Transit Administration Section 7 208 Jurisdiction of Administration Over Transit Facilities Justia Law Retrieved March 14 2022 Transit Information Overview Maryland Transit Administration Retrieved June 24 2011 https frederickcountymd gov DocumentCenter View 323253 TSAC MARC 101 presentation bare URL PDF a b Starcic Janna June 17 2016 Maryland s MARC Railroad Upgrades Fleet Service to Bolster Ridership Metro Magazine Retrieved December 22 2017 MARC Camden and Brunswick Operations and Maintenance BPM028526 Lot 1 Round 1 eMaryland Marketplace Advantage eMMA emma maryland gov Retrieved March 14 2022 a b Dilts James D 1996 The Great Road The Building of the Baltimore and Ohio the Nation s First Railroad 1828 1853 Palo Alto CA Stanford University Press p 157 ISBN 978 0 8047 2629 0 Stakem Patrick H 2008 Maryland Area Rail Commuter A Rider s Guide PRB Publishing ASIN B004U7FKQS Stover John F January 1 1995 History of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 066 0 Southern Maryland Commuter Rail Service Feasibility Study PDF Maryland Transit Administration August 2009 Baer Christopher T April 2015 A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE SUCCESSORS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY AND THEIR HISTORICAL CONTEXT 1902 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society Baer Christopher T April 2015 A General Chronology of the Successors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Their Historical Context 1968 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society Nationwide Schedules of Intercity Passenger Service National Railroad Passenger Corporation Amtrak May 1 1971 p 6 via The Museum of Railway Timetables Baer Christopher T April 2015 A General Chronology of the Successors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Their Historical Context 1971 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society Baer Christopher T April 2015 A General Chronology of the Successors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Their Historical Context 1974 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society a b c d e History of MARC Train Maryland Department of Transportation Archived from the original on January 17 2010 West Virginia Department of Transportation State Rail Authority March 12 2013 West Virginia State Rail Plan Intercity Service Review pp 4 6 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 West Virginia State Rail Plan Maryland Area Regional Commuter Service West Virginia Department of Transportation State Rail Authority March 12 2013 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 5 2014 a b c d e f g Baer Christopher T April 2015 A GENERAL CHRONOLOGY OF THE SUCCESSORS OF THE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY AND THEIR HISTORICAL CONTEXT 1980 89 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society Baer Christopher T April 2015 A General Chronology of the Successors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Their Historical ContextT 1976 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society Baer Christopher T April 2015 A General Chronology of the Successors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Their Historical Context 1977 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society a b Baer Christopher T April 2015 A General Chronology of the Successors of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and Their Historical Context 1977 PDF Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society Shifrin Carole October 24 1980 BWI Airport Rail Link Celebrates Opening The Washington Post p D3 ProQuest 147198286 Commuter Trains New Stop Beltway Station The Washington Post August 11 1982 p MD11 ProQuest 147456718 Lynton Stephen J June 9 1983 Baltimore D C Commuter Train Trips to Increase The Washington Post p B8 ProQuest 147548056 Fuchs Tom April 2009 30th Anniversary of New Carrollton Station PDF Transit Times 23 2 5 Metro Parking Spots Rented to Amtrak For Temporary Use at New Carrollton The Washington Post October 28 1983 p C12 ProQuest 147479061 New New Carrollton station Amtrak 1983 McCord Joel April 28 1984 New station schedule for rail users Baltimore Sun via Newspapers com Bulletin Board The Washington Post May 28 1981 p MD9 ProQuest 147307755 United States Northeast Rail Service Act of 1981 Title XI Subtitle E of Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 Pub L 97 35 Section 1136 45 U S C 744a Approved August 13 1981 Feaver Douglas B December 30 1982 States Rush to Replace Conrail In Switch of Commuter Service The Washington Post Sargent Edward D July 11 1983 Many Commute From Baltimore To District Jobs Washington Post Reid Bruce May 1 1991 Commuter rail Perryville to Baltimore starts today MARC line s new Susquehanna Flyer out to attract commuters ALL ABOARD The Baltimore Sun Lee Edward July 24 1993 MARC plans to raise fares 19 percent boost to be proposed The Baltimore Sun a b Hedgpeth Dana June 22 1995 600 spaces to be added to MARC station parking lot by spring The Baltimore Sun Worden Amy August 3 1989 Columbia Commuters Get a Station Break Convenience Touted at New MARC Stop in Savage Station Opens in Savage The Washington Post ProQuest 139977789 Meyer Eugene L December 10 1993 LUKEWARM THRILL AT END OF LINE The Washington Post Jensen Peter January 18 1994 MARC is off to the races Jan 31 The Baltimore Sun Fehr Stephen December 12 1994 Commuter Lines Add Stations in Va and Md The Washington Post p D3 ProQuest 757194485 Spellmann Karyn July 8 1996 State DOT Considers New Road near Dulles The Washington Times Archived from the original on September 11 2016 via Highbeam Research Logan Mary December 1 2005 MAJOR TRANSPORTATION MILESTONES IN THE BALTIMORE REGION SINCE 1940 PDF Baltimore Metropolitan Council p 12 Archived from the original PDF on December 27 2010 News and Upcoming Events PDF Transit Times Action Committee for Transit 1 2 Summer 1987 Md Commuters Get Another Way to Go The Washington Post July 9 1987 ProQuest 139235759 MARC to seek new operator for CSX run routes Trains Magazine June 14 2010 Retrieved June 14 2010 Shaver Katherine July 7 2010 Holocaust group faults VRE contract The Washington Post No way to run a railroad WBAL TV March 3 2011 Retrieved September 1 2012 permanent dead link Phillips Don July 2011 Lawsuits Commuter Trains and the Holocaust Trains p 11 Lind Michael June 5 2011 No way to run a railroad The Washington Post Rubin Neil February 10 2012 State archivist SNCF archives might not be enough Baltimore Jewish Times Sohr Nicholas November 21 2011 MD MTA Keolis mum on bids to run MARC lines The Daily Record via masstransitmag com a b Weir Kytja October 17 2012 Bombardier wins 204m MARC commuter train contract The Washington Examiner Retrieved October 28 2012 Shaver Katherine October 17 2012 New company to operate some MARC trains The Washington Post Retrieved December 18 2012 Vantuono William March 26 2018 MARC extends Bombardier O amp M contract Railway Age Retrieved March 14 2022 Maryland Rail Commuter Roster www thedieselshop us Retrieved May 17 2018 MTA Expands MARC Penn Line Service MTA Maryland Service Information Archived from the original on March 31 2009 Retrieved February 16 2010 Board Of Public Works Approves 58 Million Contract For Eight MARC Locomotives Press release Baltimore Maryland Maryland Transit Administration September 17 2015 Retrieved January 23 2018 a b MARC Riders Advisory Council Meeting Summary Minutes PDF MTA Maryland January 18 2018 Retrieved June 2 2019 Penn Line schedule change April 23 MTA Maryland Retrieved April 15 2018 MARC Riders Advisory Council Meeting Minutes PDF MTA Maryland April 20 2017 Retrieved June 2 2019 North Pole Express 2022 Owosso to Ashley MI 12 10 22 YouTube The MARC 7100 Returns November 1999 CSX Railfan Magazine TrainWeb Retrieved September 1 2012 Archived copy Archived from the original on May 17 2018 Retrieved May 17 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Maryland Mass Transit Administration MARC III Bi level Coaches www kawasakirailcar com Retrieved February 6 2021 MARC Train Awards 36 8 Million Contract to Bombardier Transportation to Overhaul 63 Bi Level Rail Cars Press release Baltimore MD Maryland Transit Administration February 4 2016 Michael Dresser August 20 2008 New cars may ease MARC crowding The Baltimore Sun pp 1B 6B Governor O Malley Announces Marc to Purchase 54 Multi level Passenger Cars MTA Maryland November 2 2011 Retrieved September 1 2012 permanent dead link Amtrak Employee Timetable 1990 Starcic Janna June 17 2016 Maryland s MARC Railroad Upgrades Fleet Service to Bolster Ridership Metro Retrieved February 4 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link MARC Growth amp Investment Plan PDF MTA Maryland September 2007 Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2009 Retrieved February 16 2010 MARC Penn Line Full Timetable PDF Maryland Transit Administration March 4 2019 Retrieved May 14 2019 Odenton station is now a Commuter Direct Store MTA Maryland September 2009 Commuter Direct Store Locations Commuter Direct March 2015 Kroner Brad April 28 2017 MARC stop in Elkton moves forward Perryville MARC facility stalls Cecil Whig Retrieved March 4 2019 Kroner Brad March 7 2017 Study to examine extending MARC line to Newark Newark Post Delaware Retrieved March 4 2019 Fixed Route 5 schedule Cecil Transit Archived from the original on March 6 2019 Retrieved March 4 2019 External links EditRoute map KML file edit help Template Attached KML MARC TrainKML is from Wikidata Wikimedia Commons has media related to MARC Train Maryland portal Trains portalMaryland Transit Administration Baltimore Area Transit amp MARC System Map MARC Current Train Status Using GPS Technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MARC Train amp oldid 1141941748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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