Comprehensive regional rail from Baltimore through to Richmond by 2045? It's possible.
Comprehensive regional rail from Baltimore through to Richmond by 2045? A new coalition thinks its possible.
By Alex Holt (Maryland Correspondent) October 9, 2020
Baltimore, Washington, DC, and Richmond havent seen a lot of new rail service over the past two decades but its not for lack of transit plans. There have been plans to tackle
every mode of transit in every city, a mode-agnostic
Regional Transit Plan for Central Maryland, a
plan for improving transit in Baltimore City, and a plan
specifically for Marylands commuter rail... the list goes on.
Missing in the Capital Region, as the Greater Washington Partnership calls it, is a vision of what it would take to create regional rail between all three cities. It is for that task that a coalition of business groups, legislators, transit agencies, and other groups
launched the Capital Region Rail Vision Project early last month. The initiative will bring interested parties together to map out the path to an efficient, interconnected rail system connecting the entire region before 2045.
The intent is to step back a second and say to ourselves what is our ideal outcome? Whats the ideal future state of our regions rail system? said Joe McAndrew, Director of Transportation Policy for the Greater Washington Partnership. What does that mean for the region? If we were to have, say, 30-minute headways between Baltimore and Washington, DC, what does that mean for the State of Maryland and for the regions economy, for job production and economic productivity? And from there, do the potential benefits outweigh the potential costs?
The initiatives first phase will be a vision report outlining goals like faster trains and commuter lines running between Maryland and Virginia, as well as the benefits, costs and outcomes of those goals, McAndrew said. The second phase, a technical report, will outline specific steps to make regional rail a reality.
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