The Montgomery County Council voted unanimously to support light rail on the Purple Line. They also showed that they supported building a trail not as an afterthought but as an equally important component.
The council also asked that the adjacent trail be expanded to at least 12 feet and include grass planted alongside the tracks.
Still,
Montgomery County Council Vice President Roger Berliner held up a
rendering of a tree-filled walking and biking trail next to a light
rail train in Tuesday’s meeting. “This representation needs to turn
into reality,” he said, “because this is the promise we are making to
the people.”
The council did add one
caveat. In a motion that passed 5-3, it asked state officials to look
into running portions of the line on a single track to cause less
disruption to the adjacent trail and tree canopy.
Mr. Berliner's comments, and the caveat, seem to be in response to what Michael D. Madden, manager of the state's Purple Line study, told the Montgomery council
"pretty much all" of the trees on the Georgetown Branch Trail between
downtown Bethesda and Columbia Country Club's golf course would need to
be cut down. However, he said, trees could be spared in trail areas
with wider right of way, such as through the country club's golf course
and east toward Silver Spring.
Madden said his team would reconsider a single track but said such systems generally make trains slower and less reliable.
[Mr. Berliner] said, "anything we can do to minimize the impact on the trail, I think we have an obligation to do.
Update: Roger Berliner might have hurt himself politically with his vote.
With some "aggressive landscaping," Berliner said, he thinks the
popular walking and bike path will someday return to its green, wooded
feel. He might take a political hit, he said, but overall a Purple Line
"advances the common good, and that's our job." End Update
Despite everyone falling all over themselves to talk about the trail and its primacy, not everyone is convinced.
Geoff Gonella, a country club board member and executive director of
the Alliance for Smart Transportation... said, "I don't think anyone can reasonably look at this and think the trail is going to come back."
Huh? Maybe he means "come back exactly the way it was before" but it certainly seems there will be a trail - paved and connected to Silver Spring, but without the same tree canopy or natural feel.
Finish the trail, meanwhile, has noted increased interest in building a 16' wide trail - as picture above - instead of a 10' wide one.
The Citizens Coordinating Committee on Friendship Heights (CCCFH)
testified at the November Purple Line public hearings in support of a
16' wide trail.Now everyone appears to be getting behind the
idea. The East Bethesda Citizens Association (EBCA) has submitted a
Jan. 14, 2009
letter to MTA with its comments on the Purple Line AA/DEIS, requesting the trail be 16' wide.
Trail users must accept some trade offs for a wider trail, especially
in the more constrained sections of the Georgetown Branch Corridor
where the right-of-way is 66' or less. Either more trees and buffer
must be removed between the trail and the right-of-way boundary, or
some of the landscaped buffer must be removed from between the trail
and the transit tracks.
They suggest nixing some of the buffer instead of trees.
We have been pushed toward the concept of a wide buffer plus vertical
elevation plus fence and/or retaining wall between trail and transit at
least in part to address unreasoned assertions coming from "Save the
Trail" advocates who are attempting to kill the Purple Line.
people routinely go about their business quite close to transit or
trolley tracks elsewhere throughout the country and around the world,
usually with no fences at all. Cyclists and pedestrians walk and bike
on sidewalks and sidepaths directly alongside motor vehicle traffic all
of the time. Most of us feel safer walking or biking alongside rail
vehicles than alongside motor vehicles. We know derailments are
extremely rare. Do we really need all of that 10' buffer between the
trail and the transit tracks?
Any increase in the
number of trees cut or reduction in the buffer between the
transit/trail and adjacent homeowners will be used as ammunition to
kill the Purple Line or to minimize the trail. Taking most of the width
needed for the wider trail from the buffer between the trail and
transit will keep the impact of a wider trail at a minimum. I would
much rather have the wider trail for fewer conflicts with other trail
users than have a full 10' buffer between the trail and the light rail
train. The train is only there at several minute intervals at most, but
the conflicts with other trail users can come every few seconds on a
trail when it is crowded.
I have to say I agree. The rail width is beyond compromise. The others items in order of importance in my opinion are the trail, the outside buffers and then the inside buffer.
As for what happens next...
Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) is expected to submit a Purple Line
project to the Federal Transit Administration for funding this spring,
entering the state in a fierce competition for construction money. The
light-rail project has been endorsed by the Montgomery council, Prince
George's council and both counties' executives and is estimated to cost
$1.2 billion to build. State officials have said they can't afford that
without the federal government covering at least half.
Transit advocates are optimistic that President Obama's plans to
spur the economy by investing in infrastructure will mean more money
for such projects. But the demand for construction money will probably
continue to far outpace supply, they said.
Webb Smedley, chairman of Purple Line NOW, said the project will
compete well, especially if the Obama administration considers how it
would limit sprawl and serve lower-income riders.
It still faces years
of work. The earliest it could be ready is 2015.
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