The Maryland legislature has passed a bill to increase the gas tax. It is certain to be signed by the Governor. Washington Post article on the passage, although the article also covers other bills and does not get into the implications. MD has been facing a serious transportation funding shortfall for years with the gas excise tax not having been increased in 20 years, but kicked the can down the road before. This year, facing the prospect of no funding available for any new road or transit projects by 2017 and with Virginia having raised taxes for transportation, they finally acted with by adding an wholesale gas tax which will increase in steps over the next 3 years.
The relevance to transit and to Amtrak is that the new revenue will provide funding to advance the light rail Purple Line and Baltimore Red Line projects. For those not familiar with the projects, the Purple Line will run from the Amtrak/MARC, DC Metro stations at New Carrolton to College Park to Silver Spring to Bethesda. When the Purple Line opens (sometime after 2020), it should make New Carrolton a busier stop with direct connections to the huge University of Maryland campus in College Park and the MD DC suburbs.
The Baltimore Red Line will run east-west through Baltimore, providing a direct connection from the MARC West Baltimore stop on the NEC to downtown Baltimore and the Inner harbor. It will also provide direct connections to the subway Green Line and the light rail line in Baltimore, giving Baltimore a connected rail transit system.
With two new light rail lines in the works that direct connect to the NEC, aka the MARC Penn Line, I would expect that with the additional revenue to draw on, that MD will also be looking to expand MARC Penn Line service to 7 days a week. Which means more state funding for NEC upgrade projects such as the BWI Airport station rebuild, 4th track from West Baltimore to New Carrolton, the B&P tunnel and Susquehanna bridge replacements.
The relevance to transit and to Amtrak is that the new revenue will provide funding to advance the light rail Purple Line and Baltimore Red Line projects. For those not familiar with the projects, the Purple Line will run from the Amtrak/MARC, DC Metro stations at New Carrolton to College Park to Silver Spring to Bethesda. When the Purple Line opens (sometime after 2020), it should make New Carrolton a busier stop with direct connections to the huge University of Maryland campus in College Park and the MD DC suburbs.
The Baltimore Red Line will run east-west through Baltimore, providing a direct connection from the MARC West Baltimore stop on the NEC to downtown Baltimore and the Inner harbor. It will also provide direct connections to the subway Green Line and the light rail line in Baltimore, giving Baltimore a connected rail transit system.
With two new light rail lines in the works that direct connect to the NEC, aka the MARC Penn Line, I would expect that with the additional revenue to draw on, that MD will also be looking to expand MARC Penn Line service to 7 days a week. Which means more state funding for NEC upgrade projects such as the BWI Airport station rebuild, 4th track from West Baltimore to New Carrolton, the B&P tunnel and Susquehanna bridge replacements.