Not to mention the name problem. Southeastern Pennsylvania And Maryland??The project will certainly help things, but I fear the red tape and funding questions will make the SEPTA-MARC meetup a long time coming.
Hey, wait! You left Delaware out.Not to mention the name problem. Southeastern Pennsylvania And Maryland??The project will certainly help things, but I fear the red tape and funding questions will make the SEPTA-MARC meetup a long time coming.
SPAM? I love it!Not to mention the name problem. Southeastern Pennsylvania And Maryland??The project will certainly help things, but I fear the red tape and funding questions will make the SEPTA-MARC meetup a long time coming.
This is a good question. Maybe the Newark, DE station will have to have a hotel for people making the connection.Are there any plans to increase service on either of these lines? Otherwise transferring between the trains would be virtually impossible given both lines' weekday rush hour only service.
I wouldn't expect that Amtrak would present much of an obstacle, since I think a fair share of the riders that would transfer between SEPTA & MARC probably aren't riding Amtrak on a regular basis. They will certainly want infrastructure improvements and charge as much as they do for commuter trains else where on the NEC.On a more serious note, if this ever materializes I'm sure we'd see an overhaul in schedules. While it will never approach the service frequencies of the PHL-Trenton-NYP connection between SEPTA and NJT, I'm sure the SEPTA-MARC link-up would be a game-changer. [side note: I wonder if Amtrak might present a bureaucratic obstacle since they would potentially lose thru-passengers on this portion of the route.]
All that said, I wonder if Newark (DE) is even the most logical place for a transfer to occur. It would force people in Wilmington (for example) to take a train a few miles west and then immediately transfer. OTOH, I'm not sure if the Wilmington station would have the operational capacity to host two commuter railroad terminals plus Amtrak thru-trains.
I don't get the second part. Is that a Northwest thing?So, would a trip from a streetcar in Seattle to this part of the country be called "SPAM the ****"?
Good points. I would have to assume that UD students might also find having these options convenient.The location isn't just for transferring between the two systems. The station is located next to UD's STAR campus. They hope workers at the businesses in the STAR campus to utilize the two trains for their commutes. Plus, I think for workers at Aberdeen who live in DE.
South Lake Union TrolleyI don't get the second part. Is that a Northwest thing?So, would a trip from a streetcar in Seattle to this part of the country be called "SPAM the ****"?
Dela-where???Hey, wait! You left Delaware out.Not to mention the name problem. Southeastern Pennsylvania And Maryland??The project will certainly help things, but I fear the red tape and funding questions will make the SEPTA-MARC meetup a long time coming.
Damn SPAM?Hey, wait! You left Delaware out.Not to mention the name problem. Southeastern Pennsylvania And Maryland??The project will certainly help things, but I fear the red tape and funding questions will make the SEPTA-MARC meetup a long time coming.
http://www.newarkpostonline.com/news/article_3e080474-c70d-574e-9044-e9f42c379189.htmlAnd groundbreaking has taken place.
www.newarkpostonline.com/news/article_3e080474-c70d-574e-9044-e9f42c379189.html
A resolution in the General Assembly would direct DelDOT to work with Maryland and Pennsylvania, Amtrak and other regional entities to strengthen the rail service across all three states.
The goal is to fill a 20 mile gap in service for regional rail, the area between Newark and Perryville, Maryland.
With the new Newark rail station slated to open next year, lawmakers hope to connect the Maryland Area Regional Commuter train service with SEPTA at that hub.
Let's see some money and plans thrown behind this resolution.
https://www.delawarepublic.org/post/lawmakers-seek-link-regional-rail-new-newark-train-station
On May 7, Hogan vetoed 37 of those bills, including HB (House Bill) 1236, or the MARC Train Expansion of Service Act, an ambitious proposal to expand the scope of Maryland’s MARC (Maryland Area Rail Commuter) commuter rail system.
The bill, sponsored by Jared Solomon (D-Montgomery), primarily calls for the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) and the Maryland Transit Administration to study running Penn Line trains through their current southern terminus at Union Station in Washington, DC, all the way to Alexandria Union Station in Virginia.
A pair of amendments, added shortly before the bill became the final bill to pass the State Senate on the final day of session, called for the MTA to study running Penn Line trains between their current northern terminus at Perryville in Cecil County and Newark, Delaware, where they’d be able to interchange with Philadelphia’s SEPTA Commuter Rail Service, and to explore building a rail connection between the two MARC lines which run through Baltimore City, the Penn and Camden Lines.
Meanwhile work continues in the area - they were noisy this morning as I walked along the trail on the north/west side of the tracks. Trains were going through the area slowly, too.Citing a budget shortfall due to the coronavirus, the Governor of Maryland vetoed the MARC expansion bill. This threatens MARC service to NRK as well as MARC run through service to Virginia.
https://ggwash.org/view/77559/gov-h...nsion-bill-maryland-democrats-vow-to-override
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