Many questions about MoCo BRT, but the answer is yes
There are many questions surrounding Montgomery County’s Bus Rapid Transit proposal, but there’s just one the Planning Board will consider next Thursday: whether we should set aside room on our main streets for public transit. The answer is decidedly yes.
It’s been 5 years since Councilmember Marc Elrich first proposed a countywide network of rapid bus routes. His idea has been reviewed, vetted and refined by transportation engineers, a task force of community and business leaders, the world’s leading experts on BRT, and now county planners.
Today, the Planning Board is reviewing a draft of what’s called the Countywide Transit Corridors Functional Master Plan, which envisions a 79-mile network containing 10 BRT routes across the county. While it’s much smaller than what previous studies have proposed, it offers a realistic answer for our county’s current and future traffic congestion.
I worked with Kelly Blynn of the Coalition for Smarter Growth to create a video about why we need BRT:
Don’t get me wrong: I love driving, and I love my car. But I’d rather spend my time in the car having fun, not sitting in traffic because there’s no better way to get around. Some will insist that transit doesn’t work for them, and that’s okay. However, there are places and times when transit is the best tool we have to get people moving, and we have to take advantage of it.
Expanding our transit network is really the only way that Montgomery County can continue to grow, and the county will grow, whether people want it to or not. This plan will provide improved transit service in areas where people already use it, like along Route 29 between Silver Spring and Burtonsville, where thousands of apartments were built in the 1970’s and 1980’s in anticipation of light-rail line that never materialized. And it will support future development in places like White Flint, where BRT along Rockville Pike will form the spine of a new urban center.
Of course, there have been a lot of questions raised about this proposal. Elected officials have asked how we’ll pay for it. Residents are worried about impacts to their individual neighborhoods. And there’s a larger, philosophical debate about Montgomery County’s transition from being the “perfect suburbia” of 50 years ago to a slightly more urban place.
We’re not going to answer these questions today, not do we have to. There are still a lot of details to consider, and there are smaller, incremental improvements we can make to our transit network sooner rather than later. What this plan can do, however, is begin a conversation about getting transit on equal footing with cars.
Growing up in Montgomery County, I was taught to value diversity. We may have different backgrounds, different perspectives, and different lifestyles, but we still come together to form one community. Building a transportation network that acknowledges that not everyone drives is a statement that we value all residents of Montgomery County, not just those who drive.
The Planning Board will hold a public hearing on the Countywide Transit Corridors Functional Master Plan this Thursday at 6pm at the Montgomery County Planning Department, 8787 Georgia Avenue in Silver Spring. To sign up to testify or send written comments, visit their website.
If you’re interested in learning more about Montgomery County’s BRT plan, the Action Committee for Transit is hosting a talk with Larry Cole, the county’s head planner for BRT, at their monthly meeting this Tuesday at 7:30pm at the Silver Spring Civic Center, located at the corner of Ellsworth Drive and Fenton Street.
Tina Slater
Superb post, Dan! Yes, let’s remember that not everyone drives, BUT *everyone* does need transportation. There is a percentage of people who do not own a car. Then there are children, teens, and older folks who don’t drive. When you combine the zero-car folks with these others, the combination, while perhaps not a majority, *is* a significant portion of our population. Let’s provide these people with a good means of getting around — and while we’re at it, I’m betting that some current “car commuters” will want to join the folks on the bus. (Frankly, I see my transit trips as chances to catch up on my reading or pulling together my thoughts & writing them down — hard to do when you’re stuck in traffic, feeling cranky & cussing!!)
Bottom line is this — as we are expanding, we need to preserve routes for transit.