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MTA Administrator Holly Arnold joins Midday to discuss the recent suspension of light rail service on the north-south line.
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Transit officials could not predict when service would be restored. Bus shuttles will be available for the approximately 10,000 people who ride light-rail daily.
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Maryland transportation projects could be delayed and local commuter bus service and roadway maintenance face significant cuts as a result of a more-than-$3 billion shortfall in funding the state’s six-year transportation plan, state officials said Tuesday.
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As the Maryland Transit Administration prepares for the next round of open houses on the Red Line, leaders in the business community want to play a large role in the transit line's future.
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Baltimore Banner reporters Hallie Miller and Ryan Little discuss their reporting on speed cameras and car crashes.
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The passenger rail company will begin clearing the way for two emergency ventilation facilities in mid-November.
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One alignment includes construction of a new downtown tunnel, while the other two routes are surface level.
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“The Red Line is moving forward… but we need to make improvements today for the riders along that corridor. And that's what this service does.”
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Marylanders can now give feedback, through a series of open houses, on newly resurrected plans for the Red Line, an east to west transit line across Baltimore City. Governor Wes Moore reinvigorated the plan last month after Governor Larry Hogan canceled the project in 2015. The environmental process requires residents to give input.
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Dr. Sacoby Wilson continues the discussion about transportation equity with Samuel Jordan, president of the Baltimore Transit Equity Coalition.