Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
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The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) is "a body politic and corporate, and a political subdivision" of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts [2] formed in 1964 to finance and operate most bus, subway, commuter rail and ferry systems in the greater Boston, Massachusetts, USA area. It replaced an earlier agency called the Metropolitan Transit Authority, or the MTA, as immortalized in the popular Kingston Trio folk-protest lament "The MTA Song". It is known by the locals as simply The T because of the logo it adopted in the 1960s, that of the letter "T" in a circle, copying the logo used by the metrosystem in Stockholm after a visit by the MTA. In 2004, the entire system averaged 792,600 one-way passenger trips each weekday.[1] The subway averaged 598,200.[2] The Green Line of the T is the busiest light rail system in the country.
[edit] Subway
The subway system has three rapid transit lines - the Red, Orange and Blue Lines - and two streetcar/light rail lines - the Green Line and the Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line (considered part of the Red Line). All four colored lines meet downtown at a square configuration, and the Orange and Green Lines (which run parallel) meet directly at two stations. The Red Line has two branches in the south - Ashmont and Braintree, named after their terminal stations - and the Green Line has four branches in the west - "B" (Boston College), "C" (Cleveland Circle), "D" (Riverside) and "E" (Heath Street). The "A" Branch formerly went to Watertown, filling in the pattern, which increases from north to south, and the "E" Branch formerly continued beyond Heath Street to Arborway. The colors were assigned on August 26, 1965, and now serve as the primary identifier for the lines, after the 1964 reorganization of the MTA into the MBTA.
The Orange Line is so named because it used to run down Orange Street (now lower Washington Street), the Green Line is named because it runs adjacent to parts of the Emerald Necklace, the Blue line is named because it runs under Boston Harbor and the Red Line is named because it runs through Cambridge, Massachusetts where Harvard University (whose school color is Crimson) is located [citations needed].
The three rapid transit lines are incompatible in dimensions; trains of one line would have to be modified to run on another. Except between the Red Line and Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line, there are no track connections between lines; however, all lines but the Blue Line have existing but unused connections to the national rail network, which have been used for deliveries.[3]
The segment of Green Line tunnel from Park Street opened in 1897, making it the first subway in the United States. The downtown portions of what are now the Green, Orange, Blue, and Red lines were all in service by 1912. Additions to the rapid transit network occurred in most decades of the 1900s, and continue in the 2000s with the addition of Silver Line bus rapid transit and planned Green Line expansion. (See History and Future plans sections.)
[edit] Commuter rail
The MBTA Commuter Rail system is a suburban rail network that shares its tracks with freight trains. As of 2007, there are 12 lines, three of which have branches, and another branch provides access to Gillette Stadium for events. Eight of the lines converge at South Station, with four also passing through Back Bay station. The other four converge at North Station. Amtrak uses two of the south-side lines and one of the north-side lines for long-distance intercity service. There is no passenger connection between the two sides, although there have been proposals to fix this with the North-South Rail Link. The opportunity for such a connection, in association with the burying of the Central Artery in the Big Dig was passed over. Currently, passengers must take the Orange Line between Back Bay and North Station, the Red and Orange Lines between South and North Stations, or take a bus or taxicab. A south side commuter rail line, the Greenbush Line, is currently under construction; a south-side branch to Fall River and New Bedford is in the planning stages. Trackage exists to extend the Middleborough/Lakeville Line to restore passenger service to Cape Cod, formerly part of the Old Colony Railroad lines. The Commuter Rail system has used the color purple on train cars and system maps since October 8, 1974, and consequently it is sometimes called the "Purple Line."[3]
Each line on the Commuter Rail is divided into up to 8 fare "zones" (previously 9 on some lines), numbered 1A, 1B, and 2 through 8. Every station is designated as belonging to one of the zones. Riders of the Commuter Rail are charged based on the number of zones they travel through. Tickets can be purchased on the train or at designated ticket vendor locations near major stations. If a local vendor is available, riders must purchase a ticket before boarding to avoid a surcharge. Fares currently range from $1.70 to $7.75, with monthly passes available.
[edit] Buses and ferries
The MBTA bus system comprises over 150 routes across the Greater Boston area. Transfers from the subway are free if using a CharlieCard (for local buses); transfers to the subway require paying the difference between bus and the higher subway fare (for local buses; if not using a CharlieCard, full subway fare must be paid in addition to full bus fare). Bus-to-bus transfers (for local buses) are free unless paying cash. Many of the outlying routes run express along major highways to downtown. The buses are colored yellow on maps and in station decor.
The Silver Line is the MBTA's first service designated as bus rapid transit, even though it lacks many of the characteristics of bus rapid transit. The first segment, replacing the 49 bus, which in turn replaced the Washington Street Elevated section of the Orange Line, began operations in 2002, with free transfers to the subways downtown (until January 1, 2007, when the fare system was revised). The "Washington Street" segment runs along various downtown streets, and mostly in a dedicated bus lanes on Washington Street itself. It is categorized as a "bus" service for fare purposes.[4]
The "Waterfront" section opened at the end of 2004, and connects South Station to South Boston, partly via a tunnel and partly on the surface. These buses run dual-mode, trackless trolley in the tunnel and diesel bus outside. (There is a brief stopover to change modes without changing vehicles.) Service to Logan Airport began in June 2005. The Waterfront segment is classified as a "subway" for fare purposes.[4]
A third, fully tunneled segment is proposed to connect the two existing lines, which are currently not continuous. "Phase 3" is controversial due to its high cost and the fact that many do not consider Phase I to be adequate replacement service for the old Elevated.
Current plans include more bus rapid transit routes, including the Urban Ring, intended to expand upon existing Crosstown Buses.
Four routes to Harvard still run as trackless trolleys; there was once a much larger trackless trolley system.[citation needed]
The MBTA boat system operates several ferry routes around Boston Harbor, including service to Logan International Airport.
[edit] Fare collection
Beginning January 1, 2007, rapid transit trips (including rides on the Green Line) cost $1.70 for CharlieCard holders, $2.00 for CharlieTicket or cash payers. Bus and trackless trolley fares are $1.25 for CharlieCard holders, $1.50 for others. (The Silver Line on Washington Street is considered to be a bus; the Silver Line Waterfront is classified as rapid transit.) Persons using CharlieCards can transfer for free from a subway to a bus, and from a bus to a subway for only the $0.45 difference in price. CharlieTicket holders can transfer for free between buses, but not from a subway to a bus. Cash payers get no free transfers.
The MBTA began collecting fares for outbound trips originating on the surface part of the Green Line on January 1, 2007. The 2007 fare increase also eliminated exit fares at certain Red Line stops and ended higher fares at inbound stops on the outer part of the Green Line "D" Branch.
Monthly passes have been in use since the late 1980s, a decade ahead of New York City's Metropolitan Transportation Authority. The MBTA also sells one- and seven-day passes intended for visitors.
[edit] Parking
The MBTA operates park and ride facilities at many of its outlying stations, with a total capacity of almost 46,000 automobiles. The number of spaces at stations with parking varies from a few dozen to over 2,500. The larger lots and garages are usually sited near a major highway exit. The parking fee for a day ranges from $2.00 to $5.00. Lots often fill up during the morning rush hour. There are some 22,000 spaces on the southern portion of the commuter rail system, 9400 on the northern portion and 14600 at subway stations. Most stations also have parking racks for bicycles.
[edit] History
Mass transit in Boston was provided by private companies (often granted charters by the state legislature to create limited monopolies and grant powers of eminent domain to establish a right-of-way) until the creation of the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) in 1947. Development of mass transportation both followed existing economic and population patterns, and helped shape those patterns.
[edit] Before mass transportation
In colonial times, the only widely economical means of transport for daily commuting was walking. Most of the buildings in Boston clustered within walking distance of the waterfront on the Tremont Peninsula. Neighboring settlements such as Cambridge and Charlestown also centered around small, dense commercial centers. Most of the land area of the region was farmland or undeveloped. Commercial shipping was highly dependent on water transport, including rivers and canals like the Middlesex Canal, and water-powered mills were important manufacturing centers. Road transport, other than walking, was powered by horses and often used stagecoaches for cargo.
[edit] Railroad era begins
The steam locomotive became practical for mass transportation in the 1810s, and came to the United States in the 1820s. The private Boston and Lowell Railroad was chartered in 1830, connecting Boston to Lowell a major northerly mill town (which was also on the Middlesex Canal). It was one of the oldest railroads in North America and the first major one in Massachusetts. This marked the beginning of the development of intercity railroads that would eventually evolve into the MBTA Commuter Rail system and the Green Line "D" Branch. Origins of the various lines are listed below.
- Eventually part of the Boston and Maine Railroad:
- Lowell Line - Boston and Lowell Railroad, chartered 1830
- Haverhill/Reading Line - Andover and Wilmington Railroad, incorporated 1833; extended as Andover and Haverhill Railroad in 1837
- Fitchburg Line - Fitchburg Railroad, chartered 1842
- Newburyport/Rockport Line - ?? as branches of the Eastern Railroad
- Eventually part of Penn Central:
- Framingham/Worcester Line - Boston and Worcester Railroad, chartered 1831
- Providence/Stoughton Line - Boston and Providence Rail Road, chartered 1831 with Stoughton Branch Railroad portion chartered 1841
- Fairmount Line - Built in 1855 for the Norfolk County Railroad; eventually part of Penn Central
- Needham Line - Opened 1906, branch of the Boston and Providence Railroad; eventually part of Penn Central
- Franklin Line - ?? later acquired by New York and New England Railroad; eventually part of Penn Central
- The Old Colony Lines were at some point acquired by the large Old Colony Railroad (much of which has since been abandoned), which later merged into the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad and then the Penn Central.
- Plymouth/Kingston Line - Original Old Colony Railroad, opened to Plymouth in 1845
- Middleborough/Lakeville Line - Randolph and Bridgewater Railroad and Middleborough Railroad - chartered 1845
- Greenbush Line - South Shore Railroad, chartered 1846
- Gillette Stadium spur of Providence/Stoughton Line - Agricultural Branch Railroad, chartered 1847? (see Old Colony Railroad; eventually purchased by MBTA from New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad
- Eventually part of New York Central Railroad
- Green Line "D" Branch - Brookline Branch Railroad, opened 1847; Charles River Branch Railroad extended from Brookline Village to Cook Junction in 1852; Boston and Albany Railroad extended to Riverside in 1886
The Grand Junction Railroad, mostly still owned by CSX, was built between 1847 and 1856. The MBTA uses it in 2007 for non-revenue movement of trains between the northern and southern halves of its system, which are otherwise disconnected.
[edit] Streetcar era begins
The Cambridge Railroad was the first streetcar company in Massachusetts. It was chartered in 1853 to connect the West End of Boston to Central Square and Harvard Square in Cambridge via the West End Bridge (which was at the site of the modern Longfellow Bridge). This is the same route of the modern Red Line subway, but the horse-powered streetcars ran on surface streets. The Dorchester Railroad, another streetcar company, was chartered soon after, in 1854. A profusion of streetcar lines were laid down throughout the Boston area.
In 1885, the West End Street Railway was chartered. The company consolidated ownership of existing streetcar lines in Boston and the inner suburbs, and began converting the animal-drawn vehicles to electric propulsion. The transition was relatively fast; the first electric trolleys ran in 1889, and the last horsecar went out of service around 1900.
In the late 1800s and early 1900s, two other streetcar companies also gained consolidated ownership of many smaller lines. The Middlesex and Boston Street Railway came to control the western suburbs, and the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway came to control the northern and southern suburbs.
[edit] Streetcar subways and elevated rail
Streetcar congestion in downtown Boston created the need for subways and elevated rail. These grade-separated railways both added additional transportation capacity (by creating the equivalent of new roads) and avoided delays caused by intersections with cross streets. The West End Street Railway was renamed the Boston Elevated Railway and undertook several such projects.
Boston's subway was the first in the United States and is often called "America's First Subway" by the MBTA and others.[5] The Tremont Street Subway is the core of the precursor to the Green Line, and opened in 1897 and 1898. In 1901, the Main Line Elevated, the precursor to the Orange Line opened, a rapid transit line running as an elevated railway through outlying areas and using the Tremont Street Subway downtown (with the outer tracks and platforms reconfigured for Elevated trains); the Atlantic Avenue Elevated opened soon after, providing a second route downtown. This was the first elevated railway and the first rapid transit line in Boston, still coming three years before the first underground line of the New York City Subway (but long after the first elevated railway in New York).
The Washington Street Tunnel opened in 1908, giving the Elevated a shorter route through downtown and returning the Tremont Street Subway to full streetcar service. Various extensions and branches were built to the Tremont Street Subway in both directions, bypassing more surface tracks. In addition, when the Main Line El opened in 1901, many surface routes were cut back to its terminals (Dudley and Sullivan) to provide a transfer for a faster route downtown. Elevated extensions were soon built on each end, and more streetcar lines were cut back.
The next line to open was the East Boston Tunnel, a streetcar tunnel under Boston Harbor to East Boston, in 1904. This replaced a transfer between streetcars and ferries, and provided access to the other subways downtown. The tunnel was converted to rapid transit specifications in 1924, with an easy cross-platform transfer at the East Boston end.
The Cambridge Tunnel opened in 1912, connecting the downtown lines to Harvard Square in Cambridge, and was soon extended south from downtown to Dorchester as the Dorchester Tunnel. The Dorchester Extension, opening in stages from 1927, took the line further along a former New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad branch through Dorchester, with the Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line continuing along the old right-of-way to Mattapan. This too resulted in cutbacks in streetcar service to its terminals.
As built, many of the key transfer stations were prepayment stations, in which free transfers could be made between surface streetcar lines and grade-separated subway or elevated lines. This was made possible by the operation of all services under one umbrella; suburban services that operated over the same tracks used different areas outside fare control. Some of the streetcar levels were later converted for bus or trackless trolley operation; others have been closed. Free transfers were eliminated outright in October 1961 except between subway routes, returning in a limited capacity in 2000 and in full in 2007 as long as a CharlieCard is used. Some of the prepaid transfer areas still exist architecturally, though transfers from bus to subway are not free, and faregates enclose all subway stations (but not most above-ground Green Line stops). Prepayment stations included Andrew (still in place), Arborway, Ashmont , Broadway, Dudley, Egleston, Everett, Fields Corner, Forest Hills, Harvard (still in place), Hynes Convention Center/ICA, Kenmore (still in place), Lechmere (still in place), Maverick, Ruggles (built for buses, still in place), Savin Hill, Sullivan Square, Watertown (only served surface and surface-subway streetcars) and Wood Island (built for buses).
[edit] Decline of streetcars and railroads
Over the years, streetcar lines have been replaced with rubber-tire vehicles. The Boston Elevated Railway started replacing rail vehicles with buses in 1922. In 1936, it started replacing some rail vehicles with trackless trolleys, which use overhead wires but rubber tires instead of rails. The last Middlesex and Boston Street Railway streetcar ran in 1930.
By the beginning of 1953, the only remaining streetcar lines fed two tunnels - the main Tremont Street Subway network downtown and the short tunnel (now the Harvard Bus Tunnel) in Harvard Square. Gasoline-powered buses could not be used in the tunnels due to the problem of venting exhaust.
The Harvard routes were replaced with trackless trolleys in 1958, and are the only surviving MBTA trackless trolley routes, not counting the new phase 2 Silver Line and a short non-revenue connection from the terminus of the 71 to the Watertown Carhouse.
The old elevated railways proved to be an eyesore and required several sharp curves in Boston's twisty streets. The Atlantic Avenue Elevated was closed in 1938. The beginning of the decline of the Atlantic Avenue line was the Boston molasses disaster of 1919 which interrupted service on the line. In 1944, passenger service on the Fairmount Line was canceled by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad after a long period of declining ridership.
As rail passenger service became increasingly unprofitable, largely due to the increasingly popular automobile, government takeover became necessary to prevent abandonment.
[edit] MTA incorporation and takeovers
A new agency of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) purchased[6] and took over subway, elevated, streetcar, and bus operations from the Boston Elevated Railway in 1947.
The Revere Extension (now part of the Blue Line) to Wonderland opened from 1952 to 1954, mostly along the former narrow-gauge Boston, Revere Beach and Lynn Railroad right-of-way.
In 1959, MTA streetcar service opened on what is now the Green Line "D" Branch, connecting to the Boylston Street Subway and using track from the New York Central Railroad, which had stopped running on the line the previous year. It required many more cars than expected due to heavy ridership.
Also in 1959, with the opening of the Southwest Expressway, the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad halted passenger service on the former Old Colony Railroad lines.
The last two streetcar lines running into the Pleasant Street Portal of the the Tremont Street Subway were substituted with buses in in 1953 and 1962, and it has since been covered over.
[edit] MBTA incorporation and commuter rail takeovers
On August 3, 1964, the MBTA succeeded the MTA, with an enlarged service area. The original MTA district consisted of 14 cities and towns — Arlington, Belmont, Boston, Brookline, Cambridge, Chelsea, Everett, Malden, Medford, Milton, Newton, Revere, Somerville and Watertown. The MBTA covered an expanded area of 78 cities and towns, with a 79th (Maynard) joining in or before 1972 and leaving in or after 1976.
The MBTA was formed partly to subsidize existing commuter rail operations, provided at the time by three private railroad companies — the Boston and Maine Railroad, the New York Central Railroad (via the Boston and Albany Railroad) and the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad — with the B&M running the north-side lines and the NYC and NYNH&H (both merged into Penn Central in 1968, and taken over by Conrail in 1976) on the south side. The MBTA soon began to subsidize the companies, and acquired the lines in stages from 1973 through 1976 amidst large cutbacks in service and coverage area. Since then, many of these lines have seen service return, most notably the Old Colony Railroad (NYNH&H) lines to the South Shore.
By 1964, commuter rail service to Worcester was being provided. The Boston and Maine Railroad started receiving MBTA subsidies for its commuter service in 1965. The MBTA bought most of the present-day commuter rail trackage from the Boston and Maine Railroad and Penn Central (into which the New York Central Railroad and the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad had merged), in 1973. It also purchased rolling stock at this time. Track between Framingham and Worcester was not acquired by the agency, and due to a lack of state subsidy, commuter rail service on this portion was cut in 1975. It resumed in 1994, though the track is still privately owned (by CSX, as of 2006). The Fairmount Line was purchased from Penn Central in 1976. Passenger service resumed there in 1979 during diversion of other lines during Southwest Corridor construction, and was not discontinued when the project was complete.
[edit] Bus expansion and streetcar cutbacks
The MBTA assigned colors to its four rapid transit lines in 1965, and lettered the branches of the Green Line from north to south. However, shortages of streetcars, among other factors, caused bus substitution of rail service on two branches of the Green Line. The "A" Branch was replaced in its entirety in 1969. The portion of the "E" Branch from Heath Street to Arborway was replaced by buses in 1985.
The MBTA purchased bus routes in the outer suburbs to the north and south from the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway in 1968. Western suburban routes were purchased in 1972 from the Middlesex and Boston Street Railway. (Both of these companies had long since ceased running any streetcar service.) A few routes to the north were taken over from Service Bus Lines in 1975, and one in the south in 1980 from the Brush Hill Transportation Company. As with the commuter rail system, many of the outlying routes were dropped soon before or after the takeover due to low ridership and high operating costs.
[edit] Rapid transit expansion
In the 1970s, the MBTA received a boost from the BTPR areawide re-evaluation of the role of transit relative to highways. Producing a moratorium on highway construction inside Route 128, numerous transit lines were planned for expansion by the Voorhees-Skidmore, Owings and Merrill-ESL consulting team. The Charlestown Elevated, part of the Orange Line north of downtown Boston, was replaced by the Haymarket North Extension in 1975, and the Washington Street Elevated lasted until 1987, when the Southwest Corridor was opened to replace it. The closure of the Washington Street Elevated south of downtown Boston brought the end of rapid transit service to the Roxbury neighborhood. Both of these were built next to existing rail corridors.
The Braintree Extension, a branch of the Red Line to Braintree, opened in stages from 1971 to 1980, again next to an existing rail corridor. The Red Line Northwest Extension to Alewife opened in 1985, with an intermediate opening in 1984, partly along a railroad corridor and partly through a deep-bore tunnel.
These recent extensions provided not only additional subway system coverage, but also major parking structures at several of the terminal and intermediate stations, the best-known of which is Alewife, where the Route 2 freeway ends at the Red Line terminal.
With the 2004 replacement of the Causeway Street Elevated stretch of the Green Line with a subway connection, the only remaining elevated railways are a short portion of the Red Line at Charles/MGH and a short portion of the Green Line between Science Park and Lechmere.
[edit] MBTA expansion, forward funding, and the Big Dig
The district was expanded further to 175 cities and towns in 1999, adding most that were served by or adjacent to Commuter Rail lines (again including Maynard). The MBTA did not assume responsibility for local service in those communities, some of which run their own buses.
Prior to July 1, 2000, the MBTA was reimbursed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for all costs above revenue collected (net cost of service). Beginning on that date, the T was granted a dedicated revenue stream consisting of amounts assessed on served cities and towns, along with a dedicated 20% portion of the state sales tax (i.e. one dollar out of each five dollars collected under the Massachusetts 5% sales tax). The MBTA now must live within this "forward funding" budget.
The Commonwealth assigned to the MBTA responsibility for increasing public transit to compensate for increased automobile pollution from the Big Dig (see "Big Dig remediation projects" below). The T submerged a nearby portion of the Green Line and rebuilt Haymarket and North Stations during Big Dig construction, but Big Dig highway funding is not part of the MBTA budget.
[edit] Future plans
As of 2005, there are a number of plans for MBTA system expansion and improvement. Some are in progress, some are in the planning stages, and others have been advocated by citizens groups. All new and rebuilt stations will be handicap accessible (as required by state and federal law). In 2005 the administration of then-State-Governor Mitt Romney announced a long range transportation plan that emphasized repair and maintenance over expansion.
[edit] Projects underway
- Construction is being finished on a commuter rail line to the Greenbush section of Scituate, the third branch of the Old Colony service.
- Several stations on the Blue Line are being rebuilt to allow six-car trains. New cars are on back-order.
- The Charles Street Red Line station and the Kenmore Square station on the Green line are being rebuilt.
- A new station at T. F. Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island, 13 miles south of Providence that will allow expansion of MBTA commuter rail to that airport and Wickford Junction (Funded in 2005 federal highway bill; work is expected to begin in 2009). Amtrak trains could use the station as well.
[edit] Big Dig remediation projects
Massachusetts agreed to build several transit projects as remediation for the environmental impacts of the Big Dig. Some have been completed, but three have not been started and the Commonwealth has proposed alternatives to the last two. The original remediation projects that were not done are:
- Extending the Green Line north beyond Lechmere, partially along commuter rail rights of way, to Tufts University and Union Square, Somerville. (This project will proceed on a definite time table.)
- Connecting the Blue Line and the Red Line at Charles Street. (The connection will be designed, but there is no commitment to build it.)
- Restoration of The Arborway streetcar service in Jamaica Plain. On February 13, 2007, the Arborway Committee sued the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to restore E-branch service to Forest Hills.
The last two projects are controversial:
- Owners of historic building near Charles Street have expressed concerns that the excavation required might damage their foundations;
- Some Jamaica Plain residents and merchants object to the restoration of streetcar service, on the grounds that it would create traffic snares on busy main thoroughfares (vigorously disputed by other residents), and be accompanied by the probable elimination of on-street parking in an area with no garages or large parking lots.
In 2002, the MBTA formed the Arborway Rail Restoration Project Advisory Committee (ARRPAC) to provide community oversight of the new design and construction for the return of streetcars to Jamaica Plain. In February 2004, after two years of planning and with station designs nearly complete, the MBTA stopped communicating with ARRPAC members and halted the planning process.
On January 12, 2005, the cities of Medford and Somerville announced their intent to sue the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The Central Artery/Tunnel Project rerouted a lot of traffic through the area, causing high levels of pollution and congestion. Though the MBTA had agreed to extend the Green Line through the two cities, there had been no progress on the extension since the deal was made in 1990. Soon after, the MBTA announced that it would build the extension.
In late 2005, the MBTA proposed moving forward on the Green Line northward extension but replacing the other two projects with increased service and new stations on the Fairmount Line, originally a community-originated proposal called the Indigo line, and building an additional 1000 commuter rail parking spaces. Planning and work on some Fairmount modifications has begun.
The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection agreed to this plan, and public comment was taken from November, 2005, to January, 2006.
In March 2006, the Boston Globe reported that the Conservation Law Foundation's lawsuit against the state could proceed to trial. The suit claims that the state failed to fund mitigation projects that were required for the construction of the Big Dig.
In November 2006, the Conservation Law Foundation announced a settlement of the suit under which the MBTA and the Commonwealth would commit to completing the Green Line extension to Somerville, the Fairmont Line upgrade and the 1000 additional parking spaces on a fixed time table. The MBTA will also complete design of the Blue Line - Red Line connection, but did not commit to building it. The MBTA did not agree to restore Arborway streetcar service in Jamaica Plain, but will study other transit improvements in that area. The new plan still must be approved by the EPA. [4]
[edit] Other projects in active planning
- A new commuter rail line to Fall River and New Bedford. Possible future extension from Fall River to Newport, RI.
- Extension of the Blue Line to Lynn
- Capacity improvements on the Framingham/Worcester Line.
- Replacement to the Lechmere Green Line station as part of the North Point Redevelopment Project.
[edit] Projects whose future is uncertain
- Silver Line Phase 3 — a tunnel connecting South Station with the Silver Line Phase I BRT service to Dudley Square, Roxbury (project on "hold" as of August 2005 [7])
- Connecting North Station and South Station (the North-South Rail Link)
- Extension of commuter rail to New Hampshire [5]
- Urban Ring
- Extension of commuter rail to Peabody and Danvers.
- A second South Salem commuter rail station in Salem, Massachusetts on the Newburyport/Rockport Line.
[edit] See also
- Boston transportation
- Transit fares
- List of rapid transit systems
- MBTA accessibility
- Noise mitigation
- David L. Gunn
- Skinhead on the MBTA
[edit] External links
- MetroMapr.com - Interactive Google Maps of the Boston T with search.
- Google Maps overlayed with MBTA stops
- MBTA Riders Network
- MBTA Full System Maps Unofficial PDFs of the full MBTA system, pieced together from MBTA section maps.
- Arborway Committee (streetcar advocates)
- Association for Public Transportation (advocacy organization)
- T Riders Union (activist organization)
- BadTransit, an MBTA transit watchdog site
- The Transport Avenger — "The lowdown on the T and the myriad of problems with operations and staff."
- NETransit (history)
- nycsubway.org — Boston Transit: The MBTA (station by station history and photographs)
- MBTA Vehicle Inventory
- The Future MBTA (Maps and ideas of what the MBTA could look like in the future.)
- The Boston: Bus-Town Project
- The Boston Globe on the North Point Project
- The Boston Globe on the North Point T Station at Lechmere
- The MBTA Forum @ Boardzero Discussion of the MBTA and Greater Boston Transit
[edit] References
- ^ Ridership. Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. Retrieved on 2006-11-13.
- ^ Wall, Lucas (August 1, 2005). T ridership reaches low point of decade. Boston Globe. Retrieved on 2006-11-13.
- ^ here we go. The Red Line connection is at JFK/UMass (MBTA), the Orange Line at Wellington (MBTA) (last used ca. 1981), and the Green Line has one at Riverside (MBTA). Trucks may also be used to deliver train cars from the manufacturer. [1]
- ^ a b http://mbta.com/fares_and_passes/subway/
- ^ Famous Firsts in Massachusetts. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Retrieved on 2006-11-13.
- ^ http://members.aol.com/netransit/private/LRV.html
- ^ Daniel, Mac (August 18, 2005). MBTA puts hold on 3d, final phase of its Silver Line. Boston Globe. Retrieved on 2006-11-13.
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