Comment on the Charm City Circulator / Transit Development Plan

Comments on proposed changes to the Charm City Circulator are due today. We continue to have concerns about the larger mission of the Charm City Circulator, proposed changes, and sufficient operational resources.

You can view proposed changes and comment on them by clicking here. Alternatively, comments can be emailed to streetsofbaltimoreTDP@wrallp.com

Copied below are comments submitted jointly by Bikemore and Central Maryland Transportation Alliance:

Baltimore City Transit Development Plan Charm City Circulator Comments

In December 2020, Bikemore and the Central Maryland Transportation Alliance wrote a joint transportation transition memo to Mayor Brandon Scott and Baltimore City Department of Transportation. In it, we called for a reevaluation of the purpose and existence of the Charm City Circulator. We were concerned that the circulator currently duplicates a number of high-performing Maryland Transit Administration routes and that calls for expansion have not included expanded funding and may exacerbate competition with existing MTA routes. 

We advised Baltimore City Department of Transportation make one of the following choices:

  • Sunset the circulator and apply those resources to improving MTA service or eliminating fares.

  • Run the circulator only where a tax on parking provides enough revenue to sustain free, frequent service for trips under two miles.

  • Run the circulator only where there is a gap in access via transit to parks, jobs, schools, healthy foods, or other priority equity destinations. 

And, we stated that if circulator service continued under the latter two options, the city must create a new mission statement with clear criteria to evaluate and fund maintaining routes and developing new ones, as well as clear criteria to avoid competition with the Maryland Transit Administration. 

We want to thank Mayor Scott and Baltimore City Department of Transportation for the opportunity to serve on the TDP Advisory Committee, where we reiterated these points, and are writing to provide comments on the draft Charm City Circulator recommendations.

Specific Proposal Comments: Some Good and Bad

Some of the proposed changes to the Charm City Circulator routes would increase the number of low-income and low-car-ownership households with access to the circulator and the destinations it serves. For example, see the proposed Cherry Route strengthening connections in South Baltimore, extension of the Green Route to North Avenue, and the eastward extension at the north end of the Purple Route expanding access to a grocer and library.

However, we have a number of concerns, including: 

  • The impact that the number of turns on the proposed Cherry Route will have on bus travel times, especially during heavy traffic conditions. 

  • Changes on the Purple Line and the routing of the Cherry Route largely duplicate already planned Summer and Fall service changes for MTA bus routes.

  • Changes do not come with adequate, let alone increased financial resources to provide frequent, reliable service.

Larger Picture Comments: Missing the Mark

Our larger concern is that it remains unclear why Baltimore City annually funds a Charm City Circulator. 

Our recommendations to choose a goal and stick with it have not been taken, and instead the circulator is again trying to do more with the same amount of resources. A new mission statement has not been created, nor have clear criteria to evaluate and fund route maintenance and development, as well as to avoid competition with MTA, been created.

The Circulator was created in 2010 to reduce the demand for parking downtown, thereby making it more attractive to walk and ride transit, producing benefits like alleviating traffic and reducing pollution. Subsequently, Baltimore City expanded the Circulator to support tourism during the anniversary of the War of 1812 and to satisfy stakeholders in Charles Village and at the Johns Hopkins Homewood campus who wanted service, despite frequent MTA service and Hopkins running competing shuttle services. Now, Baltimore City is adjusting routes to attempt to achieve equity goals.

The result of the changes from 2010 through the current proposal is a system that is largely redundant to public transportation run by the Maryland Transit Administration and that achieves none of its multiple goals particularly well. 

If equity is the goal, then it would be more effective to eliminate Purple Route service above North Avenue, where it duplicates high-frequency MTA routes and Hopkins Shuttle service and divert those resources to routing that increases the number of low-income and low-car-ownership households served. 

Another option would be for Baltimore City to stop running bus service and use the funds to underwrite more frequent MTA service on routes that improve connections to high schools, job centers, or other destinations city residents need to reach.

As we have called for in the past, we recommend clarifying the mission and the goals of the Charm City Circulator and to make decisions about routes, hours, and frequency to best achieve them. As proposed, we fear these small tweaks will not dramatically improve equitable access to the circulator, and may result in further reductions in service quality.

Funding for public transportation is scarce, and we need leaders to make tough decisions about how best to spend it.

Watch: Maryland Gubernatorial Transportation Forum

Watch the Maryland Gubernatorial Transportation Forum!

The 2022 Maryland Gubernatorial Transportation Forum, hosted on April 20th, was a huge success, with a live audience and more than 3,000 Facebook and YouTube viewers.

We’re grateful to our many partners who helped organize and spread the word, including The Real News Network and moderator Jaisal Noor, Central Maryland Transportation Alliance, Transit Choices, Baltimore Transit Equity Coalition, Maryland League of Conservation Voters, The Fund for Educational Excellence, Sierra Club, The Transform Maryland Transportation Coalition, and transit riders and operators.

Watch the livestream below!

ACTION ALERT: Greenway Trails Network Meetings

Two children outside in a park point to where they live on a large poster map of the Baltimore Greenway Trails Network

Greenway Trails Network Northern Segment community engagement in Druid Hill Park in 2016

Virtual meetings to discuss the Northern Segments of the Baltimore Greenway Trails Network are being held March 1st, 2nd, and 3rd from 6:00pm to 7:30pm.

Please register to attend by clicking here.

The Northern Segments of the Baltimore Greenway Trails Network would create a new trail connection between the Gwynns Falls Trail, Jones Falls Trail, and Herring Run Trail, allowing people to safely and accessibly walk, bike, and roll between Gwynns Falls/Leakin Park, Druid Hill Park, Wyman Park, Lake Montebello, and Herring Run Park.

The Northern Segments are the largest unconstructed gap of the full 35 mile Baltimore Greenway Trails Network, which when completed will connect a majority of neighborhoods and nearly every large city park, transit hub, cultural institution, hospital, and university to one another through a walking, biking, and rolling trail.

Bikemore began conducting community outreach around the Northern Segments of the Baltimore Greenway Trails Network in 2016, meeting residents through our Mobile Bike Shop and other programming in partnership with community associations and residents. We have consistently heard a desire for safe and accessible trail connections along the corridor.

You can learn more about the full project by clicking here.

Like any project that has the potential to reclaim or repurpose space from motor vehicles, the idea of a safe trail connection along Gwynns Falls Parkway and 33rd Street faces opposition.

It's important that you show up and make your voice heard.

Remembering Edgar Draper

A photo of Edgar Draper and Gloria Jacobs

On November 19th 2021, Edgar Daniel Draper, 63 years old, was hit and killed by the driver of a Baltimore City Department of General Services Ford F-150 pickup truck just minutes from his home in the Hanlon-Longwood neighborhood.  

Retired from the computer tech department of the Social Security Administration and a proud member of the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity, Edgar is survived by his companion of 16 years, Gloria Jacobs, his children, and his grandchildren. The bicycle was his transportation in the neighborhood, where they had recently moved. Edgar was returning on his bicycle from shopping at Big Lots when he was hit and killed.  

Although the driver stayed at the scene, the city has been less than forthcoming about the crash, with nothing reported in the news and an unusual two week lag between the fatality and the city acknowledging it to Bikemore.  

It is difficult to deal with the loss of the person you plan to grow old with, the person who has become grandfather to your grandchildren. The family’s grief over this unforeseen tragedy has been made worse by Edgar’s death going publicly unacknowledged by Baltimore City.  

Between the funeral expenses and Gloria’s loss of Edgar’s retirement revenue, her grief is further exacerbated by the financial burden suddenly thrust upon her. Bikemore has set up a fund to assist Gloria in this time. 100% of funds raised will be passed on to assist with this financial burden.

A white painted ghost bike locked to a school crossing sign next to a road with speeding cars.

At Gloria’s request, Bikemore has placed a ghost bike supplied by Velocipede Bike Project as a memorial to Edgar at the crash site. Unfortunately, COVID-19 precautions prevented us from hosting a memorial ride to the site for the ghost bike placement, but there will be a memorial ride and gathering there in the near future.

The site of this fatal crash is a poorly designed intersection on a road with a major speeding problem. Gloria has asked us to use her loss to continue to increase awareness for the need for traffic calming, high visibility crossings, and separated bicycle infrastructure–treatments that could have prevented this death. Baltimore City must address this and other dangerous corridors, and should use revenues from automated enforcement on those corridors to do it.

In the meantime, we ask that you please make a contribution to help offset the financial burden taken on by Edgar’s partner Gloria Jacobs.

Donate to the Edgar Draper Memorial Fund

Staff transitions - A note from Clarissa

At my first Mobile Bike Shop in August 2019! (Photo Credit: Graham Coreil-Allen)

I am writing with gratitude to share with our Bikemore community that this week is my last at Bikemore.

After I graduated in 2019, I was ready to jump into community organizing and nonprofit work in Baltimore, eager to contribute in the ways that I could and bring my energy to whatever opportunities came towards me. Through the Baltimore Corps fellowship, I found my first job at Bikemore. I started my role knowing nothing about transportation but a general knowledge of how much transportation contributed to the climate crisis.

Quickly, I learned that redesigning our roads to accommodate for cyclists, pedestrians, and transit users wasn’t just about mode shift to halt damaging practices to the environment - it was about righting the racist wrongs urban planners made decades ago, deliberately segregating communities. I see Complete Streets as a tool of transformative justice, a way to move our streets away from harmful and individualist transportation and towards a public space that brings people together.

I am so grateful for all of the people I’ve learned from through this job, from my cohort peers in CMTA’s Transportation 101, the inspirational parents who bike with their kids and show them a way to engage with the world around them, all of the partners that worked with me to pull off community events and programs, to each person I met at our Mobile Bike Shops.

I’m proud to say now that I feel comfortable getting around the city by bike and I think of Baltimore in a different, nuanced light than when I first graduated from Hopkins. And I’m greatly excited to support Bikemore as a Baltimore resident, cyclist, pedestrian, and transit rider. This Fall, I’ll start my master’s program in Social Work at the University of Maryland, and carry everything I’ve learned about community organizing, policy, Baltimore, and urbanism with me there.