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Transit options save Marylanders $346.3 million each year at the pump, save 132.3 million gallons of oil, and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 960,400 metric tons, according to the report. The state ranks sixth in the nation in the amount consumers save on gas through mass transit.
“These data illustrate the concrete reasons why rail and other forms of public transportation should be a greater focus,” Johanna Neumann, state director for the Maryland Public Interest Research Group, said at a news conference at Penn Station in Baltimore. “But the larger issue is that America’s transportation is not leading us toward the future because it has lacked a real purpose for decades.”
The Maryland Transit Administration ranked 14th among the top 50 transit agencies for oil savings, sparing 35.7 million gallons of oil annually and saving consumers $93.4 million each year. Baltimore ranked 10th among the top 25 metropolitan areas for oil savings.
In releasing the report, Neumann and other local transit advocates urged state and federal lawmakers to increase funding for new mass transit options such as Baltimore’s planned Red Line.
Doing so, they said, would stop the building of far-flung communities requiring gas-guzzling commutes and boost smart-growth and mixed-use projects.
“We’re not building those types of communities fast enough to meet demand,” said Douglas Stewart, director of public transportation advocate group 1000 Friends of Maryland. “Poorly planned, scattered developments are a major reason we don’t have better transit options.”
But Neumann said federal funding is parsed out based on the state’s previous-year gas consumption the amount of roadways in the state, and miles traveled on those roads — all car-based measurements dating to the 1950s expansion of the nation’s highway system.
“We once had a vision of our nation for highways,” said Otis Rolley III, president and chief executive officer of the Central Maryland Transportation Alliance. “We believe it is time to have a vision again.”
acahall@baltimoreexaminer.com



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1:39 PM MST on Fri., Mar. 7, 2008 re: "Study: Mass Transit saves Marylanders $346M in gas"
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Examiner Reader said:
I would like to know how all the people in the press conference got to Penn Station? My bet was that they drove there, why, because mass transit is inconvenient and unsafe.
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reader said:
I rode it for the first time last week to go downtown and thought that I would be more relaxed. But I was wrong! I caught cab for the trip back with someone who could not speake english.
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reader said:
I rode the light rail from hunt valley to downtown near inner harbor for the first time last summer. That was the last time I would ever travel on that light rail.I was wishing I was armed with a gun all the time I was on there. Then I tried the sub from owings mills to downtown and thet was worse . Most of the ride is under ground and dark.And when you get off it is just as bad. There too I wished I was armed.Didn't see any security.Thumbs down on our transportation system and the democrates who made this monster!!
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Fridley Wallheimer said:
Almost everyone would ride mass tarnsit if they had a cop of every car and or train 24/7. The animals (I'm sorry if I offend my four-legged friends by referring to this scum as animals) that I have to share the subway with sometimes are unbelievable. If you could assure anyone who decides to take Mass transit to work or after hours that they will not be harassed, intimidated robbed and/or just annoyed then people will flock to the buses and subways in droves.
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