Petition to save the Yellow line
Tuesday, March 30, 2010 at 11:33PM
MHNA

From the Meridian Hill Listserv - Save the "Yellow Line" now! Sign our petition to the WMATA board!

Help prevent cuts that will hurt our community and undermine our businesses!  

WMATA has proposed numerous options to address their budget shortfalls, many of which will directly impact the DC neighborhoods that were hardest hit by original delays in constructing the system. WMATA is proposing to: 

CLICK HERE TO SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION OPPOSING THESE CUTS!

While WMATA is holding a meeting on April 1, at All Souls Church at 16th & Harvard, these cuts are not an April fools joke, they are on the table for real, right now, and your voice is needed to make sure they don't happen!

PUBLIC HEARING DATES AND LOCATIONS

Development and Ridership: 

These changes represent backwards thinking and would have a devastating impact upon the Shaw, U Street, Columbia Heights, Georgia Avenue and Fort Totten stations, where real estate developments and future ridership are still a work in process. These stops were the some of the last in the system to be developed due to decades long construction delays in the 80's and 90's. 

When the Yellow Line extension was approved in 2006, it addressed the failure of WMATA to provide the service that was promised for these stops as part of the original design and spurred continued development. However the extension does not run during rush hour and the Yellow Line is the shortest route, so it does not have the ridership numbers of other lines, and those numbers are being held up as justification for the cuts.

These cuts would assure that ridership never reaches it's potential as development stalls and property values are impacted by removing half the service to these developing areas, creating long waits at these dense urban centers. Development has already slowed as evidenced by the tens of millions of dollars of tax abatements that have been given to projects at Shaw, U Street, Columbia Heights and Georgia Avenue. The city and WMATA are not considering these long term impacts when assessing these cuts as proposed.

Mixed-use 24-7 Urban Communities - Weekend and Late Night Hours: 

These proposed changes also represent a reversion to the days of the subway system as a week day commuter rail as opposed to serving as the hub of an urban transportation network. Councilmember Graham led the fight in the late 90's to extend the hours from midnight to 3:00 am on weekends, stimulating the late night industries and providing a safe alternative to "drunk driving," and addressing some of the need for parking to be provided at all the venues that remain open in these time frames. 

All of the changes proposed above would reverse the progress that has been made by WMATA in the last decade to serve the needs of these communities. These changes will inspire more car purchases for the urban residents around these stations, and more driving trips into the city by visitors to DC's continuously emerging music and arts scenes, as many shows and activities don't begin until 10:00 or 11:00 pm. The impacts upon these businesses and the residents that live nearby would be devastating. MPD resources already spread thin, would not be able to cope with the new demands as car break-ins and muggings increase. 

The closure of the eastern entrance of the U Street/African American Civil War

Memorial/Cardozo station is emblematic of this lack of understanding of life around the stops themselves. The eastern entrance opens onto the memorial, a destination for tourists, while also serving the 9:30 Club, Town Dance Boutique and all of the venues that make up the 9th Street cluster, known as "Little Ethiopia." These venues are at their peak on weekends and during late night hours, brining tens of thousands of people to the area on a weekly basis, many of whom using the subway to access the area.

ACT NOW!

SIGN THE PETITION!

EMAIL THE METRO BOARD!

TESTIFY AT THE HEARINGS!

Petition

"I urge the Metro Board to not make a serious mistake in cutting off vital services to the stations serviced by the Yellow Line. These vibrant urban centers are dynamic and exciting destinations for metro travelers that depend on the following: Maintaining the Yellow Line Extension, Maintaining full Yellow Line service on evenings and weekends, Maintaining late-night service for entire system, and keeping both entrances at U Street and Shaw."click here to sign

Article originally appeared on Meridian Hill Neighborhood Association, Washington, DC, USA (http://www.meridianhilldc.org/).
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