Plan to Fix Traffic
COOPER RELEASES METRO 360 PLAN FOR
TRANSPORTATION TRANSFORMATION
BETHESDA, MD – Today Jordan Cooper announced his comprehensive Metro 360
Plan for transportation transformation. Cooper announced: “Gridlock.
Rush hour. Traffic congestion. These are experiences familiar to every
constituent in District 16.”
Cooper went on to describe our past success at handling increasing
traffic through our investments in mass transit infrastructure, saying
“We have done two things right with transit in the past 60 years: in the
1960s we built the Capital Beltway and in the 1970s we built Metro. We
need to build upon our successes and create an outer beltway and a
beltway Metro system.”
The Metro 360 Plan entails building an outer beltway, of which the
Inter-County Connector (ICC) would be a part, that includes a second
bridge across the Potomac River, connecting Montgomery and Loudon
Counties. This second connection above the American Legion Bridge would
enable Marylanders to travel directly to Dulles Airport without first
driving either down to the Beltway or up to Frederick. No development
would be permitted along this direct access road connecting Maryland to
Virginia in order to preserve the Montgomery County Agricultural Reserve
as much as possible.
The Plan also calls for a Beltway Metro system of which the Purple Line
is a part. In order for Metro to be a viable transit option for the
entire DC metropolitan area, Metro lines need to run along the entire
beltway. Cooper’s Metro 360 Plan takes into account some features of
existing master plans that were implemented decades ago when, for
example, a bridge connecting Prince George’s County to Alexandria, VA
was intentionally built wider than necessary in order to accommodate the
future construction of a Metro line over that bridge. With a Beltway
Metro system Montgomery County residents would be able to take Metro to
Tysons Corner and Dulles Airport within a half-hour through a connection
between the Red and Silver Lines. And as the Silver Line has been
partially funded through Metro impact taxes, so too could this new
Beltway Metro plan be fund by the same in addition to an increase in the
gas tax in Maryland.
Cooper summarized his Metro 360 Plan as such: “Improved mass-transit
options will increase mobility, strengthen our economy, and improve our
quality of life. We must continue to invest in the maintenance and
expansion of our transit infrastructure.”
Gridlock. Rush hour.
Traffic congestion. These are experiences familiar to every constituent
in District 16. Among the top issues that I'm hearing from you as I go
door to door with my team is your frustration with traffic. As a result I
am pleased to announce my comprehensive Metro 360 Plan for
transportation transformation.
We have done two things
right with transit in the past 60 years: in the 1960s we built the
Capital Beltway and in the 1970s we built Metro. We need to build upon
our successes and create an outer beltway and a beltway Metro system.
The Metro 360 Plan
entails building an outer beltway, of which the Inter-County Connector
(ICC) would be a part, that includes a second bridge across the Potomac
River, connecting Montgomery and Loudon Counties. This second connection
above the American Legion Bridge would enable Marylanders to travel
directly to Dulles Airport without first driving either down to the
Beltway or up to Frederick. No development would be permitted along this
direct access road connecting Maryland to Virginia in order to preserve
the Montgomery County Agricultural Reserve as much as possible.
The Plan also calls for a
Beltway Metro system of which the Purple Line is a part. In order for
Metro to be a viable transit option for the entire DC metropolitan area,
Metro lines need to run along the entire beltway. My Metro 360 Plan
takes into account some features of existing master plans that were
implemented decades ago when, for example, a bridge connecting Prince
George’s County to Alexandria, VA was intentionally built wider than
necessary in order to accommodate the future construction of a Metro
line over that bridge. With a Beltway Metro system Montgomery County
residents would be able to take Metro to Tysons Corner and Dulles
Airport within a half-hour through a connection between the Red and
Silver Lines. And as the Silver Line has been partially funded through
Metro impact taxes, so too could this new Beltway Metro plan be fund by
the same in addition to an increase in the gas tax in Maryland.
Improved mass-transit
options will increase mobility, strengthen our economy, and improve our
quality of life. We must continue to invest in the maintenance and
expansion of our transit infrastructure.
