Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Another lost opportunity in parks planning: Joint Management Plan for Cromwell Valley Park; Lock Raven Reservoir; and the Northern Central Trail in Baltimore County

The comment thread on the NPS post ("National Park Service as operator of local parks in DC") a couple back reminded me I meant to write about "Loch Raven Reservoir" because it was written about in a recent Baltimore Sun column, "At Baltimore's Loch Raven Reservoir, a good walk spoiled."  From the article:

It took me 10 days to get a response from DPW about the desire of citizens to see the gates closed. The next paragraph contains most of the official statement I received from DPW’s communications office. (Note: The second quoted sentence was missing a critical verb or two when it arrived by email.) 

“Due to the management goals for the City’s water resource, the [reservoir] areas are not managed as park, recreational areas, but as water resource protection areas. In an effort to protect the water source, monitor, and manage activities around the Loch Raven Reservoir, DPW having the gates open, eliminating parking hazards associated with increased recreational activity and enabling better management of crowds. As the weather becomes outdoor-friendly, many runners, bikers, and walkers will frequent the City’s watershed areas and compete for recreational space. It is the department’s desire to ensure the safety of everyone who visits and enjoys the City’s watershed areas while protecting the City’s water resources for the public and our 1.8 million customers.”

When I worked briefly in Baltimore County in FY2010 to do a bicycle and pedestrian plan for a section of the western county, I was titled "bicycle and pedestrian planner," but it was only for that section of the county.  Nonetheless, it did include a section around Towson (but not Towson), north and east.  

This included the old right of way for the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad, which had long since been abandoned, and is used by Baltimore Gas and Electric as an electricity transmission corridor.

To create a county-wide bikeway system that connects to adjacent counties so it can be a regional system, this corridor provides the ability to connect to Harford County, which uses Ma & Pa corridors for trails already.

A new stewardship agreement between the city of Baltimore, MORE (Mid-Atlantic Off-Road Enthusiasts) and the International Mountain Bike Association promises improved mountain bike access to the watershed. Baltimore Sun photo.

There is an installation of "connected parks" here, all owned by different entities.  Cromwell Valley Park is a Baltimore County park.  

Loch Raven Reservoir isn't a park per se, it's part of the regional water system, and owned and operated by the Baltimore City Department of Public Works.  And the NCR Trail is a state park--literally limited to the width of the old railroad ROW--which runs north to York County, Pennsylvania.  

During the planning process, there was a lot of tension around LRR over mountain biking, because it could get dirt into the water ("Loch'd Out: Loch Raven Reservoir MTB Riding," BIKE Magazine, 2017, "Deal will expand mountain biking at Loch Raven Reservoir," Baltimore Sun, 2017) which has been a problem dating to the late 1990s. 

Wrt CVP, Baltimore County long ago ceded "authority" over parks and recreation centers to residents, through organized committees, called "park and/or recreation councils," which raise money to operate the facilities and deliver programming.  

The group at CVP spent a lot of time restoring the creek watershed, removing invasives, etc. and looked upon biking--because of the mountain biking issue at LRR--as a threat to all the work they had done.  Justifiably, they are very proud of their efforts.

In our plan, we wanted to put a trail through CVP, because the grade of the Ma & Pa/BGE transmission corridor is brutal (BGE is a rare utility in the DMV that isn't opposed to co-locating trails in transmission corridors.  I also argue that adding bike trails to transmission corridors can increase facility by adding "eyes on the street" to places normally bereft of people and subject to vandalism and even terroristic acts.)

I was invited to speak about our planning process and concepts at a CVP monthly meeting.  It was the second worst public meeting I've ever endured.  Due to my own hubris and their somewhat unjustified fear of regular bicycling.  

I wasn't fully conversant with the issues and history of the CVP committee, and I had smooth sailing through most of the public process in terms of positive civic engagement and a lot of experience with the public element of planning processes.  Turns out I was unprepared.

Anyway, I got my clocked cleaned.  

Eventually I made a rare compromise to the plan--even though it would cripple the concept of a regional bikeway system, at least on the east side of the Baltimore metropolitan area--and took that recommendation out of the plan, because I realized that vociferous opposition by the CVP group could scuttle the whole plan, not just the recommendation for an eastern trail connecting to Harford County.  

BUT, I did come up with a different recommendation, one that I was super proud of, that had a Gordian Knot type of "simplicity" and elegance.  And one that stayed in the plan.

I proposed a next stage of bike and pedestrian planning for that area, the creation of a "joint management plan" between the three "parks," Cromwell Valley Park, Loch Raven Reservoir, and the Northern Central Trail, bringing the County, the City, and the State Parks together for a jointly managed and coordinated access plan for pedestrians and cyclists for the three parks.  (You could even get York County involved, since the NCR trail continues from the state border to Downtown York City.)

It would deal with mountain biking, get the DPW to manage LRR more as a park, and hopefully lay the setting for a reconsideration in the future of an eastern bikeway through Cromwell Valley Park.

Obviously, 13 years later, a joint management plan is nowhere near being created.

Just like my recommendations on Baltimore area transit ("More remonstration about the molasses of change: Transit planning, Baltimore County, Maryland and Towson").

Or that the State of Maryland required school systems to do "balanced transportation planning" and formally require school transportation planning include bicycle and pedestrian planning, not just school buses.

Etc.

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8 Comments:

At 10:06 AM, Anonymous charlie said...

Very off topic:

1. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2023-04-27/chronicling-of-the-collapse-of-public-transit-in-the-us?sref=4NgeXq8Q

"CityLabTransportation
Anatomy of an ‘American Transit Disaster’

2. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-04-29/germany-sets-the-new-standard-for-cheap-national-mass-transit?sref=4NgeXq8Q

"Germany Sets the New Standard for Cheap, National Mass Transit"

First link ends in a very good point that places that "conserved" transit were also early into public ownership (Boston, SF and although unstated NYC). Very bad transition from private to public that destroyed it.

And goes back to an old point of yours is that the primary effect of DC Streetcar was building big building further away -- capturing that revenue and inventing cities to capture it would be the key long term solution.

Lots of the german piece, Berg makes 2 good points -- this was a joint federal/state effect and it forced digital passes to all local transit companies.



 
At 10:43 AM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

Will read. I picked up a book (but it's in DC) about the transition from streetcars to cars in Chicago, and it makes the point that there wasn't really a system of public transportation planning at the time. Limited mostly to regulatory in terms of price and safety.

Some places did get involved earlier (eg SF MUNI) out of a sense that the public should own transit not greedy profiteers). And in places like NY as railroads said they weren't making $ on passenger service, governments started subsidizing new equipment. Besides the lnvolvements in local transit.

Ironically, it's the 40th anniversary of creating local transit systems SEPTA, Metro North, and NJTransit (and other separate commuter railroads) because Congress set a deadline for the cessation of rail passenger service by Conrail, which had inherited legacy services from companies like Penn Central.

But definitely by the time we developed a system of metropolitan transportation planning it was too late for it to be balanced, the car reigned supreme.

Not to mention how the profiteering railroads created animus, which in large part generated momentum needed to build the federal highway system for cars and trucks were built. Auto industry and road builders were all in. Oil companies too.

Found this

https://apnews.com/article/germany-public-transit-cheap-ticket-trains-metro-3d83f1a35ab8e3945b8034b9bd511c29

 
At 1:00 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

That transportation planning developed around motor vehicles especially cars, not mulimodal.

https://www.deseret.com/1993/5/31/19049422/richard-van-winkle-dies-at-79

 
At 1:57 PM, Anonymous Charlie said...

Pretty amazing circular firing squad in dc with “pro-transit “ advocacy groups pushing for free buses rather than the k st redesign.


Meanwhile dc is sitting on. 1.3 billion in u paid traffic tickets.

 
At 10:00 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

I'd rather provide free transit to the people who are financially pressed, and still invest in transit improvement and expansion. It's not like DC has the absolute best transit system.

I saw the editorial about "cuts to the Circulator." I think 10+ years ago I wrote a post about throwing up my hands and calling it political bus service.l and accepting abysmal numbers.

I was thinking about writing about it and I kept looking for the Circulator dashboard and I couldn't find it. They used to post the ridership data. Except fotlr the top couple routes, the usage was always low.

 
At 8:28 AM, Anonymous charlie said...

Circulator dashboard has been dead for a while. I thought the Rosslyn-Dupont one was being subsidized by the Rosslyn BID.


Great point about "buses under Mayoral control".


On that note WMATA coming out hard against free buses. And they are the ones who set fares.

 
At 4:10 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

It's weird though. I don't think that Bowser is super focused on financial probity. Or the K Street transitway. She never gave a s* about streetcars, which would have been a great move for Georgia Avenue and Kennedy Street-Fort Totten when she was W4 Councilmember.

I wonder why she's opposed to free bus service, which would be a more populist move, like the yellow paint BLM. She's never shown much interest in "the people" outside of pathways to the middle class, which never amounted to much in practice. By contrast, Michelle Wu in Boston was pro transit, pro free transit (at least on select routes) even before she became mayor.

Wrt WMATA, they should just say how much it costs to provide DC bus service. And go from there. Don't see why the other jurisdictions should care. Cf free local transit in Alexandria.

Fwiw, I wrote a paper for a class in 2007 on a transit first planning paradigm for DC and did suggest that free bus service would be a compromise on equity grounds, that a fareless square like Portland (at the time) would be too much of a subsidy of the well off, even though it's justifiable on transportation demand management grounds.

Probably not worth it from a cost perspective but like Talinn, Estonia you could require fare cards, and only resident trips would be free.

I have been meaning to write about this for a long time.

 
At 4:13 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

Wrt to tickets, I would be militant about license plate readers + booting. That would get Virginia and Maryland to the table for negotiating reciprocity. They should focus on the top scofflaws. DC has an extensive LPR system.

 

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