• MrStankov@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I’m sorry, they complain about emissions from trains? The electric Amtrak trains? From within a tunnel? While they’re surrounded by streets will all kinds of car traffic? Freight trains are routed the long way around the city btw.

    • AnIndefiniteArticle@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      From the article:

      Directly across from the elementary school Amtrak plans to build a ventilation facility to “provide protection for train passengers in the event of an emergency,” according to the Amtrak website. This structure will include emergency fans that “could extract smoke from the tunnel in the unlikely event of a fire.”

      If something goes wrong, they vent the bad air coming out of that tunnel across the street from a black elementary school. Their planned management of hazardous emissions is what’s in question.

        • RecallMadness@lemmy.nz
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          5 months ago

          I doubt it’s /just/ smoke ventilation. Sure, it’s primarily there for fire safety.

          But it probably provides ambient ventilation for the tunnel too. Tunnels with trains get hot. Most things, living or inanimate don’t like heat.

          And if it’s always ventilating, it’s also might be expelling brake and metal dust from passing trains.

          But all speculation. I’m not a train engineer, so I’m probably wrong.

    • Fondots@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I don’t know the specifics of this project, but not all Amtrak trains are electric, they also run diesel and dual mode (diesel/electric) trains (I’m pretty sure, but not certain that the northeast corridor is all electric)

      There’s also other things worth considering like emissions from construction or maintenance vehicles, some lines are used for freight and passenger rail, construction might stir up any crap that might be in the soil, I suspect there’s some amount of metal dust created by the constant grinding of wheels on rails, plastics from brakes and such, leaks from any hydraulics onboard the train, refrigerant leaking from the air conditioning, etc.

      In the grand scheme, even if they’re running straight diesel trains, leaking fluids, asbestos brake pads, etc. it’s probably all negligible in emissions compared to just living in Baltimore, maybe even offset if it leads to more people using Amtrak instead of driving but all of it is still worth considering.

  • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    That doesn’t appear to be good journalism. The article does not mention that the reason they want to move the location of the tunnel is to remove the biggest bottleneck on the northeast corridor, and redoing the current tunnel location keeps that bottleneck. Removing that bottleneck would have huge benefits to public transit on the eastern seaboard.

    Additionally, they mention “train emissions”, but don’t mention that the trains that would use the tunnel are all electric. The only time there would be any emissions would be in the case of a fire, which is very uncommon in passenger trains. The highway and other busy streets in the area are a far bigger problem.

    Overall, it seems like standard nimby-ism.

    • Cosmonauticus@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Overall, it seems like standard nimby-ism.

      I would agree if the US government didn’t have a history of bulldozing predominantly Black neighborhoods in the name of infrastructure and instantly omitting white affluent neighborhoods.

      While this project doesn’t seem to do it at first glance can you blame black ppl of instantly distrusting the US government motives?

      • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yeah, definitely. Baltimore also has a good record of combatting that in the case of highway 70, too. In this case, though, it’s just tunneling under that neighborhood, not carving a path through it. Oddly enough, further down the track, there are ~20 people getting displaced (might have already happened), but that’s in a different neighborhood, and I think that would have happened no matter where the tunnel was moved.

  • Bye@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I don’t like it when underprivileged people get the short end of the stick. It sucks.

    But trains are awesome, and it is IMPOSSIBLE to create the infrastructure we desperately need without some people being inconvenienced.

    • jeffw@lemmy.worldOPM
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      5 months ago

      Sure… but in the USA those people have pretty much always been the same communities, time and time again

  • Yawweee877h444@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I dont understand why the title of the article has to start with “black women…”. It’s just weird to me. Is it really specifically black women? Even if it is, how does that add to the content/subject? I don’t get it. It’s just fucking people, members of a neighborhood, mothers who care about their kids. Idk.

    • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      Read up on redlining and where the US installed its highways in cities in the 50/60/70s.

      In almost every case, they cut right down the middle of a black neighborhood, a neighborhood that people had been forced into living in due to redlining. This of course destroyed the neighborhood, and made any adjacent homes and buisnesses highly undesirable, gutting black and minority wealth again and again and forcing those residents to live next to road/noise pollution.

      Leading off by acknowledging that this may be a modern day case of the same practice is why they added a “black woman” to the headline.

      I personally read this as a case of nimbyism, as most of their complaints aren’t based on likely issues, but i can understand the distrust the community has for this kind of project.

    • curiousaur@reddthat.com
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      5 months ago

      Because when choosing where to build infrastructure projects like these, poor and minority neighborhoods are usually chosen over richer or white neighborhoods.

  • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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    5 months ago

    “Of all of the 14 options that they say they considered, all 14 ran through predominantly Black communities.”

    Yeah, that’s a problem.

    • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      The problem is that the current tunnel has a sharp curve, and to make that curve less sharp, they need to increase the radius. That puts the path of a good new tunnel under a new neighborhood, which happens to be Black because most Baltimore neighborhoods are. Those 14 options are likely all under the same neighborhood.

      • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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        5 months ago

        But the current tunnel is under a white neighborhood. So why can’t they build another tunnel there instead?

        • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          The current tunnel is a relic from a long time ago when trains were slower, and there were competing train lines that had to try and fit through baltimore where they could. If you look at a map of the train line, it actually sharply curves out of the way of that currently Black neighborhood to go under the currently white neighborhood. This means the top speed is 30 mph. Under the new plan, they could hit 100 mph.

          There are other problems with the current tunnel, mainly just down to being old, and those you could fix by redoing it in the same spot, but that wouldn’t fix the speed issue, because the speed is governed by the curvature (and grade).

  • azimir
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    5 months ago

    It’s a tunnel with electric trains. I volunteer my pasty white ass’s house as tribute for this. My city has near zero rail service and I’ll take it in a heartbeat.

    Yes, the US has been using infrastructure to harm minority communities for generations, but so far this doesn’t seem to be the most egregious example of that. The exhaust system being next to a school is the only concern, but only if there’s a fire in the tunnel (which should be rare unless Boeing starts making trains).

    Either move the exhaust or move the school while you start digging that new higher speed tunnel! Let’s go for some real modern transit!

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    5 months ago

    I understand that institutionalized racism has long been and continues to be a thing, where predominantly white neighbourhoods are kept quiet and intact while neighbourhoods whose residents are predominantly other races end up being the first target for displacement and “physical impacts”. Most likely the land in the neighborhood of the selected alternative costs lower than that of the other neighbourhood, which isn’t Amtrak’s fault but it is one of the facets of this institutional racism.

    The Interstate Highway System is a prime example of this in many metro areas, and ironically improving this rail corridor would be helping to reverse the damage by making alternatives to motor vehicles more attractive.

    On the other hand, this effort is treading towards the line of NIMBYism. With proper engineering, the effects of tunneling under the neighbourhood are overstated.

    Still, I think that if there are legitimate health concerns, the ones who pay the most in direct and indirect costs should receive commensurate benefits. Provide better transit to the neighbourhood that connects to the nearest station serviced by the future corridor. Subsidize premium comprehensive healthcare for these residents to help address any concerns from construction impacts. Fund soundproofing improvements if noise impacts are a concern.