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History of the Georgetown Branch
- 1910 - The B&O Railroad completed a branch line to Georgetown. "The Georgetown Branch" leaves the CSX main line at a junction in the North Woodside area of Silver Spring, arcing westward through Lyttonsville, Chevy Chase Lake and Bethesda and on southward to the federal heating plant in Georgetown.
- 1970's - A graduate student at the University of Maryland writes a thesis proposing use of the Georgetown Branch right-of-way for a rail transit system to connect Silver Spring and Bethesda.
- 1978 - The North Silver Spring Sector plan is amended to include a reference to the potential use of the Georgetown Branch right-of-way for transit.
- 1985-86 - The CSX railroad files intent to abandon the Georgetown Branch right-of-way.
- Nov. 1986 - The Montgomery County Council approves Georgetown Branch Master Plan Amendment designating the right-of-way "a public right-of-way intended to be used for public purposes such as conservation, recreation, transportation, and utilities. It is not to be used for a continuous roadway."
- Dec. 1988 - Montgomery County purchases the Georgetown Branch for $10.5 million under the National Trails Act which has rail-banking as a major goal.
- 1988-89 - The Georgetown Branch Corridor Study is completed, with DeLeuw Cather/Parsons Brinkerhoff serving as the primary consultant. A three-tiered task force worked with the County during this process: a Technical Advisory Committee, a Citizens Advisory Committee, and a Steering Committee.
- Dec. 1989 - The County Council approves Georgetown Branch Master Plan Amendment. (see highlights of the Master Plan Amendment HERE ).
- 1989-90 - Governor William Donald Schaefer offered $70 million to Montgomery County for construction of the Trolley line, but the project floundered when the state determined that the cost would exceed $100 million. During this period a new County Council and County Executive are elected.
- 1990 and 1994 - For these two elections, opponents of the trolley (SMART-PAC) raised and distributed campaign contributions of $21,000 and $22,000 respectively. The project stalls.
- 1994 - Maryland Mass Transit Administration (MTA) begins a Major Investment Study (MIS) for the Georgetown Branch Transitway/Trail in conjunction with a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS). A public hearing is held with strong support for the light rail alternative.
- 1995 - Newly elected County Executive Doug Duncan recommends that funds be diverted from the Georgetown Branch study to a study of a busway on U.S. 29. The Georgetown Branch DEIS documentation is issued but the project is put on the shelf without a Final Environmental Impact Study FEIS). The U.S. 29 busway proposal fizzles.
- Dec. 1998 - A newly elected County Council votes in the first hour of their new term to request priority funding for the Georgetown Branch FEIS.
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