The South Baltimore 7 Coalition has withdrawn its support of a proposed $10 billion maglev high-speed train after formerly backing the project in September.
The coalitionβs lawyer said the nonprofit did not have approval from a majority of the board members, which is required by the bylaws.
The coalitionβs chair, Michael Middleton, said board members will likely vote again once additional information is reviewed. A specific date for a revote has not been determined.
Keisha Allen of Westport said she had no idea a press release about the coalitionβs change in position was going out Tuesday, but she had reservations about the initial voting outcome. She and a representative from the Brooklyn neighborhood previously voted against the high-speed train project. The neighborhoods of Lakeland, Cherry Hill and Mount Winans voted in favor of maglev support and Curtis Bay abstained.
While Allen said she appreciates a revote, she doesnβt think one coalition should decide for all neighborhoods because it doesnβt affect them all the same.
βThe SB7 was not designed to bully other neighborhoods into supporting what they want for their neighborhoods,β she said.
Middleton said as the nonprofitβs chair he tries to work in the interest of all communities and the nature of SB7 is to connect and expand beyond the borders of a single neighborhood.
βWe are six communities and my belief has long been that neither of us as an individual neighborhood will survive or grow if the others donβt,β he said.
The maglev train would come through a part of Westport and a stop is proposed for Cherry Hill. A 43-acre property in Westport is entangled in a legal battle between Baltimore Washington Rapid Rail and Stonewall Capital, a developer with plans to build townhomes, affordable housing and green spaces.
The coalition represents several communities β Mount Winans, Curtis Bay, Cherry Hill, Brooklyn, Westport and Lakeland β and representatives from the nearby Port Covington development are also involved. Allen, the president of the Westport Neighborhood Association, said a vote was taken to gauge whether the coalition would show support for the project and seek a community benefit agreement.
In a previous interview, Middleton, the executive director of the Cherry Hill Development Corporation said that South Baltimore has been a βlong-ignoredβ area of the city and the rail project is an opportunity to enhance economic development.




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