Transit line could uplift a struggling Baltimore community

Estelle Kent has high hopes for Baltimore's Red Line.

Neighborhood Voices on the Red Line Route:
ESTELLE KENT

      If the Red Line means change for her west Baltimore neighborhood — an end to the drug abuse,  joblessness and poverty – then bring it on, says Estelle Kent.   

      This 54-year-old longtime community activist very much favors the Red Line transit project — which would send light rail cars right up the middle of Edmondson Avenue, not far from her house. The Red Line, she’s convinced, will bring development that would boost up her proud-but-challenged community. Kent has seen it steadily deteriorate, she said, since moving there from Calvert County in 1969.

     “Today, it’s nothing like it was then,” said Kent, vice president of the Lower Edmondson Village Community Association. “I hope it will become more safe for everyone around here, that it will be pretty. Right now the way it looks around here, I would not want to move here. The consensus in my neighborhood? They want to see change and they think the Red Line could bring it.”
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