Posted on 11/04/2018 8:03:57 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
By Bruce DePuyt When Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) announced a major plan to widen three Maryland roadways last year, even transportation insiders were caught off-guard.
I was surprised by it, but I rejoiced at it, said John B. Townsend II, AAA mid-Atlantics manager of public and government affairs.
As much as people are loath to admit it, the congestion in Maryland has limited economic development in the state. And [it has] impacted the quality of life because of the amount of hours more than 80 hours a year [on average] we spend being stuck in traffic.
The $9 billion plan for a public-private partnership, which Hogan unveiled in 2017, would add four lanes each to Interstate 270, the Capital Beltway (I-495) in Montgomery and Prince Georges counties, and the Baltimore-Washington Parkway. The three roads bog down regularly, and not just at rush hour, because they carry much more traffic than they were designed for.
The new lanes would be express toll lanes, similar to those built in recent years on I-95 north of Baltimore City, where motorists can decide whether to drive them if they are willing to pay tolls that fluctuate based on traffic volume.
Its been literally decades that there have been studies on how to address the problem of I-270 and 495, said Maryland Transportation Secretary Pete K. Rahn in an interview. Its always been concluded that there are not enough resources available to fix the problem.
Thats what makes what we are doing with the traffic relief plan different. We have a way to actually put something in place thats going to make it better for those hundreds of thousands of commuters that are on those routes every day.
In his first term as governor, Hogan:
gave final approval to build and broke ground on the long-planned Purple Line, a light rail system running from New Carrollton, through the University of Maryland, to Bethesda;
brokered a deal with Virginia and Washington, D.C., to provide WMATA, the capital regions subway and bus system, the first dedicated source of funding in its 40-year history;
killed plans for the proposed Red Line, a light rail project, in Baltimore City;
reduced some bridge tolls and eliminated the monthly fee for EZ Pass transponders;
finished construction of the new Dover Bridge along MD 331 over the Choptank River, early and under budget; and
allocated $2 billion to rehabilitate, replace or begin construction work on all 69 structurally deficient bridges identified during his first year in office.
We will continue to focus on a balanced transportation system, which means addressing highways and transit and pedestrian and bicycle and also even innovative transportation modes, Rahn said.
Red Line Still Rankles
Hogans Democratic challenger Benjamin T. Jealous (D) has accused the administration of failing to enact a coherent plan for connecting people with worksites and universities.
Maryland does not have a forward-thinking vision for how its going to plan for growing populations in our cities, said Jealous spokeswoman, Jerusalem Demsas.
The decision to ax the Red Line, a light rail line that would have run from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services in Woodlawn to the Johns Hopkins Bayview campus, means we dont have proper mass transit in the states largest city, Demsas said.
The Red Line, a decadelong project pushed forward by [former U.S. Sen.] Barbara Mikulski and other state leaders, was canceled single-handedly by Larry Hogan and replaced with a bus system that has failed on every metric to meet the needs of Baltimore City residents.
Demsas said the plan to widen the three highways is an election-year gimmick and not a long-term solution.
If you just increase the number of lanes in a highway, people will just fill up the highway again, she said.
She further charged that residents of the less-populated portions of the state are also suffering due to Marylands transportation failures.
What were seeing on the Eastern Shore is that people who are well-educated, people that are doing well, just leave because its impossible to connect the jobs in the major cities that we have out there.
If elected, Demsas said, Jealous would:
find a real solution to the lack of mass transit in the Baltimore region;
add bus rapid transit service to the states four most populous subdivisions; and
engage residents in determining what transportation solutions they need to get to work and school.
Bens entire plan for transportation is to make sure that were connecting people to the jobs that exist now and were also planning for whats going to happen in the future.
A recent The Washington Post/University of Maryland poll found that opposition to the Hogan road-widening plan outpaces support, even in the Washington region, which routinely ranks as having some of the worst congestion in the nation.
The survey found that 54 percent of voters in Prince Georges and Montgomery counties opposed the Hogan plan, while 41 percent supported it.
Opposition was fairly consistent across the political spectrum and various demographic groups. Support was strongest among younger voters surveyed and the more affluent.
News reports from Virginia, which now has an extensive network of high-occupancy toll lanes, is likely the reason the public is skeptical about the Hogan plan, observers said, particularly in the I-66 corridor, where tolls can reach eye-popping levels.
Whats embedded in peoples heads are those $45 tolls, said AAAs Townsend.
The Virginia Department of Transportation blew it, and that, I think, was damaging and it could even damage the effort to transform Maryland 295, transform the Beltway and also 270, he said. Because people loathe tolls.
Rahn, Marylands transportation secretary, said residents should look north, not south, to get a true feel for how HOT lane tolls would function on the BW Parkway, I-495 and I-270.
Thats a unique circumstance to that section of I-66, he said. I have no expectations whatsoever that we would see the kinds of tolls that we are seeing in the news for I-66.
A Pledge to Preserve Houses
Hogan has pledged that no homes will be taken to make way for the three road-widening projects, a claim that Demsas, the Jealous spokeswoman, called not credible.
Ben Ross, head of the Maryland Transit Opportunities Coalition, said the projects are certain to cost more than advertised and he too doubts the state can add lanes without the use of eminent domain.
They took $100 million a mile, which is the cost of building roads out in the countryside but not when youre in a built-up area, he said, adding, If they want to stay within the existing right of way, they have to double-deck [the highway], and that would drive up the costs astronomically.
How do you build it in that narrow right of way without shutting down the highway for a year?
An analysis that Ross conducted concluded that motorists would have to pay $41 just go get from Frederick to Shady Grove Road in Montgomery County. And thats assuming they filled up the road with cars and at that price they cant fill up the road. So it will still need a state subsidy.
Ross said it was notable that Jealous brought up the subject of Hogans road plan during the gubernatorial debate, but the governor did not.
Rahn expressed confidence that engineers will be able to come up with a design that expands capacity without taking existing homes.
This is not the first roadway that is tight and needs to have some additional lanes. This has occurred around the country and around the world.
He pointed to the LBJ Freeway in Dallas as an example of how solutions to seemingly intractable challenges can be found.
They were dealing with an even more constrained right of way than we are on 495. They have a roadway that is cantilevered below what was the existing level. So they did additional lanes into the roadway and it is actually functioning incredibly well.
Even Townsend, a supporter of additional road capacity, expressed concern that there will not be enough land to widen the B-W Parkway, which is currently owned by U.S. Department of the Interior. Hogans plan for the B-W Parkway relies on the federal government turning the land over to the state.
I cannot see that one in my head, Townsend said. Ive been to the town hall meetings. I still dont know how you do it without eminent domain, which is always bothersome to me.
If houses and businesses do need to be taken, Townsend said its imperative that owners be compensated fairly.
The government has to give the great priority to making those people whole. Were not talking about a token kind of payment. Ive seen too many people lose their treasure and their investment because of these takings. It is an unfortunate thing It [has to be] more than just market value.
Critics often refer to HOT lanes as Lexus lanes because the tolls are theoretically less of a challenge to high income motorists. But supporters call them a win-win.
Even if you dont want to pay [to drive] in an express toll lane, youre going to benefit by the fact that there are people using those versus the lanes that youre already in, Rahn said.
Townsend said Virginias early experiences with HOT lanes, on I-395, convinced him that the Lexus lane label was unfair.
Everybody benefited, including those people that didnt pay, because it took enough traffic off the existing lanes The commute time dropped for everyone. That is something that none of us foresaw. Thats when I became a believer in the concept.
Townsend said there are benefits to infrastructure improvements that dont often get talked about, including reduced deaths and injuries, and an increased ability to evacuate people in an emergency.
He called the Hogan plan a game-changer.
We are behind the eight ball in terms of competing in the regional economy and the national economy. I think the next governor, the next General Assembly session, will have to do more than just pay lip service to freeing up space on the existing highway system and reducing commuter traffic on local roads.
Roads Improving
Marylands State Highway administrator, Gregory I. Slater, said the Hogan administration has made great strides in maintaining existing roads and bridges over the last four years.
Eighty-eight percent of our [road] system has an acceptable ride quality, and 85 percent of our system has preferred maintenance system that means all of the assets of that system are in great shape, he said.
In addition, Slater said, the state is being more diligent about upkeep, so fewer structures reach the crisis point, noting that 97.6 percent of our bridges are in fair or better condition. That means we have one of the lowest percentages of structurally deficient bridges in the entire nation.
Kevin Quinn, head of the Maryland Transit Administration, said the state has spent $800 million on new rail cars for the Baltimore Metro system, to be rolled out in the next few years; a full rehab of 53 light rail cars thats going to give a new face to our light rail; and a locked-in contract on replacement buses that will carry the state through fiscal year 2024.
He also said the agency is embracing technology to improve commuters experience, including a new system to relay real-time information to our customers and a mobile-ticketing app that includes a free transfer window, which essentially puts money back into the pocket of Marylanders.
Its a real exciting time for MTA here in Maryland, he said.
Rahn pointed to the expansion of MD 404 on the Eastern Shore, which was a deadly roadway, the groundbreaking on MD 219 in Western Maryland, and the record-setting performance of state-owned BWI Airport and the Port of Baltimore as other transportation accomplishments of the last four years.
Were going to continue to be making investments to support and drive our economy.
Rahn said Washington Redskins fans are getting out of the stadium parking lots 15-20 percent more quickly thanks to a smart-signal program to adjust traffic timing on the fly.
According to one longtime Hogan administration critic, the governor is able to tout significant progress on transportation projects in large part because his predecessor, former Gov. Martin J. OMalley Jr. (D), pushed an increase to the gasoline tax through the General Assembly.
He shows up at every one of these ribbon-cuttings and ground-breakings and talks about how the state is finally putting money into roads and the bridges, said state Sen. Richard S. Madaleno Jr. (D-Montgomery), who ran in this years gubernatorial primary.
Hogan defeated OMalleys lieutenant governor, Anthony G. Brown, in 2014, in large part because he pounded the Democrats on their willingness to raise taxes.
Its because of the tax increase that, if [he] had had his way, would never have occurred, Madaleno said.
Killing the Red Line and a shift in financing for the Purple Line (putting it on the credit card, in Madalenos view), also helped free up cash for numerous other projects.
The gas tax was a plan that no Republican [legislator] voted for, even though the business community, the Maryland Chamber [of Commerce], the [Greater Washington] Board of Trade, all these interests, were consistently asking us to do this, said Madaleno, outgoing vice chairman of the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee.
Among the issues likely to dominate the next four years regardless of who is governor is whether the state should build a new Chesapeake Bay crossing.
Ross, the transit advocate, said the issue has gone under the radar at the state level.
A study is underway now. Of the three basic concepts being considered building next to the existing spans, or one from Dundalk to Kent County, or one in Southern Maryland all would be likely to generate opposition.
AAAs Townsend said Marylands modern history is to spend decades fighting over every project that comes along, citing the Intercounty Connector highway and the Purple Line as examples.
The investment in infrastructure, the investment in transportation, has accrued to the benefit of Virginia but not to Maryland, he said, because we have never seen it as a priority.
You can be anti-growth if you wish, but then you lag behind. Thats why this gubernatorial race is so important. It is: What do we do about infrastructure?
The Libertarian and Green Party candidates were not consulted on their positions on transportation for this article. Figures.
Maryland “Freak State” PING!
There are very few people as aptly named as Benjamin Jealous.
I thought this was a WWE thread..
What a joke. A red herring to the hilt. If you cannot baffle them with erudite brilliance , throw more crap against the wall hoping something will stick. Pure unadulterated crap.
Toll lanes — like the Inter-County Connector.
Whats embedded in peoples heads are those $45 tolls, said AAAs Townsend.>
Yes, and seeing those Virginia campaign ads for Barbara Comstock in which she talks about her opponent's support for those tolls isn't helping Governor Hogan's plan gain support.
Hogan is going to beat Jealous comfortably.
Don’t get Wexton’d.
“Whats embedded in peoples heads are those $45 tolls, said AAAs Townsend.”
Toll Roads: The people who use the road, pay for the road. And if the road costs $45 per car during the evening rush hour because of monopoly pricing...well, then people need to SUCK IT UP. That’s CAPITALISM, isn’t it?
Whats embedded in peoples heads are those $45 tolls, said AAAs Townsend.
Yes, and seeing those Virginia campaign ads for Barbara Comstock in which she talks about her opponent's support for those tolls isn't helping Governor Hogan's plan gain support.
This does not fully capture the issue. Almost 10 million people live in the Washington D.C.-Baltimore Combined Metropolitan Statistical Area, which extend from Southern Maryland to Winchester and Shepherdstown and from Frederick, MD to Fredericksburg, VA. We are the fourth largest metro area in the country, trailing only NYC, LA and Chicago. We are suffering the inevitable consequences of size, while too many people are still living in the 1960's and think that more asphalt will solve the problem.
The problem is sprawl. More people need to live closer to their jobs. This means putting the planning emphasis on protecting, rehabilitating, and in some cases reclaiming neighborhoods and communities in the core and the inner ring suburbs. The inner ring jurisdictions will have to accept densification. Densification is not a dirty word; it's what needs to happen when suburbs build out and become urban places. At the same time, the outer ring counties need to establish growth boundaries. Preaching limits to the fringe cowboys, who think they still live on the open range, is like spitting into the wind, but if nothing else it's a matter of fair warning. The exurbs need to be put on notice that -- if MD extends strip malls and sprawl all the way to Hagerstown and Gettysburg, and if VA strip malls everything out to the Blue Ridge and the Rappahannock -- they can't expect sensible, closer-in communities to destroy themselves to accommodate heroic commutes by people who want to live 40, 60 or more miles away from their jobs. Want to live 60 miles out? Fine. But take the train.
I live on Capitol Hill, where over 50 percent of people do NOT drive to work. The long distance suburban commuters immediately respond that such a model is simply not relevant to them, and that's true for many. But this misses the point. More and more of the jobs are in growing job centers in the suburbs and edge cities. The key regional issue is whether places like Frederick, Rockville, Gaithersburg, Germantown, Reston, Herndon, Manassas, etc., etc, etc. will start planning now for denser, more balanced, multi-purpose neighborhoods that give a significant fraction of their residents the option of living close to work. Some are. But I ran an errand yesterday afternoon south of Manassas, in the new sprawl around Nokesville and Bristow. On my return there was a wreck on I-66, so I diverted up 28 through the Dulles corridor. It's sad to watch the transportation mistakes of the last generation being repeated so mindlessly. The assumption clearly is that everyone is going to drive everywhere. That doesn't work in a city this big.
The problem with the widening is the same as last time;even if you find the room the real estate developers will be ahead of you so the congestion will continue.
A number of Federal Agencies need to relocate out of the area. Agriculture to Kansas, for example.
There's also a world of difference between a two or three or five mile commute on city streets vs. a 30 or 40 mile commute along a clogged commuter sewer like 66, 270, 95 or 495. Build communities that encourage people to live within five miles of their jobs and get there on neighborhood streets, without having to become a road warrior.
There will still be people who want to live in Urbana and drive into DC. But the best way to reduce their angst is the drain the swamp ahead of them by getting a lot of people in the closer-in suburbs out of their cars. 270 would be a lot easier for the Frederick/Urbana commuters if everyone in Germantown, Gaithersburg, Rockville, etc. wasn't clogging the road ahead of you.
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