At a park where the noise of traffic from the Capital Beltway nearly overwhelmed the sound of songbirds, residents against a plan to widen portions of the Capital Beltway and Interstate 270 and to add toll lanes joined local lawmakers in calling for a delay in the plan.
Maryland鈥檚 Board of Public Works is set to vote Wednesday on the public-private partnership, or P3 plan, which Gov. Larry Hogan says will deliver relief to commuters suffering in what he calls 鈥渟oul-crushing鈥 gridlock.
Hogan has called detractors of his plan 鈥減ro-traffic,鈥 and organizers of Monday鈥檚 news conference seized on that.
鈥淣one of us support traffic,鈥 said state Del. Jared Solomon, who represents Montgomery County. 鈥淚t鈥檚 time away from our friends, our families and our communities.鈥
He announced that 60 Maryland state lawmakers sent a letter to the Board of Public Works that called for a go-slow approach on the project.
鈥淲e are 100% for congestion relief, but MDOT鈥檚 process has shut us out,鈥 said Montgomery County Council member Tom Hucker, referring to the Maryland Department of Transportation.
Abbe Spokane has lived in the Indian Spring neighborhood for five years, and she鈥檚 quick to say that, while she opposes the P-3 program as proposed so far, she鈥檚 not anti-car. She drives her son to his school each day on the Beltway. And despite the fact that her drive is short 鈥 one exit away 鈥 she鈥檇 like to see congestion addressed. 鈥淚 would love a solution that I think would have a chance to make things better, but I think that what鈥檚 been proposed is not the answer.鈥
Spokane says she鈥檚 in favor of adding public transit to the plan to attack gridlock on the Beltway. She鈥檇 also like to see an emphasis on getting companies to encourage more teleworking.
Neighbor Beth Siniawsky, who鈥檚 lived in Indian Spring for 25 years, says she鈥檚 concerned about losing green space and part of the property at her local YMCA. The neighborhood sits up against the sound wall that lines the Capital Beltway near Colesville Road.
Siniawsky is also skeptical of the financial structure behind the project.
Governor Hogan鈥檚 proposal is designed to have private companies pay for the design and construction of toll lanes, but Siniawsky says of the $9-$11 billion dollar proposal, 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know anything about who they鈥檙e giving money to.鈥 And she wonders, 鈥淲hat responsibility does the state have over watching over the road?鈥
The Hogan administration points out that an environmental impact study will be required as part of the project, but residents like Spokane and Siniawsky say they don鈥檛 think the state should move forward with its plans until that study is complete 鈥 and according to the state鈥檚 plan, the environmental impact study is expected to be completed by 2020. With respect to the Board of Public Works鈥 vote on Wednesday, Siniawsky says 鈥淚 would say hold off until environmental impact has been investigated.鈥
Local lawmakers say the sprawling project, with a price tag that鈥檚 been put at up to $11 billion, has a lot of unknowns and details that need further explanation 鈥 such as what would happen if the private companies taking on the project go bankrupt, and whether a noncompete clause in the plan would apply to any future transit or traffic-relief plans the counties would come up with.
The Hogan administration has said there have been dozens of public meetings on the road plan, but critics have complained that the meetings are less about public input and more about a presentation of what the administration wants to do to achieve its goals.
鈥淥ur three counties want to be at the table, not on the menu,鈥 Hucker told the crowd gathered at Indian Spring Terrace Park, referring to the counties most affected by the plan: Frederick, Montgomery and Prince George鈥檚.
Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich said the county has long had plans to relieve gridlock, including adding bus rapid transit, or taking one shoulder or inside lane to add capacity to clogged roads.
The current plans for the Beltway and I-270,聽Elrich said, don鈥檛 seem to take into account the possible impact on surrounding secondary roads.
鈥淣o matter what the governor does to speed people around the Beltway, when you get to places like Georgia Avenue and Connecticut Avenue, you鈥檙e not going anywhere fast,鈥 Elrich said.
Prince George鈥檚 County Council member Dannielle Glaros said the P3 plan would be the “biggest transportation that would be done in our nation,” and that “it is not the Maryland way to have the Board of Public Works vote before you close off the public comment period.”
Former Maryland state delegate and current Prince George鈥檚 County Council member Jolene Ivey stressed the importance of getting several viewpoints to inform the best outcome. 鈥淥therwise, you have more unintended consequences,” she said.
The Hogan administration has pushed back against criticism that the plan has been rushed: It was first pitched in 2017.
In information released to reporters on Monday, Hogan communications director Michael Ricci put out a statement designed to correct statements that have been made about the project.
Responding to a letter urging the Board of Public Works to vote on each segment of the project, Ricci said each phase will go before the board for a vote. In an email statement, he wrote, 鈥淲e look forward to implementing these ideas as part of our plan to fix the region鈥檚 soul-crushing traffic.鈥
The Board of Public Works is made up of the governor, Comptroller Peter Franchot and Treasurer Nancy Kopp.
91欧美激情’s Kate Ryan reported from Silver Spring, Maryland.
