草莓传媒

House approves measure to prod MDOT on pedestrian fatalities

This article was republished with permission from 草莓传媒’s news partners at .聽Sign up for today.

This content was republished with permission from 草莓传媒鈥檚 news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for today.

In 2016, Robert Grossmann, 64, was fatally struck by a car along a busy stretch of Georgia Avenue, a short walk north from Metro鈥檚 Glenmont Station.

Five years later, his widow, Claire E. Weissmeyer Grossmann, 63, was killed two blocks away, attempting to cross the same busy thoroughfare.

Today, two pairs of shoes, painted white and nailed to a utility pole, memorialize the tragic twin deaths.

Safety advocates say the deaths, while agonizing, were not a surprise. Georgia Avenue (Maryland Route 97) has long been regarded as high-risk for pedestrians and cyclists. Two more pairs of white shoes are nailed to a utility pole a few hundred feet away.

Local officials and community activists say the loss of life underscores another phenomenon: the existence of known problem areas in the state鈥檚 transportation network about which not enough is done.

Earlier this month, the Maryland House of Delegates approved legislation aimed accelerating safety improvements along state highways. The bill is聽sponsored by Del. Lorig Charkoudian (D-Montgomery), a lawmaker who has conducted regular walking tours for three years with State Highway Administration officials at dangerous intersections in her district.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so important to ask them to come and look at the realities (rather than) at a map in a Zoom meeting,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is absolutely different when you walk.鈥

聽the Maryland Department of Transportation to include design and safety improvements in 鈥渁ny construction or improvement project, or post-construction project, preservation or maintenance.鈥

If a new construction or improvement project is projected to take more than a year to complete, the agency would be required to 鈥渋mplement all possible incremental, near-term safety improvements immediately.鈥

In a letter to legislators, MDOT officials wrote that 鈥渕any鈥 of the bill鈥檚 requirements are already being implemented.

As originally drafted, the measure would have required $300 million be spent on safety improvements such as bike lanes, new crosswalks and special safety signals. After the agency warned that 鈥渇unds would need to be shifted from previously programmed projects,鈥 the measure was amended to include only those safety upgrades that qualify for federal funding.

Despite the change, Republicans opposed the legislation. Del. Christopher Adams (R-Middle Shore) said sponsors of the measure 鈥渁re implying that the state makes bad decisions from a standpoint of safety.鈥

鈥淎t some point, we have to trust MDOT,鈥 added Del. Jeff Ghrist (R-Upper Shore). 鈥淲e just have to let them do their work.鈥

Del. David Fraser-Hidalgo (D-Montgomery) urged the House to reject Republican amendments to the bill. 鈥淭here are multiple intersections where people have been killed or hurt over and over and over again,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 happening around the state is not acceptable.鈥

Charkoudian鈥檚 bill passed the House on a party line vote, 99-34.

Rachel Grossmann said the deaths of parents after being struck by vehicles along Georgia Avenue prompted her to become a safety advocate. She said attempting to engage state and local officials about the risks cyclists and pedestrians face every day has become part of her 鈥渉ealing.鈥

In 2019, SHA lowered the speed limit on the stretch of Georgia where Robert Grossmann died. In 2020, the agency added a traffic signal, a new crosswalk and pedestrian signal where Claire Grossmann was later hit.

Even so, more could be done, Rachel Grossman said.

鈥淭he changes are taking too long to implement,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 such an obvious problem.鈥

In her view, well-to-do neighborhoods are more successful in pressing for safety improvements than working-class areas. 鈥淐lass and wealth play a role,鈥 she said.

Prince George鈥檚 County Executive Angela D. Alsobrooks (D) submitted written testimony praising the bill鈥檚 insistence upon 鈥渋ndustry standard context-driven design elements,鈥 which she said will advance the county鈥檚 goal of eliminating roads deaths and injuries.

鈥淩oadway fatalities are wholly preventable,鈥 Salisbury Mayor Jacob Day told lawmakers. 鈥淵et we must actively work to ensure that our roads remain safe for all modes of transportation, whether via a vehicle, on a bicycle, or by foot.鈥

Federal 草莓传媒 Network Logo
Log in to your 草莓传媒 account for notifications and alerts customized for you.