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Bill to boost pedestrian safety funding could get late vote, chair says

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With the General Assembly set to adjourn at midnight Monday, legislation that would boost spending on pedestrian and bicycle safety is running out of time, though a key committee chair said she remains open to advancing the measure.

聽would increase state funding by $7.2 million to pay for sidewalk improvements, safety signals, bike lanes and Americans with Disabilities Act retrofits.

Sponsor Del. Lorig Charkoudian (D-Montgomery) said the measure was intended to prod the Maryland Department of Transportation to make safety upgrades in areas where pedestrians and bicyclists have been injured or killed.

Her district includes a stretch of Georgia Avenue聽聽were killed, five years apart, while trying to cross the road.

The bill appeared to die on a 5-5 vote in the Senate Finance Committee last week. It was unclear if lawmakers were aware that the bill 鈥 which originally sought $28.6 million in safety upgrades over five years 鈥 had been amended down to $7.2 million for fiscal year 2024 only.

Senate Democrats Joanne Benson (Prince George鈥檚) and Kathy Klausmeier (Baltimore County) joined Republicans on the committee in voting the measure down.

Committee member Sen. Malcolm Augustine (D-Prince George鈥檚) was absent on the day the panel voted, but on Thursday he said he is a strong supporter of the legislation.

鈥淚鈥檓 the chair of the transit caucus. It鈥檚 one of our priorities,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f I had been here, I would have absolutely been supportive of the bill.鈥

Augustine said he would like the bill to advance but 鈥渨e鈥檙e very late鈥 in the session. 鈥淭here was a vote,鈥 he added. 鈥淲e鈥檙e sort of in a place where the rules are getting in the way.鈥

Finance Committee Chair Delores Kelley (D-Baltimore County) said she is open to reconsidering the measure. 鈥淚f there are enough members one way or the other who are interested in bringing it back, we鈥檒l do it,鈥 she said.

In a letter to the legislature, the Department of Transportation said that Charkoudian鈥檚 bill would require that funds 鈥渂e shifted from previously programmed projects.鈥 But the lawmaker dismissed those claims in an interview Thursday, saying that $7 million is 鈥渃ouch-cushion change鈥 for the agency, which has a multibillion-dollar budget.

鈥淢DOT and the governor have purposely cut various funding sources to the Transportation Trust Fund, so it鈥檚 on them if they feel it鈥檚 too tight,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his bill is a catch-up bill. It鈥檚 moving money to start to catch up the under-funding鈥 of safety improvements.

In addition to mandating an increase in spending on safety measures, HB 656 also would require the State Highway Administration to report how many unfilled staff positions it has and to describe 鈥渢he extent to which these open positions slow down the process of implementing safety improvements once improvements have been identified.鈥

By a vote of 99-34, the measure passed the House of Delegates on March 21, over the objections of Republicans. Several GOP lawmakers said the legislature should have faith in transportation department鈥檚 ability to prioritize safety improvements.

The Senate cross-filed version of Charkoudian鈥檚 bill, Senate Bill 880, sponsored by Sen. Jeff Waldstreicher (D-Montgomery), has not been voted upon.

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