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Days before feds could issue I-495 toll lanes decision, Montgomery Co. official urges delay

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With the U.S. Department of Transportation poised to issue its decision on an ambitious Capital Beltway and I-270 toll lanes plan, Montgomery County鈥檚 top planner accused state highway officials of running roughshod over Maryland law.

In a Tuesday letter to federal transportation officials, Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission Chair Casey Anderson said the state Department of Transportation has neglected to put the toll lanes plan through a required review process known as Mandatory Referral.

Anderson said Maryland law prohibits public agencies and officials from acquiring land, building a road, park or public building, or 鈥渁uthorizing鈥 such development 鈥渦nless the proposed location, character, grade, and extent of the activity is referred to and approved by the Commission.鈥

鈥淐learly, Mandatory Referral applies to the [toll lanes] project and it applies at every stage of the project including 鈥榣ocating, constructing, or authorizing,鈥欌 said Anderson, an attorney. 鈥淓ach stage in the life of a project raises different issues for the community, many of which are unknown at the earlier stages of development.鈥

Anderson does not ask U.S. DOT to reject the $7.6 billion Maryland plan, but he does seek 鈥渢he required 60-day Mandatory Review process鈥 so that the commission can 鈥渆nsure that the Project鈥檚 impacts to parkland, stream, and wetland resources are avoided, minimized, and mitigated to the maximum extent possible.鈥

The request for a delay comes at a critical time for Gov. Larry Hogan鈥檚 plan, which envisions the construction of four privately funded toll lanes on portions of the two roads along with the reconstruction of the 60-year-old American Legion Bridge.

According to that tracks federally funded infrastructure projects, the target date for issuing a final verdict on the proposal 鈥 known as the Record of Decision 鈥 is Aug. 5. (A spokesperson for the State Highway Administration insisted last week that the date listed on the site in no longer accurate, but declined to elaborate or provide the new date.)

Late Wednesday, an MDOT spokesman said the agency is following 鈥渁 well established process.鈥 He noted that the agency went through Mandatory Referral for the Intercounty Connector and the Purple Line after those projected received a greenlight from the federal government.

Maryland hopes to use Accelerate Maryland Partners, a consortium that includes the Australian toll road operator Transurban, for its 鈥渆xpress lane鈥 plan. The term-limited Hogan (R) is eager to get a final construction contract signed before he leaves office in January.

According to the federal project dashboard, the state intends to seek a permit with the Department of the Interior on Jan. 6, 2023, approximately two weeks before Hogan leaves office. It鈥檚 considered unlikely that his successor would embrace his plan in its current form.

On Friday, Wes Moore, the Democratic nominee for governor, told WAMU (88.5 FM) host Kojo Nnamdi that he would like to see 鈥渁 new type of proposal,鈥 one that emphasizes reversible lanes, increased transit and greater collaboration with local 鈥渟takeholders.鈥 Republican gubernatorial nominee Dan Cox has expressed concern about the cost of tolls and he has urged MDOT to reconfigure its existing right of way to reduce delays.

Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich (D) the federal government to give residents more time to study a 26,000-page environmental analysis the state released in June. A leading critic of the project to determine whether the state鈥檚 traffic models were altered to make the plan appear more successful at cutting commute times.

Doug Mayer, a former Hogan spokesman who leads Traffic Relief Now, said the commission鈥檚 letter is an example of how 鈥渢ruly obscure government organizations that almost no one has ever heard of鈥 are able to thwart progress in relieving traffic.

But Rockville Mayor Bridget Donnell Newton, a leading critic of the Hogan plan, applauded Anderson鈥檚 letter.

鈥淚 certainly hope they are more successful in getting MDOT/SHA to follow the law than we have been in getting adequate time to review the [Federal Environmental Impact Study],鈥 she wrote in an email.

In an interview, Anderson insisted that he did not spring his concern about the Mandatory Referral process on the state as a delaying tactic. Rather, he said, it was to insure that county planners and residents have a venue for 鈥渇ormal feedback鈥 on specific design elements of the highway-widening effort. 鈥淲e have asked them repeatedly, in the course of this process, when we can expect a Mandatory Referral package,鈥 he said.

Anderson noted that M-NCPPC, which by law is responsible for the use of county-owned parkland, has invoked its Mandatory Referral rights on far less ambitious projects, such as the construction of salt barns that MDOT wanted to build along the Beltway.

鈥淲e are landowners,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have a legal obligation 鈥 as well as a right 鈥 to provide input鈥 on how the toll lanes project moves forward.

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