By
Kenneth C. Rossignol
ST.
MARY’S TODAY
LEXINGTON
PARK — Take a look around
the entire region and the
evidence of a do-nothing
Republican Administration
abounds for the fastest
growing region of Maryland;
the area’s roadways and
bridges groan with traffic
and lack of any semblance of
mass transit other than
buses fuels the appetite of
motorists for gasoline.
With
almost daily crashes
blocking the Governor Thomas
Johnson Bridge for hours,
with Rt. 301, Rt. 5 and Rt.
4 taking turns being blocked
with massive tie-ups, the
focus often is on the
meltdown on the major
roadways.
But a
trip down past the bucolic
scenes of Ridge on the way
to Point Lookout State Park
brings back the reality that
not only were the major
traffic arteries ignored
during the last four years
while the State of Maryland
committed hundreds of
millions to a controversial
highway in Montgomery
County, but even the
boondocks have suffered from
a lack of state funds.
The late
Joe "Judge" Ridgell, made an
annual trip to Leonardtown
for more than twenty years
asking for the county to
prioritize the widening of
Rt. 5 between Scotland and
Point Lookout, to no avail.
For the
past eight years, Ridge has
had an extra county
commissioner, with Dan
Raley, who technically is
elected from the Lexington
Park commissioner district,
functioning as the elected
commissioner for the
southern part of the county
by default.
Four
years ago a school bus was
sideswiped by a dump truck
and the bus overturned,
loaded with kids. There were
minor injuries and a lot of
tongue-clucking on the part
of elected officials, but
the county has always had
more important road projects
to request the state to
fund.
Chancellors Run Road is
finally being geared up for
a major overhaul after
twenty years of being set on
the back burner.
The chief
reason that project was
funded was due to
Congressman Steny Hoyer (D.
Md. 5th) including funds for
the expansion and
reconstruction of Rt. 237
(Chancellors Run Road) in
the federal budget due to
BRAC.
When
then-Governor Robert
Ehrlich’s administration set
up a circus tent for
officials to announce the
implementation of the
funding of the rebuild, they
never bothered to give Hoyer
any credit.
What did
get put into the current
budget for Point Lookout was
for someone to drive down
there and paint wider white
lines on the edge of the
highway. Perhaps the wide
stripe of paint will call
more attention to the edge
of the highway and somehow
keep vehicles from
overturning into the deep
ditch on each side of the
road.
With the
Ehrlich Administration
ballyhooing their rosy
fiscal policies for several
years, they somehow managed
to leave behind a $1.4
billion deficit.
Now the competition for
funding transportation
projects all over the state
will become more severe.
Fortunately the O’Malley
Administration has done more
than talk about solving the
region’s transportation
woes.
Last
year, just weeks before the
election, Ehrlich suddenly
embraced the proposal made
by Senator Dyson to build
another span over the
Patuxent River at Solomon’s.
Ehrlich
made a big splash at his
election-eve conversion to
being a bridge booster but
evidently the voters weren’t
bamboozled. Ehrlich had
vetoed Dyson’s
Transportation Study
Commission and the General
Assembly overturned his veto
at the start of last year’s
session.
In a
final attempt to play
politics, Ehrlich only
provided $100,000 in funds
for the study.
Ehrlich
lost the election.
Republican delegate Tony
O’Donnell (Lusby) voted for
the study before he voted
against it by sustaining the
Ehrlich veto effort.
O’Donnell formerly was for
commuter rail before he
became against it, now that
he is minority leader for
the GOP in the House of
Delegates.
With the balance of the
region’s legislators all
being Democrats, only Del.
John Wood sides with
O’Donnell.
Wood was
dumped as a committee
chairman when his pal
Speaker Cas Taylor lost the
election in 2002 and Wood
holds little sway in
Annapolis while local
politicians prepare to run
for the district he was
first elected to in 1982.
While Wood could have been
in a position of influence
with a new Democrat
Governor, Wood sealed his
fate by backing Ehrlich in
last year’s election.
One of
the first commitments made
by O’Malley for
transportation was to
provide $4 million in
funding for the
Transportation Study.
Anyone
who thinks that somehow Wood
has any or has had any
influence with the state
simply needs to look around
the northern end of St.
Mary’s County. While
everyone tries to take
credit for the Hughesville
bypass, again it was Hoyer
who snared Federal funds
that made the project come
to pass.
"I got
$10 million for the
Hughesville bypass and
Glendening had budgeted $15
million for it during his
second term," Hoyer told ST.
MARY’S TODAY on Wednesday.
"That is $25 million of the
$54 million to make it
happen, its only the right
thing for the last Governor
to come up with the balance
of the money for what we
started."
A project
to build a round-about at
Chaptico has been beaten
around for the past 15
years. It is finally
underway and the principal
goal is to keep motorists
from running stop signs and
causing horrible wrecks on
Rt. 234.
The
Farmers Market twice-a-week
traffic jam has been tended
to by the SHA by the
painting of lines on the
roadway, evidently some sort
of miracle cure. The only
real improvement in the
northern end of St. Mary’s
has been the chanelized
intersection of Rt. 235 and
Morganza-Turner Road at
Oraville. Again, this change
came about due to the lack
of ability of motorists to
yield to traffic when
pulling out from Rt. 6.
Three
people lost their lives at
this intersection due to a
teen driver’s impatience.
The legal
number of maneuvers at open
intersections numbers at
least at 16 but with the
concrete curbs, the number
is cut down to about 4.
With CSX
running coal trains down to
Morgantown and Chalk Point
each day, the ability of the
state to run MARC trains
over those tracks is a
fairly easy proposition.
The
rights of ways are in place,
the tracks are in place and
the railroad made it clear
at a meeting with Delegate
John Bohanan (D. California)
three years ago that they
wanted indemnification from
the state for passenger use
of his rail line and that
the state would have to bear
the cost of double-tracking.
Now the
railroad is under pressure
to stop running hazardous
cargo under the mall from
Union Station south to
Virginia.
The
prospect of a terrorist plot
to set off an explosion on a
train carrying chemicals and
explosives has set planners
coming up with ways to send
freight trains south around
Washington to cross over the
CSX line that snakes away at
White Plains to Indian Head
where a new bridge would
cross the Potomac River.
Another
possibility would be to run
a lower bridge platform
under a new Rt. 301 span at
Morgantown in order to
bypass Washington, D.C.
The
railroad would greatly
benefit from such a plan and
the effort to make a safer
journey for hazardous
material, cargo routinely
shipped around the nation
every day, would be a boost
for finally improving the
tracks that come into
Southern Maryland.
The track
improvements would have to
be borne by the railroad and
would lessen the cost of
adding commuter rail for
Maryland.
Reached
at the Capital on Wednesday
evening, Hoyer told ST.
MARY’S TODAY that he was
vitally interested in
bringing commuter rail to
Southern Maryland but he
didn’t know if the proposal
to redirect freight traffic
south through Maryland would
work.
"Every
local official in the region
has called me to say that
they are opposed to
hazardous cargo going
through their areas," said
Hoyer. "I have asked that
perhaps a far less expensive
option would be to simply
have the trains checked
before they ran underground
at the Mall. It would be a
lot cheaper."
Hoyer
brought several million to
the State of Maryland for a
light rail study for the Rt.
210 corridor ten years ago.
But with
the support of O’Malley and
his Secretary of
Transportation John Porcari,
commuter rail for this
region might finally become
a reality.
A big
cost item would be the
construction of overpasses
for the CSX line.
The State
of Maryland clearly had not
a single planner employed
when it built the
Mattawoman-Beantown Road Rt.
5 bypass without
constructing an overpass.
Senator
Mac Middleton told ST.
MARY’S TODAY that building a
Potomac River rail bridge
would bring 30 freight
trains a day through
Waldorf. He may be on the
low end of that guess.
The price
of gas may become a lot
higher in order to fund
transportation improvements.
One of
the quickest fixes that the
General Assembly can come up
with to replenish the
transportation fund which
was emptied out by the
Ehrlich Administration for
years to come would be to
increase the gas tax.
That
isn’t a fun idea for anyone
but the money has to come
from somewhere and higher
gas prices are fueling
plenty of interest in
commuter rail.
Planned
commuter bus parking lots
finally got the attention of
the Tri-County Council.
The new
chairman of the Tri-County
Council is St. Mary’s
Commissioner Larry Jarboe
(R. Golden Beach), who is
one of the most ardent
supporters of commuter rail
for the region.
Jarboe
said this week that he has
spoken to each member of the
three county panel and
lobbied them to support
making Hughesville a major
rail station with parking
lots for commuters which
would serve both buses and
trains.
Jarboe
has given his support to
Sen. Roy Dyson, the area’s
chief public transportation
advocate, and to Hoyer and
Bohanan, even earning the
ire of some of his fellow
Republicans, including one
who was pummeled in last
year’s election by Dyson.
"With Hughesville now a
ghost town, it could be just
the ticket to revitalize the
town to once again make it
revolve around train
travel," said Jarboe, "just
like it was a hundred years
ago. With parking,
restaurants and trains
coming and going, shops
might once again open their
doors."
With the
support of the county
commissioners in each
county, the legislators and
the Governor, all the tools
for solutions are on the
table.
"Wayne
Clark, our TCC Executive
Director was amazed at the
extent of the Governor’s
support of the funding for
our transportation study
commission," said Jarboe.
"We were expecting far less
and now it shows the extent
of the commitment of the
Governor to this region."
Jarboe
said he would ask the TCC to
seek a demonstration of the
Colorado Railcar self
propelled commuter train
which tours the country to
showcase the ability of the
American firm to provide
rail cars to the commuter
railroad operators. The firm
brought the demo train to DC
in 2000 for the District to
examine use of the train
cars on a line operating in
Southeast over existing rail
lines, to the Northeast part
of town.