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The Statehouse in Annapolis, Maryland, is the oldest
state capitol building in
continuous use.

ST. MARY'S TODAY
(c) photo 1999

 


 

 

 

By Kenneth C. Rossignol

ST. MARY’S TODAY

 

ANNAPOLIS --- State Senator Roy Dyson (D. St. Mary’s, Calvert, Charles) will file a bill in this session of the General Assembly funding the feasibility study on preserving the old Navy railroad right of way for future commuter rail use between the CSX railroad line which links Southern Maryland with the Washington area and the Patuxent River Naval Air Station.

"This region is Maryland’s fastest growing area and our roads sure show it," said Sen. Dyson. "We have had so much increase in traffic that roads which were built to last us for another 20 years are already congested and out of date with intersections on the newly reconstructed Rt. 235 leading to Pax River already in a state of failure."

Dyson has criticized the Governor for failing to address the Hughesville bypass funding issue, a bottleneck for traffic which consumes every vehicle traveling between St. Mary’s and Waldorf.

Dyson’s bill establishing the feasibility study passed the General Assembly four years ago, but $1.6 million in funding to maintain the right of way for future commuter rail use was not appropriated.

The study which was conducted by the Maryland Department of Transportation called for St. Mary’s County to cease granting easements across the right of way to builders and developers as the future cost of requiring those easements would add to the eventual cost of establishing rail service once again to Pax River. Those needing access across the county right of way would be responsible for making other arrangements once rail service cut them off from their access.

For years, successive St. Mary’s Boards of Commissioners, shortchanged the county by allowing hundreds of easements across the right of way which the Federal government turned over to the county as excess property in 1973.

The first thing the county did was to sell the old railroad ties and rails for scrap and without the rails and ties in place, the bed became a backroad freeway for local criminals who burglarized businesses and for those riding dirt bikes.

A recent plan to provide for a bike and horse trail along the right of way brought out dozens of angry neighbors who said that they wouldn’t mind if trains were once again on the former rail line but didn’t want access for those on foot to bisect their properties, in many cases, coming close to their homes.

The rail line leads from Lexington Park to Hughesville and then on to the CSX line near Gallant Green.

Trains ran on the line up through the late sixties after having been taken over by the Navy at the start of WWII. The Navy finished the line from Mechanicsville where it had ended after a series of owners built it since the late 1800’s.

Dyson, Del. John Bohanan (D. Lexington Park) and St. Mary’s Commissioner Larry Jarboe (R. Golden Beach) met with Maryland Comptroller William Donald Schaefer in Annapolis last January to plan initial strategies for establishing commuter rail service over existing CSX lines in Southern Maryland. Last September, Dean Kenderline, Schaefer’s Chief of Staff, and Del. Bohanan met with CSX Vice President J. Randall Evans and a team of CSX officials to outline what CSX would require for use of their tracks on lines to Aquasco and Morgantown.

The CSX officials said that they would cooperate with Maryland leader’s intent to use the existing rail lines for commuters but would require the state to indemnify them and to double track the lines so freight trains could run unimpeded by passenger use.

CSX said that it was their experience where they share trackage with commuter trains, that once commuter trains began service they grew in popularity and more trains end up running and thereby impact their business.

Maryland recently added commuter rail service over CSX lines from Frederick to Point of Rocks. Maryland MARC trains run into West Virginia and end up in Washington, D. C. MARC also runs lines from Baltimore while Virginia’s VRE has soared in popularity. Amtrak trains and the Washington METRO trains also provide rail service to Washington while Southern Maryland has had a growing number of commuter buses.

The highways leading from Southern Maryland are clogged with traffic and rarely a day passes without serious crashes shutting down the roads.




Democrats, Anti-Slots Supporters
Vow to Kill All Gambling Legislation
By STEPHANIE TRACY
Capital News Service
ANNAPOLIS - It may not be enough to kill the bill yet, but a group of 20 lawmakers said Wednesday they were only the tip of the iceberg of opponents in the General Assembly determined to stop Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s proposed slots legislation.
At a news conference, a group of about 20 senators and delegates - including many in the Montgomery County delegation - announced they would not support any kind of legislation to expand legalized gambling in Maryland.
Montgomery County Executive Doug Duncan has asked his county's delegation to oppose any gambling legislation, and said at the news conference, "We don't have to have slots shoved down our throats for the future of the state."
"We're the voice of opposition," said Delegate Anthony Brown, D-Prince George's. "We will not sit back and hope this issue stalemates again. We will directly oppose slots and casinos."
Last session, Ehrlich's first slots package died in the House.
Last week, Ehrlich submitted his lightly revised slots bill to the General Assembly, calling for off-track slot machines at two undetermined locations along the Interstate 95 corridor between Washington, D.C., and Baltimore. As before, the bill also calls for slots at four racetracks in the state.
Between sessions, the House Ways and Means Committee studied the economic and social impact of expanded gambling, recommending strong state regulation of slots venues. The study also recommended locating off-track gambling sites closer to major
thoroughfares and away from residential areas.
Some House Democrats have said the interim report will guide them on this year's slots proposals.
But Delegate Peter Franchot, D-Montgomery, a vocal opponent of slots last year, sounded a different tone Wednesday. The opposition this year, he said, is stronger and more broad-based.
Franchot rejected the connection between slots and balancing the budget and called slots the "crack cocaine of gambling."
"In our view, the governor's job is to come up with new revenues or more cuts if slots are not going to be the mechanism to balance the budget," Franchot said. "Ultimately the budget is his responsibility, and we just decided to stop propping him up."
Some members of the anti-slots coalition present at the press conference included Senate President Pro Tem Ida G. Ruben, D-Montgomery; House Speaker Pro Tem Adrienne Jones, D-Baltimore County; Delegate Curt Anderson, D-Baltimore; Delegate Mary-Dulany James, D-Harford; Sen. Roy P. Dyson, D-St. Mary's; Sen. Brian Frosh, D-Montgomery; Sen. Paul G. Pinsky, D-Prince George's; and Sen. Ralph M. Hughes, D-Baltimore.
The rancor revolving around the slots issue is just par for the course in this year's legislative session.
The Assembly, for the first time in 15 years, overrode a
gubernatorial veto. While partisans bickered and shouted about rules changes that diminished power and the fairness of debate.
Ehrlich Communications Director Paul Schurick said the governor was not worried by the vocal opposition.
"The majority of the people who live in Maryland support slots. The state is broke, and we can't fix the problem without revenues from slots," Schurick said. "(If the bill doesn't pass) it means the state won't have the money to pay for education."
In the Senate, where Ehrlich's slots bill passed narrowly last year, President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. said Maryland should be considered part of a region of states that already have legalized gambling.
The Calvert Democrat called slots "an absolute economic
necessity in light of the divided government we have," and said legislators needed to move forward to pass a bill.
Senate Minority Leader J. Lowell Stoltzfus, R-Somerset, said the fate of the governor's slots bill rests with House Speaker Michael E. Busch, D-Anne Arundel.
Busch said he is still opposed to slots legislation as an
individual legislator, but said too much time had been taken up talking about slots and said he was "trying to focus on other important issues."        



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St. Mary's Commissioner Larry Jarboe (R. Golden Beach), Sen. Roy Dyson (D. St. Mary's, Calvert) and Del. John Bohanan (D. Lexington Park), prepare to enter meeting with Comptroller Schaefer to pitch rail transportation over existing freight rail lines which begin in Southern Maryland and reach to Baltimore and Washington via Bowie.  
ST. MARY'S TODAY photo
Rail-Ho!
Local Officials Meet with Comptroller William Donald Schaefer to advance commuter rail into Southern Maryland. 

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This self-propelled rail car can operate over existing rail lines in Southerm Maryland.
Dyson Says Time Has Come to Explore
Bringing Rail to Southern Maryland Now

Senator will convene Light Rail Summit, ask for study of self-propelled MARC trains to Aquasco and Morgantown on existing freight rail lines... see print edition on newstands Tuesday for details..

Sen. Roy Dyson







 

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