Moore OKs Toll Lanes on 495 & Spur. Our First Take!

Our Governor is in the process of making a very bad choice. He’s picking up Larry Hogan’s backward-looking behemoth of a plan and saying, in effect, this is the best the Moore administration can come up with for our MD-DC corridor. Unwanted, unworkable toll lanes.

Here’s what we know:

  • The Governor is applying for a federal grant (taxpayer money) to help fund Phase 1 of MDOT-built toll lanes. The grant program is highly competitive, and the project’s many deficiencies may lessen the state’s chances.

  • Per MDOT, Phase 1 will go from the GW Parkway in Virginia (why is MD building toll lanes in VA?), across the bridge and up I-495 and the I-270 West Spur, ending north of a to-be-built interchange at Westlake Drive. (See the map below, which also shows toll lanes on a section to the east.)

  • Lower I-270 may get toll lanes as part of a later phase.

  • Upper I-270 may get who knows what as part of a later, later phase.

  • The Governor’s grant application “does not preclude a public-private partnership model favored by former Gov. Larry Hogan.”

  • The project still faces the strong lawsuit brought by the Sierra Club, National Resources Defense Council, and historic preservation groups.

  • If the project does go forward – and that is far from a given – it would be years before Phase 1 construction could begin.

Scope of New Phase 1 Proposal for Managed Lanes [toll lanes]

From MDOT Grant Application Project Description, p. 3; Maryland State Highway Administration

This can’t be the legacy our Governor wants

  • We are in a climate crisis. Chasms between the wealthiest and the rest intensify inequity, and there are huge shifts in how and where people work.

  • The toll lane plan would cement inequity, exacerbate the climate emergency, ignore future workforce needs, and tie up state resources and transportation policy for generations. All for a project that, for the vast majority, can’t possibly work.

  • The public will not thank Gov. Moore or the elected officials who support him in this plan.

  • Already the Governor, like Hogan before him, has had to disguise the truth of what he’s proposing. Only a few days ago, MDOT rolled out the toll lane project with a statement that did not include the word “toll.” MDOT’s press blitz falsely portrayed the toll lanes as some kind of public transit bonanza.

The Governor can change his mind

  • Many, many effective, forward-looking alternatives to toll lanes are on the table right now. See here and here and here. They would reduce congestion singly or in combination without harming the public and the environment.

  • If Montgomery County officials hear from large numbers of their constituents, they are more likely to urge the Governor to adopt alternatives instead of the toll lanes. Councilmember Kate Stewart has already issued a powerful statement.

  • A vast army of advocates, activists, allied elected officials -- and virtually all Marylanders who newly learn the true dimensions of the Governor's bad choice -- will not stop until the toll lane scheme is cancelled.

 

Take Action Now

 

This is the beginning of our latest push to convince the Governor and local elected officials to pivot from Hogan’s toll lane plan to effective alternatives. Spread the word. Tell everyone you know to click on this link from Citizens Against Beltway Expansion. Use the prepopulated message or your own words to tell the Montgomery County Council to reach out to Moore now.

 Thank you to all who have sent messages before. Keep going – numbers matter! More action items coming soon.

Quick Action Alert: Urge MoCo Councilmembers to Speak Toll-Lane Truth to Moore

We face the looming possibility that our new Governor will support some version of his predecessor's dangerous, backward-looking toll lane scheme.

We’re actively calling on our Montgomery County Councilmembers to write to Gov. Moore and urge him to halt the scheme in favor of the many better alternatives.

The time for our Councilmembers to act is now, before the Governor approves a toll lane plan.

Quick Action

Our valued partner Citizens Against Beltway Expansion has created a tool for messaging the County Council.

Click on CABE’s link here to urge Councilmembers to tell Moore the toll lane project must be cancelled in favor of equitable, workable, environmentally sustainable alternatives.

 Send the prepopulated message, customize it, or use your own words entirely. For inspiration, see this powerful new article in Maryland Matters.

Thank you for taking action!

Lawsuit Update; No Letting Up

Governor Moore is the lone decider of the future of Larry Hogan’s toll lane plan. Our new Governor has one smart option and a lot of bad ones.

Moore campaigned to leave no one behind, to be a champion of equity and environmental justice. He aims to make Maryland a national leader on climate action. If he rightly chooses to cancel the toll lane scheme in favor of multiple better alternatives, the wave of benefits he sets in motion will resonate far beyond his time in office.

For now, unfortunately, he shows signs of going in the wrong direction. But that can and must change.

The governor recently spoke of “people who have business models that are intended to separate us because [those people] benefit…” A perfect way to describe the inequitable toll lane plan. 

He also recently said of the public, “That’s where my power comes from, the people.” Well, the people don’t want infrastructure that benefits only the wealthy and condemns everyone else to more congestion and less safety. The people don’t want a backward-looking highway project to further degrade the environment.

How do we hold our Governor to his worthy promises?

  • We keep taking action: We push our elected officials to speak the truth to and about Moore if he continues down Hogan’s path. We make our voices and opinions heard, and we never let up. See the Action Items below.

  • We follow and support the lawsuit making its way through U.S. District Court of Maryland. See the update below.

Gov. Wes Moore; The Washington Post, 8/1/23

Action Item #1

The Moore Administration is asking what we think of their ambitious goal to set “a national and global example for how a state can go all-in on climate action.”

Let’s tell them! ASAP, please complete the Administration’s 2-question survey. Explain, in as much or as little detail as you like, that the Moore Administration will never achieve its goal if they move ahead with Larry Hogan’s toll lane scheme.

For inspiration, see what the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), a plaintiff in the lawsuit challenging the toll lane plan (see update below), says: “By bringing more cars onto these highways and creating new traffic bottlenecks, this project would worsen deadly air pollution, especially for nearby environmental justice communities. The state failed to account for the threats this project poses.”

Click here to access and complete the State’s short environmental survey.

• For more about the Administration’s goals, see Maryland’s Climate Pathway. This new document fails to mention the toll lane project or the resulting increases in vehicle miles traveled, greenhouse gas emissions, and more.

• See the Sierra Club-led technical and legal comments on the project’s environmental flaws here.  

Action Item #2: Watch for It

Check your inbox in the coming days and weeks for quick outreach tools we’ll forward from our trusted coalition partners. Use the tools to tell Montgomery County Councilmembers – because they must be proactive on this issue – to carry our message to Governor Moore: the public says no to Hogan’s inequitable, ineffective, climate-destroying toll lane project.   

Lawsuit Update

The lawsuit challenging the toll lane plan is moving ahead in federal district court.

  • On June 16, 2023, the Sierra Club, NRDC, and historic preservation groups “filed a motion for summary judgement…which asks the judge to decide the case in their favor without going to trial.”

  • By August 7, 2023, “MDOT and [the Federal Highway Administration] plan to file a response and cross-motion for summary judgment…according to the court-ordered schedule…”

  • NRDC’s statement on the lawsuit says, “In its haste to try and get this harmful project started, the Hogan administration cut corners and ignored legally required steps. The new administration of Gov. Wes Moore now has the opportunity to conduct the robust and just environmental review that the law requires.”

  • But according to MDOT, its “Managed Lanes Study fully complied with all federal requirements in the environmental review process…”

We may soon learn more about Governor Moore’s pending decision: to take ownership of his predecessor’s very bad plan, or to work toward equitable, environmentally sound transportation that benefits all.

If the latter, wonderful. If the former, we won’t let up.