Why won’t MDOT tell us WHY it’s going along with VA’s plan to build toll lanes in Prince George’s County, MD?
VDOT is proposing to build Southside toll lanes across the Woodrow Wilson Bridge into Prince George’s County as far as Oxon Hill. Amazingly, MDOT is still supporting the project, though it has not given a reason, substantive or otherwise. MDOT has not explained why, on the one hand, it has withdrawn its own study of I-495 toll lanes from east of I-270 to the Wilson Bridge (p. 5), while on the other hand supporting the Virginia study to build toll lanes within that same portion of the Maryland Beltway.
The Southside project is bad for Maryland and the region: it would create a new traffic bottleneck at Oxon Hill where the toll lanes terminate, and it would likely end chances of WMATA’s Blue Line eventually crossing the Wilson Bridge.
The Prince George’s County Council has proposed removing the Southside project from the regional Transportation Planning Board’s (TPB’s) long-range plan. TPB members, including MDOT, will vote on the proposal on June 20. Watch the live vote here to see what the TPB and MDOT do.
MDOT’s ultimate mixed messages re: toll lanes on lower & upper I-270
First, lower I-270. At the regional TPB’s May 2024 meeting, MDOT could provide no functional, public-serving reason to impose toll lanes on lower I-270, including through Rockville. MDOT’s own Innovative Congestion Management System has already mitigated congestion on that portion of the highway. MDOT itself told the TPB, “No active design or planning [for this segment] is planned to be advanced by this Administration as we focus on sections to the south and north” (p. 8). Yet MDOT still insisted that construction of toll lanes on lower I-270, with an implementation date of 2045 (which can be changed at any time), be included in the TPB’s long-range plan.
Rockville officials stayed strong. Despite MDOT’s disappointing action, Rockville Mayor Monique Ashton – unanimously supported by City Councilmembers Kate Fulton, Barry Jackson, David Myles, Izola Shaw, Marissa Valeri, and Adam Van Grack – continued the City’s powerful record of evidence-based opposition to the toll lane project and support for transportation alternatives that serve the public’s real needs.
Upper I-270. MDOT’s open house materials from fall 2023 said the following about plans for upper I-270: “A National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) study will be performed to evaluate equitable, environmentally sensitive, and multimodal solutions to address transportation needs.” Sounds good, but in reality, the outcome of the NEPA study of upper I-270 seems already predetermined: toll lanes. That’s what MDOT submitted for inclusion in the regional TPB’s current long-range plan (see p. 38, lines 190-194).
ACTION ITEM: Help spread the word!
Staying current on the Moore-Hogan toll lane plan is a challenge for everyone, particularly the general public not connected to advocacy and grassroots organizations. MDOT’s websites offer the look of news but not the substance or timeliness the public needs. The Washington Post rarely covers toll lane issues. We are grateful to online publications like Maryland Matters – they’re some of our best sources for updates. But overall, our area lacks comprehensive coverage of the toll lane story.
So all of us have to help get the word out to those who aren’t following the issues as closely as we are. Please widely share this newsletter and other relevant outreach you get from Citizens Against Beltway Expansion, the Sierra Club, the Action Committee for Transit, Maryland Transit Opportunities Coalition, the Coalition for Smarter Growth, and others.
Make sure people you’re in contact with know that the harmful and inequitable toll lane project is still a priority for the Moore Administration.