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Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Without New Funding Source, Purple Line, CCT Could Be 'Put On Hold'

Montgomery County officials are blasting a state transportation funding plan that calls for re-allocating money earmarked for the two projects if lawmakers can't drum up more funds.

Members of the Montgomery County Council are urging state transportation officials against delaying funding for the Purple Line and the Corridor Cities Transitway. Lawmakers in Annapolis are struggling with ways to fund state transportation projects, including the 16-mile Purple Line light rail that would connect Bethesda with New Carrollton and the upcounty bus rapid transit route. Maryland Senate president Thomas V. Mike Miller has proposed a 3 percent gas tax that would raise about $300 million for transportation projects, Patch reported. But without a funding increase, a state transportation funding plan calls for re-allocating the money earmarked for the two projects and Baltimore’s Red Line within the Maryland Transit Administration’…

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Jersey GIrl

5:12 pm on Monday, February 11, 2013

If Maryland can NOT balance it budget it should NOT spend money that it does NOT have! Once you take away green space it is gone FOREVER! The Capital Crescent Trail is packed with bikes, mothers and children, dog walkers, the elderly.....It is almost too crowded on a nice day! You can NOT relocate a wooded trail!!! If they build the purple line they will cut down trees on either side of the rail …   more ›

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Top Maryland House Republican Calls For Purple Line Delay

“The citizens are hurting. They can’t take any more tax increases," believes Maryland House Minority Leader Anthony O'Donnell, reports the Baltimore Business Journal.

Maryland House Minority Leader Anthony O'Donnell has called for a delay in the Purple Line and Baltimore's Red Line, saying proposed tax increases to fund the light rail projects would be too costly for taxpayers, the Baltimore Business Journal reports. In Annapolis this legislative session, lawmakers are grappling with ways to fund the Purple Line, Red Line and other transportation projects.  Maryland Senate President Mike Miller has proposed a 3 percent gas tax that would raise up to $300 million for transportation, and jurisdictions would be able to tack on another 5 cents per gallon to pay for local transportation projects, Patch reported. O’Donnell, R-St. Mary’s and Calvert counties, said the Purple and Red Line projects should be put…

Joe Galvagna

6:50 am on Thursday, January 31, 2013

Stop stop no more stupid spending no more taxes please vote this wasteful spending down and these ignorant Dens out. Our state our country is in a free fall we need some real leadership starting at the top in the whitehouse. Wake up people you can only squeeze so much out of the working people to pay for the freeloaders. We need to fight back to stop all these give aways. You intitlement bums get…   more ›

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Metrobus Schedule: No More App for That

The popular bus arrival time app has gone dark.

  NextBusDC, a smartphone app that had been tracking the arrival times of Metro buses for users since 2009, has quit working, according to a Washington Post story. The app, which is the end product of a partnership between NextBus—a company that tracks transit system data, and AppTight, which makes the data user-friendly in an app format, stopped working on Dec. 20, according to the In The Capital website. In The Capital reported that a contractual relationship between the two companies “ceased,” with NextBus receiving only three days’ notice and AppTight no notice at all. AppTight’s Kelly Beener remarked that only the data feed to the DC app has stopped, and the San Francisco version continues to function. NextBus’ Ken Schmier told The …

Queen

12:59 pm on Thursday, January 3, 2013

This article isn't quite right. The Nextbus service is still working, it's just the app that's not. Why pay for an app when you can get the same info for free by pointing your phone's browser to nextbus.com?   more ›

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Intercounty Connector to Open Feb. 22

Interstate 370-to-Georgia Avenue segment will be toll-free until March 6.

The first segment of the Intercounty Connector, a seven-mile stretch from Shady Grove to just northeast of Rockville, will open two weeks from today, Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) announced on Monday. The state's first all-electronic toll road, it will be known as Maryland Route 200. Its first piece will connect Interstate 370 to Georgia Avenue. The segment will open at 6 a.m. on Feb. 22, weather permitting, the Maryland Transportation Authority said in a news release. The first segment had been scheduled to open in December, 2010, but was delayed due to bad weather, ICC spokesman Ray Feldmann told Patch at the end of last year. Motorists may will be able to "test drive" the ICC without paying tolls through March 6. MDTA will use the test drive…

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Lezlie Crosswhite

2:30 pm on Tuesday, February 15, 2011

No, I understand there aren't real booths, which is why I put "booths" in quotes. The question that I can't seem to get the answer to is, where on 370 do they have the structure that reads the EZ pass that collects the toll? Is it before the exit for 355 or after? If you happen to know the answer, I'd be most interested! Thanks.   more ›

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