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A new study of the ICC and alternatives finds four practical, cost-effective options perform better than the Intercounty Connector (ICC) on most measures, including reducing traffic, air pollution and overall cost. The report was sponsored by regional and national environmental, transportation and smart growth groups and conducted by Smart Mobility, Inc., a nationally recognized traffic modeling firm. "We found that alternatives already being discussed by the state and counties would cost less and reduce traffic better than the ICC," said Stewart Schwartz, of the Coalition for Smarter Growth. "This study shows that faster, cheaper and cleaner alternatives to the ICC are practical and cost-effective," said Michael Replogle, Transportation Director of Environmental Defense and a former Montgomery County transportation planning official. "By refusing to consider alternatives like these, the state is missing the opportunity to speed up commutes, protect the region's watersheds and deliver cleaner air." The groups commissioned the study after the state refused to look at transit, development, and local transportation changes as alternatives to a new highway. "The proposed $3 billion ICC and its financing package would impact the entire state - putting other projects to the back of the line for dozens of years," noted Delegate James Hubbard (District 23 - Prince George's County). "We cannot afford to waste $3 billion and now we know for certain that there are better alternatives." The Maryland Department of Legislative Services has estimated that the full cost of the ICC will exceed $3 billion with financing.
Not only did the alternative packages perform better than the ICC, the ICC performed the worst on almost every measure including time spent driving, delay due to congestion, total amount of driving or vehicle miles traveled, and the total number of trips made each day. "In essence, compared to the other alternatives, the ICC would cause residents to spend more time behind the wheel making more and longer trips each day," noted Steve Caflisch of the Sierra Club. "The alternatives that performed the best included a combination of increased transit with more jobs and housing near transit, and a better east-west balance of jobs and housing." Improving the balance of jobs and housing in Montgomery and Prince George's Counties shortened commutes and reduced congestion. ICC
would cost more to build, mean more time spent driving The state's official study acknowledges that building the ICC would have a "negligible impact on freeway operations, including the Beltway, I-270 and I-95" (pages IV-343 to 344) and would add traffic to the Beltway in Montgomery County (Table IV-91 at pages IV- 316 to 317).
Most of the elements in the packages of alternatives are individually under consideration in other studies by the counties or the state, but were not included in the state's ICC study. This study is the first time that they have been united into a comprehensive quantitative analysis. "The results certainly show that a more measured analysis of alternatives such as suggested by your necessarily quick study and analysis, would be in order before embarking on construction of the Intercounty Connector," noted Keith Lawton, a national traffic modeling expert and former Director of Technical Services at Portland Metro, the regional entity similar to the Council of Governments, who reviewed the report. Delegate Adrienne Mandel (District 19, Montgomery County) noted, "There are alternatives to this destructive highway that the state has not considered." Environmental Impacts "We analyzed air pollution and our best alternative produces less NOx air pollution, by a half million pounds/year, than the ICC," noted Lee Epstein of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. Costs Methodology "Smart Mobility Inc. carried out the travel modeling work done for this study. I am familiar with the Principal, Norm Marshall, and consider this firm to be both competent and professional. The report conclusions seem to be well justified," noted Lawton in a letter. Elizabeth Deakin, a Professor of City and Regional Planning and Director of the University of California, found "that the alternatives the report develops are reasonable and offer valuable options for consideration The formulation of the particular transit-oriented land use alternative analyzed in this report seems to have been carefully done The modeling approach taken in the report is reasonable and in accord with standard modeling practices."
The full report and a summary can be accessed online at: www.SmarterGrowth.net and www.environmentaldefense.org/go/iccoptions
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