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Back to Press Room For
Immediate Release: December 20, 2006 Digital Maps are
available Proposed $3 Billion
Boondoggle Is Loser For State Taxpayers Because It Provides None Of Promised
Traffic Relief, While Better Alternatives Exist Rockville, MD – Residents along the controversial proposed 18-mile
intercounty connector (ICC) toll highway in Montgomery and Prince George’s
Counties have joined environmental groups to challenge the legality of
state and federal decisions that threaten communities and natural resources,
including the Chesapeake Bay. One of two court challenges filed today
is the first case nationwide to seek to hold federal transportation agencies
accountable under a recently amended law that requires minimizing transportation-related
fuel consumption and air pollution to promote energy security and combat
global warming. Individuals and organizations, including Environmental Defense, Sierra Club, Maryland Native Plant Society and Audubon Naturalist Society, have sought an objective analysis of options to address the traffic problems and transportation needs of area residents since Governor Ehrlich launched another study of the proposed ICC in 2003. The federal and state agencies failed to look at alternatives or adequately assess the health and environmental impacts, so these groups were forced to take their concerns to the courts in order to protect the interests of state residents. “The science is in: toxic vehicle exhaust from major highways like the ICC can poison anyone in close proximity to the road,” said Connie McKenna, a member of both Environmental Defense and the Sierra Club. McKenna lives on Briardale Road in Derwood next to the proposed six-lane toll road that would allow 18-wheel trucks to spew diesel exhaust fumes as they pass by her home. “I am terrified for my son who, like many children along the ICC right-of-way, suffers from asthma. My cousin’s first asthma attack killed her.” In fact, the state’s own study shows that the ICC would boost traffic on parts of I-370, I-270, I-95, the Beltway and on many local north-south roads, causing increased pollution at sensitive sites near these roads, such as Montgomery Blair High School and Holy Cross Hospital. In two different legal cases, four environmental groups and several individuals are challenging the approval of the proposed $3 billion ICC. Environmental Defense & Sierra Club Audubon Naturalist Society, Maryland Native Plant Society &
the Metcalf-Burton Family Air Pollution, Public Health The American Academy of Pediatrics recently recommended protecting children from the harmful effects of air pollution by not locating schools near highways. California has banned new schools from locations within 500 feet of major highways based on recent research that links motor vehicle emissions to adverse health effects suffered by children. Yet located within 500 feet of the proposed ICC route are: Drew Elementary School; East Norbeck Park; Northwest Branch Recreational Park; Layhill Park; Rock Creek Regional Park; and ball fields and playgrounds near Royal Forest in Colesville. “The proposed ICC would deliver health risks without curing our transportation ills,” said John Balbus, MD, MPH, the Health Program Director at Environmental Defense who also is a Sierra Club member and founding Director of the Center for Risk Science and Public Health at George Washington University. “Children and adults already suffering from asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis and heart disease will be most likely to be affected. Even fetuses appear to be vulnerable to the adverse health effects of motor vehicle-related pollutants.” Consideration of Environmental Impacts & Reasonable Alternatives “Our challenge maintains that Federal Highway Administration and U.S. Department of Transportation so narrowly defined the scope, purpose, and need of the project during the NEPA process that anything other than the six-lane east-west toll highway was not considered,” noted Fitzpatrick. “The ICC would severely damage or destroy high quality natural resources and ensure continued governmental inattention to truly significant transportation problems in suburban Maryland which continue to plague millions for lack of funding.” These groups are also challenging the approach used to assess and weigh impacts to air, forests, water quality, parks and rare and endangered species. The federal agencies rely on only what is in the study for their review and assessment, so incomplete, inconsistent or skewed information can bias the agencies review. This is how the deficiencies of the EIS have infected not only Federal Highway Administration and U.S. Department of Transportation’s project approvals, but also the Army Corps of Engineers’ approval of a permit that would allow Maryland agencies to fill in wetlands and other water bodies to construct the ICC. "Throughout the study, the state failed to identify the extensive environmental impacts of the proposed 18-mile road,” noted John Parrish, Vice-President of the Maryland Native Plant Society. "Restoration of the Anacostia River and Chesapeake Bay depends on maintaining and restoring forest cover. Losing 700 acres of forest, including rare species, is simply unacceptable in light of better performing, less harmful alternatives." Independent experts found four practical, cost-effective options perform better than the ICC on most measures, including reducing traffic, air pollution and overall cost. These alternatives include enhancing bus and rail transit, upgrading existing highways, fixing local roads, time-of-day tolling, encouraging more development near Metro stations, and balancing job growth across the region. “It is important to remember that state officials don’t have to wait for the courts to address traffic and protect communities and the environment. Governor-elect O’Malley and state and local officials have a new opportunity to rethink the state’s transportation needs,” said Betsy Johnson, Chair of the Maryland Chapter of the Sierra Club. “Now is the time to prioritize our limited transportation funds on transit in Baltimore and the Washington suburbs as well fixing local roads statewide.”
Summary of legal complaint from Environmental Defense & Sierra Club
Legal representation for Audubon Naturalist Society, Maryland Native
Plant Society and the Metcalf-Burton family is provided by Sidley Austin
LLP. | |||
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