Given permission by the federal government to proceed on the planning for a third Chesapeake Bay Bridge adjacent to the existing two spans, the state must commit $40 million to design a plan for review by the Federal Highway Administration.
Meanwhile, the Queen Anne’s County Commission is promoting an eight-lane Bay Bridge to replace the two heavily used spans with one structure that supposedly will accommodate future traffic. One of the spans was completed in 1952 and the other in 1973. Let the fierce battle begin between the build-the-bridge gang and the conservationists. The public discourse will be intense and bitter.
I side with the bridge opponents, with a twist. My recommendation is a rapid-transit option, acknowledging its huge cost and public opposition to traveling by any manner other than a car. Vehicular travel is still king in our country.
I have voiced this recommendation previously. I realize it is a poorly supported option, one that would relegate vehicles to a second thought. The primary question will be: how can we (parents) carry our children, their toys and luggage to the beach? Is it possible? Is it practical?
I am an optimist. The rapid transit cars could contain storage. Sounds simple to me; maybe it is not. The rapid transit could use the right of the way running in the middle of Route 50. Another possibility would be a multi-level bridge that would bear the brunt of increasing commuter traffic on one level, and rapid transit for beachgoers on the other level.
Most importantly, traffic would not build to a more onerous level than is the case now. And, even more critically, valuable Eastern Shore farmland would not be lost. Shore life would be undisturbed. Motorists would not rule the Delmarva Peninsula. New residential development would not mushroom.
Unlike ardent conservationists, I believe another span is necessary, but under the already stated conditions. I believe it is inevitable, though years and millions and millions of dollars in the future. It will be a tedious slough for the pro-bridgers.
Projected to cost at least $10 billion, I suspect it will be closer to $20 billion, if not more, when all is said and done. Public works projects such as this one will require a humongous investment of federal financial support. Politics, lawsuits and recessions will interfere. The process will be rife with controversy.
I do commend the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) for taking a comprehensive approach that views a third or replacement bridge as necessitating an improved road system on both the eastern and western shores. MDOT also understands the environmental damage to Bay creatures and pollution.
Consideration of another span assumes that traffic will increase along with expanding population on both shores. That assumption is questionable if climate change and global warming erode significant acreage. Current residents might move to higher elevations.
Count me as an intensely interested observer. Though a self-exile in Annapolis, I love the Eastern Shore and want to protect its pristine qualities. The impact too on the Western Shore will be significant and harmful. Valuable property will vanish under concrete. Too much is at stake.
This will not be my last Bay Bridge column. The future cannot be ignored. The two existing spans changed life on the Shore. Nothing was the same afterwards. A third span, either adjoining what is there or replacing it with an eight-lane structure, will be an irreversible game-changer.
Columnist Howard Freedlander retired in 2011 as Deputy State Treasurer of the State of Maryland. Previously, he was the executive officer of the Maryland National Guard. He also served as community editor for Chesapeake Publishing, lastly at the Queen Anne’s Record-Observer. In retirement, Howard serves on the boards of several non-profits on the Eastern Shore, Annapolis and Philadelphia.
Gren Whitman says
The first Bay Bridge was built in 1952, one lane east and one west, and jerked the sleepy Shore into the 20th Century. Cambridge was desegregated (good), tract housing ate up Kent Island (bad), and Ocean City exploded (ugly). Seasonal traffic jams blossomed.
After a statewide referendum in 1966 (289,418 votes against a second bridge, 248,942 for), Gov. Millard Tawes ignored the result and, under Gov. Spiro Agnew, a second span opened in 1973. Seasonal traffic jams quickly resumed.
Gov. Hogan is now pressing for a third parallel bridge and the Queen Anne’s County commissioners want to scrap spans No. 1 and 2 for an eight-laner. Any such project will take 20-30 years and must include vastly widened approaches stretching from I-97 to Rte. 404, not to mention the need to widen or replace the Kent Narrows Bridge.
Somewhere around 2050, season traffic jams will resume.
Carol Mylander says
Kent Island is the oldest European settlement in the State of Maryland. It was originally part of Virginia and sent representatives to the House of Burgesses in Virginia. It was stolen and pillaged by the Calverts and it continues. For those of us born on Kent Island we try to protect what we can. You might ask “how did we let it go”-the farms and plantations, orchards and wheat, family graveyards(the battle continues), Well, things like this made it happen, the state moving in deciding on cutting through farms to make faster routes to the barrier islands(slowly being taken over by the sea and rising tides) A new bridge=new subdivisions, thousands of cars, people hurrying.
I am asking for consideration, moderation and transparency. If a bridge and new highway lanes are built then consider saving our waterways and our largest graveyard,
the safety of our children, native forestation to keep toxins at bay and air clean. My great grandmother fought to save the island from becoming a proving ground, the
battle continues. At the same time the state and federal government build, then give us a National Park at Kent Fort Manor, replace our dying ancient dying trees with
new trees and be considerate.