logo
Bill to kill Gorham Connector crashes in committee

Bill to kill Gorham Connector crashes in committee

Yahoo09-05-2025
May 8—A bill that would ensure the controversial Gorham Connector proposal is dead was soundly rejected by the Legislature's transportation committee this week.
LD 1020 would repeal 2017 legislation that directed the Maine Turnpike Authority to plan and build a toll highway extension from South Portland, through Scarborough and Westbrook, to Gorham.
The bill follows the authority's announcement in March that it enlisted the Maine Department of Transportation to consider alternative solutions to commuter traffic congestion west of Portland. Neither agency has said the connector proposal has been dropped entirely.
The bill also would order the authority to sell any land purchased for the project to the previous owners or give it to the municipalities where the properties are located. If municipalities didn't want the land, the authority would have to offer it to a local land trust before selling it.
The authority has spent $6.3 million on 15 properties totaling 340 acres, or about 30% of the 50 parcels the authority would need to complete the project.
The bill's supporters say they want to make sure the plan to build a 5-mile, four-lane toll highway isn't considered a viable option in the upcoming study, which is expected to take 18 to 24 months.
The committee sided with the bill's opponents, including Department of Transportation officials, who said eliminating the connector proposal from potential solutions would predetermine the outcome of the study before it starts.
"I don't think you'd want to do any of those things until you knew what the options were," said Sen. Brad Farrin, R-Norridgewock, a committee member.
The committee voted 9-3 Wednesday to recommend that LD 1020 "ought not to pass" when it goes before the House and Senate in the coming weeks.
The committee instructed Department of Transportation officials to report back early next year on the study's progress.
"I don't want the department or the turnpike expending resources and energy and time without community support," said Rep. Lydia Crafts, D-Newcastle, committee chair.
The MTA has already spent $18 million developing the connector proposal, which has been in the works for more than 20 years.
Now estimated to cost at least $331 million, the project drew organized opposition after the authority announced its preferred route in February 2024.
Public dissent swelled last summer, when an MTA poll found that 45% of respondents said they oppose (12%) or strongly oppose (33%) the connector, while 40% said they support (20%) or strongly support (20%) building the road. Municipal councils in Scarborough and Westbrook withdrew their support.
Supporters of the highway project say it would be an effective solution to traffic congestion, especially as more homes are being built in communities west of Portland.
Connector opponents say it's an outdated and costly proposal that would do little to fix commuter congestion. They say it would displace homes, worsen suburban sprawl and vehicle emissions, and destroy wetlands, farmlands and forests.
They also note that traffic counts dropped in the wake of the pandemic, in part because more people are working from home, and they say options such as roundabouts and other improvements to existing roads would be cheaper and less invasive.
The transportation committee also rejected another turnpike-related bill, LD 1292, also sponsored by Sen. Stacey Brenner, D-Scarborough, recommending 12-1 that it "ought not to pass." It would require the authority to transfer additional toll revenue collected beyond its legislatively approved budget to the Department of Transportation's highway fund.
Copy the Story Link
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mob of anti-Israel protestors clash with police after attempting to storm Grand Central Terminal: cops
Mob of anti-Israel protestors clash with police after attempting to storm Grand Central Terminal: cops

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • New York Post

Mob of anti-Israel protestors clash with police after attempting to storm Grand Central Terminal: cops

Anti-Israel protesters clashed with police outside Grand Central Terminal Saturday — resulting in four arrests, cops and sources said. The chaos erupted around 3:30 p.m. when hundreds of demonstrators that had been marching in Manhattan attempted to storm the transit hub's doors, forcing officials to lock and barricade the iconic building. The unruly crowd was part of a protest organized by Palestinian activist group Within Our Lifetime that started outside City Hall earlier in the afternoon, according to police. Advertisement The group, waving Palestinian flags and chanting, scuffled with NYPD and MTA officers outside the station's Vanderbilt Hall entrance, according to cops and shocking videos on social media. One video of the melee showed protesters hurling profanities at a female officer before a group of cops tackled an agitator, while others formed a barrier to keep the hostile group from entering the terminal. 4 NYPD and MTA police officers confronting Palestine protestors at Grand Central Station. Some cops were seen using batons to fend off the protestors. Advertisement 4 NYPD officers detaining Palestine protestors at Grand Central Terminal. 4 Some cops were seen using batons to fend off the protestors. A handful of the rowdy flag-waving demonstrators, shouting 'Free Palestine' and banging on drums, made it into the main concourse, but were removed by authorities, a video shared by WOL showed. Advertisement None of the arrested protesters were publicly identified by cops. Two of them were arrested by the NYPD, charged with trespassing and disorderly conduct and issued Criminal Court summonses, a police spokesperson said. 4 Footage of a scuffle between NYPD officers and Palestine protestors at Grand Central Terminal. MTA officers took two other demonstrators into custody, but no details about what charges may be facing were immediately made public. Advertisement Train service didn't seem to have been disrupted after the wild skirmish. A heavy police presence remained hours later, blocking off the area where the tussle erupted.

Hochul blames ‘lack of investments' for MTA's hellish service meltdowns, even as bloated transit agency eyes fare hike to $3
Hochul blames ‘lack of investments' for MTA's hellish service meltdowns, even as bloated transit agency eyes fare hike to $3

New York Post

time3 days ago

  • New York Post

Hochul blames ‘lack of investments' for MTA's hellish service meltdowns, even as bloated transit agency eyes fare hike to $3

Just throw more money at the problem! Gov. Kathy Hochul on Friday blamed decades-long 'lack of investments' in subway infrastructure for hellish service meltdowns this week amid stifling heat and torrential downpours — even as she directed MTA officials to conduct a 'pretty much full review' of the issues. Hochul, standing alongside Metropolitan Transportation Authority honcho Janno Lieber, acknowledged the repeated failures had left straphangers running late or frustrated. 4 Gov. Kathy Hochul, in a press conference, addressed the reasons for the subway meltdowns this week were due to a 'lack of investments' in subway infrastructure. Matt Roberts/Shutterstock 'I don't want any person to feel as if they aren't getting first-rate service, so I've directed Janno and his team to provide a pretty much full review of what occurred this week,' she said. Power outages at the West Fourth Street station during the morning commute on both Tuesday and Thursday caused travel nightmares for thousands of subway-riders, some of whom vowed to jump turnstiles to steal back their lost time. Hochul already appeared primed to point the finger at the 'lack of investments' in the subway system, despite the MTA raking ever-increasing billions of dollars over decades for infrastructure improvements, imposing a $9 congestion pricing toll and, this week, eyeing a fare increase to $3. The governor even touted the MTA's latest, record-breaking $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 as a step forward in fixing the infrastructure woes, specifically for electrical upgrades. 'That's why we're continuing the investments, $4 billion to upgrade the electrical system,' Hochul said during an unrelated press conference. The MTA plans to spend the $4 billion on power and electricity components over the next five years, according to the capital plan. This includes around $3 billion specifically for the system's 224 substations and 317 circuit breaker houses. 4 Multiple station outages occurred during the stifling heat and torrential thunderstorm that hit the Big Apple, including at West Fourth Street on Tuesday and Thursday. Oliya Scootercaster/FreedomNewsTV But even after the upgrades planned for in the most recent capital plan are complete, the MTA estimates a little more than a quarter, 27%, of substations will still be in poor or marginal condition, per the plan. 'I'm very annoyed,' Kate Whitman, a 26-year-old creative executive, said Friday, lamenting the proposed $3 fare. The shoddy subway service this week forced Whitman to shell out $80 in Ubers heading to work in Brooklyn and back from her West Village home. But she said she has been late to work multiple times because of poor subway service even before the troubles. 'I know the system is severely outdated. It's very obvious that it would be an extensive audit required, but, like, it's very clear that the money isn't being used very wisely at all.' 4 Commuters were frustrated, which even led to one subway rider shelling out up to $80 for Uber rides to get to their workplace and later on back home. Oliya Scootercaster/FreedomNewsTV MTA officials have sounded alarm bells in recent years about the subway system's decaying, often-century-old infrastructure. The budget for the transit agency's capital plan in 2000-2004 stood at just shy of $22 billion — and has only increased for each subsequent five-year cycle, records show. On-time performance during 2017 — which featured the notorious 'summer of hell' — hit a dismal 63%, data shows. Since then, on-time performance has improved significantly, hitting 89% in 2020. But that coincided with a nosedive in ridership because of the coronavirus pandemic, with total annual ridership in 2024 at about 1.2 billion — compared to roughly 1.7 billion each year before COVID, according to data. Lieber on Friday argued the subway system bounced back quickly from Thursday's torrential rainfall, noting all lines were back in service the next morning. He said the electrical issues at West Fourth Street will be addressed by the recent capital plan. 'You're talking about 100-year-old electrical infrastructure, cloth-covered wires that are from our great-grandparents era that nobody went to update, and we just can't live with that anymore,' he said. In 2020, only 60% of substations were in a state of good repair. But despite spending a massive $2.6 billion from 2020 to 2024 to improve electrical infrastructure, that number only improved to 64% of substations being in a state of good repair. 4 Metropolitan Transportation Authority honcho Janno Lieber said the subway resumed with regular service on Friday. James Messerschmidt Substations during that period appeared to be deteriorating faster than MTA crews could fix them. The widespread transit woes — including yet more flooding in the subways — this week only highlighted the mixed results from the MTA's spending. But Lieber was quick to note that the MTA's measures of subway and commuter train rider satisfaction have greatly increased this year. 'Customer satisfaction with subways is up 8%, Long Island Rail Road is up is up 5%, Metro-North is up 4%,' he said. 'Customers before this week — and you know, this week has definitely taken a hit on customer satisfaction — are recognizing the improvements that have taken place. We have to get them back to that level of comfort.' Not everyone was buying it. 'New Yorkers pay a dizzying number of taxes and fees towards the MTA and, yet, they can't even keep the power on,' said state Sen. Jim Skoufis (D-Orange). 'Until their leadership brings radical reform to the system – and stops depending on annual bailouts from Albany – taxpayers will continue getting ripped off and riders will continue to be let down with substandard transit.' Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-Staten Island) highlighted the issues by posting a clip showing straphangers climbing on subway gates to avoid flooding. 'Pathetic!' she wrote.

Feds launch audit into FAA over gutted Long Island air traffic control facility as safety concerns rise over Newark airspace
Feds launch audit into FAA over gutted Long Island air traffic control facility as safety concerns rise over Newark airspace

New York Post

time6 days ago

  • New York Post

Feds launch audit into FAA over gutted Long Island air traffic control facility as safety concerns rise over Newark airspace

The feds are questioning the Federal Aviation Administration's decision to relocate air traffic controllers who oversee Newark's airspace from Long Island to Philadelphia — following a series of radar blackouts and growing concerns over exhausted, short-staffed crews working 60-hour weeks. The Department of Transportation's Inspector General confirmed this week that it's auditing the FAA's 2024 decision to shift control of Newark Liberty Airport's airspace from New York TRACON, the radar hub in Westbury, to Philadelphia's air traffic tower after they experienced a series of radar blackouts in New Jersey. 'The FAA downplayed the safety risks,' Rep. Laura Gillen said of the relocation. 4 The DOT's inspector general confirmed that the agency will audit the FAA's decision to shift control of Newark Liberty Airport's airspace. Rep. Laura Gillen (pictured) accused the agency of downplaying safety risks. Brandon Cruz / NY Post 'They reported the risk of an outage is one in 11 million — and it happened twice in the year since they moved,' Gillen said — referencing two 90-second radar blackouts at Newark airport in April and May of this year. The controversial move stripped 12 veteran controllers from TRACON, one of the nation's busiest radar centers, and left behind what local leaders and air traffic controllers said is a facility in dire need of help. 'Staff are burnt out — and very concerned about safety and feel very strongly that those moved to Philadelphia should come back to this facility,' Gillen told reporters outside the TRACON building after touring it Tuesday. Erick Carlo, a veteran air traffic controller with over a decade of experience, agreed that he wants to see the jobs come back to Long Island. 4 The controversial move stripped 12 veteran controllers from TRACON. New York Post Carlo and Gillen, a Democrat who represents Long Island, described what is essentially a 'hole' on the floor where the relocated staff used to work, and said their absence has further hindered the progress of safer air travel in one of the busiest air traffic control hubs in the country. The FAA previously defended the move as necessary for efficiency and to address staffing shortages, but Gillen said only one additional graduate has joined the team and staffing issues remain relatively the same since the move. On top of the staffing issues, the facility is in dire need of modern upgrades. 4 Sean Duffy arrives for the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee hearing titled Oversight of the Department of Transportation's Policies and Programs and FY2026 Budget Request, in Rayburn building on July 16, 2025. 'It's tough to put it into perspective,' Carlo, a representative of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association labor union, told The Post. He described having to use radars and equipment from the 1980s and 90s at TRACON, and said that only 8% of the FAA's facilities and equipment budget goes toward modernizing the system that millions of travelers rely on each year. 'The staffing shortages are one thing, but the equipment we use… I can't say that the equipment is not working — it's working — but it's ancient,' Carlo said. 4 Air traffic controllers monitor air traffic at the FAA TRACON center in Westbury, NY. Freelance Prior to the move, if the old technology they are forced to work on had an issue, he was able to go over to Newark's side and collaborate to ensure the skies remain safe, which is no longer an option, Carlo, who watches over JFK, explained. The Department of Transportation audit will probe whether the plan actually backfired — compromising safety, morale, and operational continuity at one of the country's busiest air traffic control hubs. If the audit determines that operations are most efficient out of Long Island, then the air traffic controllers who moved from the area to Philadelphia will have to move back. FAA officials declined to comment outside of the facility.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store