Home   Chevy Chase DC Web   Family News  
Welcome to your local news by you!TM Finally you have a non-ad driven, grassroots place to share your issues and concerns with other areas and with local politicians. Unlike a normal article, you can keep updating the story until it is resolved. Share your news and observations through your local site and reach thousands of neighbors and parents across the DC area, and they you! You decide what audience you want to share with and they will read your article on their site and vice versa. Any user on a portal site where organization officers approve new users is allowed to post, providing a quality group of contributors that care about their local area. Use this fun and powerful news tool to bring the collective knowledge of all members to bear on any local issue or to just catch up and share the latest! All articles are archived and can be found using the Search box at any time, so others can learn from your experience.
 Member Login
Username:
Password:
password help   
New users register here
  
 Portal Quick Links
Find Your Community
The New Deal
My Community
Classifieds
Service Ratings
Parent Guide
Events
 
 Categories
A & E
Business
Columns
Development
Editorials
Environment
Finances
Government/Politics
Health
Kids
Live and Learn
Local Memories
Local Photos
Maintenance Minder
My Community
Neighborhood Officers
People
PTA Issues/Sharing
Recreation
Safety
School/Education
Survey
Taxes
Technology
Traffic
Your Home
Youth Sports
 
 My Links
You must be a registered user of Chevy Chase DC Web to use the 'My Links' feature. Click here to register.
 


The News >> Development

Development  
County Cuts Westbard Master Plan
By Rover
Posted 07/02/2008
Viewed 2807 times

May 23, 2008
With Fewer Funds in 09, Montgomery County Planning Department Will Cut Traffic Relief Studies, Environmental Protection Analyses, Other Programs
SILVER SPRING, MD –The fiscal year 2009 budget approved yesterday by the Montgomery County Council includes $18.9 million for the Montgomery Planning Department, approximately a 3 percent cut from the previous year when factoring in mandatory spending increases.

Facing fewer funds, the Planning Board during budget discussions with the County Council identified services and programs that will be cut starting July 1.

On that list is the county’s oldest master plan – Westbard, on the western edge of the growing Bethesda area – that planners had targeted for an update. Master plans help guide development, set zoning, establish transportation improvements, lay out pedestrian routes and establish environmental protection measures. The Westbard community, surrounding River Road and Little Falls Parkway, will have to wait at least a year.

Another plan to be delayed is Battery Lane, a small neighborhood on Bethesda’s northern edge, where density, the expansion of the National Naval Medical Center and affordable housing are particularly important. The Council had asked the department to address those issues in a sector plan.

Last fall, the Council approved the 2007 Growth Policy, a biannual law that helps match transportation, schools and other public services to new development. At that time, the Council mandated aggressive new requirements for developers to mitigate traffic impacts in a number of innovative ways, including mass transit. That requires planners to even more carefully analyze every development plan for congestion relief strategies. With the funding cut, planners will not be able to fully carry out the Council’s intent, which they had hoped to achieve with additional transportation staff. Instead, for example, transportation planners might recommend that a developer fund construction of a new turning lane to alleviate traffic concerns posed by new growth rather than recommending more complex, long-term solutions like mass transit.
In addition, planners will not be able to conduct much-needed analyses of countywide parking needs and traffic congestion.

Environmental protection initiatives also will be delayed or abandoned. A state-required plan to analyze the county’s long-term water supply and quality will be delayed by at least a year, while a proposal to study the county’s energy needs to recommend strategies to reduce demand and generate energy will be scrapped.

County residents used to visiting the department’s public information counter to learn about zoning, development plans and community master plans may find the counter closed. Planners expect to limit service hours given dwindling staff.

The fiscal shortfall mostly affects personnel, which makes up 90 percent of the Planning Department’s budget. The funding reduction forces the department to reduce staff. Unable to fund positions, the department will freeze vacancies resulting from retirements and resignations in hopes of shrinking the workforce and avoiding layoffs. In addition, for the first time in many years, the department will not offer paid summer internships to college students.

# # #

Email This Article To A Friend |  Comments (0) |  Report Abuse

Comments
What do you have to add?
  Please login to publish a comment.
 Member Login
Username:
Password:
password help   
New users register here
 
© 1999-2008 Community Web, Inc.
Powered by Woodbourne Solutions