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>Gov.'s Budget Plan Does Not Restore Highway User Fees

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Jan. 27, 2011

Despite pleas from 157 Maryland cities and towns, Governor Martin O’Malley’s proposed fiscal year 2012 budget included no additional Highway User Revenue and Police Aid funding for hard-hit municipalities.
Municipal leaders had called on the governor to restore full funding for municipal Highway User Revenues and Police Aid in his proposal.

Most municipalities lost 82% of their total state aid in the FY 2011 budget, and the FY 2012 budget proposal maintains the same funding amounts.

Since 2008, Highway User Revenues for municipalities have been reduced by 95% and Police Aid has been reduced by 35%. Highway User Revenue is funded through the gas tax and other transportation-related fees and is designed to be returned to Maryland communities for ongoing transportation related projects such as road repair, street maintenance, and snow removal.

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Towns need their road funding

From the Baltimore Sun:

Maryland’s municipalities need their highway user money, as well as additional ways to raise revenues

By Gary Comegys

October 11, 2010

What if 95 percent of your road went unplowed during a snowstorm this winter? Or if only 5 percent of a pothole in front of your office was filled?

Members of the Maryland Municipal League — composed of 157 incorporated cities and towns and two special taxing districts in Maryland — have been dealing with a 95 percent cut in funding for road maintenance since early 2010. Now, as 2012 budget decisions are under way, many local leaders are left with few options to make ends meet and continue to be able to provide these essential, quality-of-life transportation services.

All municipalities have been affected, but hardest hit have been Maryland’s historic small towns.

In the mountains of Garrett County, Deer Park Mayor Donald E. Dawson took it upon himself to plow his town’s streets after last winter’s debilitating snowstorms because the town did not have the money for a contractor to perform the work. Elsewhere in Garrett County, Friendsville has turned off half of its streetlights, and Loch Lynn Heights heated its Town Hall with a wood stove last winter to save on energy costs — just to keep operating for residents.

Read the full article here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!