

ASSOCIATED PRESS
A highway project near Maryland’s Aberdeen Proving Ground and other Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) transportation projects are facing a massive funding shortfall.ABERDEEN, Md. | Facing a massive shortfall in funding and looming gridlock, Gov. Martin O’Malley voiced strong support Friday for more federal dollars toward Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) transportation projects in the state.
At a news conference announcing that a highway project near Aberdeen Proving Ground was moving toward construction, Mr. O’Malley was confident that the shortfall in funding would be met. He emphasized that the state would work closely with Congress to make it happen.
“We plan to meet the shortfall as we have every challenge in the history of our nation - by doing it together,” Mr. O’Malley said.
According to a September study by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), Maryland will need to spend an additional $315 million to $470 million - on top of $95 million already allocated - on necessary transportation projects around Bethesda National Naval Medical Center, Aberdeen Proving Ground and Fort Meade.
These three sites, as well as other military installations in the state, are slated to gain about 27,000 jobs by September 2011. Specialists and state officials have expressed concern that the influx of people will result in gridlock if necessary highway improvements are not made.
During his remarks, Mr. O’Malley made it clear that the state would need federal assistance to address potential traffic problems. For example, about 80 percent of the allocated money for the project announced Friday - $42.6 million to improve the interchange at U.S. 40 and Maryland Route 715 - was from the federal government.
Federal funding for other sites is also in the pipeline. In a statement Wednesday, Democratic Sens. Barbara A. Mikulski and Benjamin L. Cardin announced that about $12.4 million in highway projects for four military bases in the state moved one step closer to being approved by Congress and signed off on by President Obama.
But Andy Scott, the Maryland Department of Transportation official who coordinates BRAC activities, said these announcements included only about $10 million in new funding not included in the GAO study. He said the state is taking an incremental approach to alleviating gridlock, making small improvements to intersections and roads as money comes in.
“Every little bit of money we get can be immediately applied to projects around these installations,” Mr. Scott said.
Mr. O’Malley said he would continue to work with Maryland’s congressional delegation to fund necessary infrastructure projects.
“We’re hopeful when Congress comes back after the holiday recess that they will take up infrastructure bills, jobs bills that will get some much needed funds to Maryland for further BRAC improvements,” he said.
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