Jay Fergusonjay@deepcreekvacations.com301-501-0420
Menu

As gas tax increase looms, county infrastructure projects can stagnate for years

To build everything currently on the counties’ wish lists would cost about $12 billion
by C. Benjamin Ford, Staff Writer

Since at least 1987, when Jay Moyer was on the Oakland town council in Garrett County, the relocation of U.S. 219 to bypass the town was listed as the county’s top priority in the annual letter to the state Department of Transportation.

Each year the county put it on the wish list of transportation projects to the state to consider funding, and each year the request itself was bypassed by the state for other projects on other counties’ wish lists.

Two years ago, Moyer, now the county’s general roads superintendent, asked Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) about the project.

“He told me the state didn’t have the money for it,” Moyer said. “He told me that right to my face. He pulled his pockets right out of his pants and said, ‘Does it look like I have the money for it?’”

More here.

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! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free

Maryland lawmakers consider Marcellus shale gas tax

Posted: Monday, November 28, 2011 12:00 am | Updated: 8:44 am, Mon Nov 28, 2011.

By GREG MASTERS Capital News Service | 0 comments

ANNAPOLIS Maryland lawmakers are starting to debate how much “severance tax” should be imposed on the natural gas that might be produced from the Marcellus Shale rock formation in Western Maryland.

Though it is not clear when, or even whether, Maryland will allow drilling in the Marcellus Shale using the controversial gas extraction method known as hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” an advisory commission created by Gov. Martin O’Malley to develop recommendations is already considering potential sources of revenue for the state from natural gas production.

Garrett County would impose a 5.5 percent county tax.

More here.

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! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free