Northeast PA Board Rejects Transportation Funding Plan Due To Underfunding Of Marshalls Creek Bypass Project

The Marshalls Creek Bypass Project continues to create controversy.  Last week, the Northeast Pennsylvania Alliance Board – known as NEPA – voted 13-7 during a special meeting to reject a four-year state transportation funding plan.  The biggest reason it rejected that plan was because it lacked funding for the Marshalls Creek Bypass.  According to press accounts, it is the first time in memory that officials recall the NEPA Board – or any other regional board that reviews transportation funding priorities in Pennsylvania – voting against adoption of a four-year funding plan.  As the Pocono Record reported, “This has not happened before," said NEPA Alliance CEO Jeffrey Box. "It's reflective of the concern the NEPA Board has for numerous transportation projects in all our counties."  The Pocono Record article can be found at www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article

PennDOT has been planning the Marshalls Creek Bypass Project for many years.  It is aimed to alleviate gridlock at the bottleneck of Routes 209 and 402 in Smithfield and Middle Smithfield townships, Monroe County Pennsylvania. It has been broken up into phases and has been put on hold while PennDOT redesigns part of the project.   Stay tuned.

 

Marshalls Creek Bypass Project Put On Temporary Hold

PennDOT has been planning a project known as the “Marshalls Creek Bypass” for many years. It is aimed to alleviate gridlock at the bottleneck of Routes 209 and 402 in Smithfield and Middle Smithfield townships, Monroe County Pennsylvania. PennDOT has already acquired some properties for this project and was sent to acquire more properties when it decided to put the project on hold in April.

I represent some of the property owners that will be impacted by this project and spoke with a PennDOT representative about its plans. PennDOT still intends to go forward with the project. However, it is revisiting some of its plans to determine if there are ways to cut costs.

It appears that we will know more about PennDOT’s plans later in the summer or early fall.