Posted on 04/06/2017 7:17:23 AM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
A Senate bill to address predatory toll penalties, technical problems with transponders and poor customer service at E-ZPass will die in the Senate Finance Committee this session, its chairman said Tuesday, along with a watered down House version that delegates supported unanimously on Monday.
Instead, Senate Finance Committee Chair Thomas Mac Middleton said he is holding off legislation for a year to give the Maryland Transportation Authority time to improve customer service and pursue new contracts with vendors to operate Marylands toll system.
Middleton told Maryland Reporter last month that he would move the bill towards passage if he didnt see a commitment from MDTA to fix the problems. He said his committee has since received a letter from MDTA spelling out the agencys action plan.
The agency has come under fire mostly due to problems at the states two unmanned video toll roads, the Inter County Connector that connects Laurel to Gaithersburg and the I-95 express toll lanes in Baltimore County. The electronic tolls take snapshots of license plates to bill commuters who dont subscribe to E-ZPass, or when subscribers transponders fail to register as they pass under the toll gantries. (see our earlier story)
Same old story, delegate says
Ive heard that story before that were going to give an opportunity for things to happen administratively but this has been going on for a long time in my district, said Del. Mary Ann Lisanti, D-Harford County, after learning her bill, HB963, was DOA in the Senate. I have hundreds and hundreds of complaints and I have citizens that have gone into bankruptcy [because of the fines].
She said she was subject to fines herself when her credit card didnt work properly to replenish her E-ZPass account.
Middletons decision also disappointed Sen. Roger Manno, sponsor of the Senate bill, SB139, whose Montgomery County district includes some of the ICC. He said his office has been inundated with constituents facing toll bankruptcy.
Manno said the powers the legislature enacted for MDTA in 2013 to deal with toll violators has run amuck and resulted in financial hardship for many of his constituents who use the ICC. Problems with credit card processing, a poor notification system and technical problems with transponders have resulted in fines in the thousands of dollars.
Bureaucracy run amuck, Manno says
I dont think theres a single member of the Senate who would have voted for the [2013 measures] if we knew hundreds of thousands of Marylanders would be caught in toll bankruptcy under a predatory penalty system that MDTA has crafted, Manno said on Tuesday after learning neither bill would move out of the Senate Finance Committee. I think its unconscionable, I think its unfair, I think its government bureaucracy run amuck and it needs to stop.
Motorists told the Senate Finance Committee on Feb. 1 that the problems have put them thousands of dollars in debt and unable to renew their vehicle registrations with the MVA.
The 2013 law gave MDTA the power to block registrations renewals and refer past due accounts to the states Central Collection Unit. Often motorists were not notified of any problems while they continued to drive and accrue additional tolls and penalties.
A $50 fine kicks in for each violation not paid after 45 days. After an additional 45 days the debt is transferred to Marylands Central Collection unit where a 17% fee is tacked on.
There are 340,000 Marylanders whose accounts have been forwarded to CCU, Manno said in February. Thats one in every 18 Marylanders in collection at CCU for toll violations.
Relief from state debt collectors
Lisantis bill would give MDTA authority to pull accounts back from CCU to resolve unpaid tolls with the motorist. Mannos bill would have reduced fines to just 25% of the original toll and prohibit MDTA from referring any delinquent accounts to CCU.
That you can get a $50 penalty for a 50-cent toll needs be stopped, Manno said.
Sen. James Mathias, D-Worcester, said Middletons wait and see approach was not going to sweep the issue under the rug and that a bill could absolutely come back next year.
Mathias, chair of the transportation policy subcommittee, said he had to initially push the agency to get the commitment letter.
Were paying very close attention to their customer service and how they reorganize that department, he said.
MDTA opposed the Senate bill because the toll fine revenue, $34 million, over the last two years has been included in revenue statements to bondholders and could affect the bond rating, an assertion some senators disputed.
Maryland “Freak State” PING!
Maryland is one of just a few states I’ve never been to. I have no plans to go there, and this is one of the reasons.
The sticky side of a toll system with an eye in the sky and tentacles in government.
Are people rebelling just to get one over on the system or because it just cannot seem to be fair?
I worked for a few months in IT support and development for such a system. It seemed wild and wooly. Turning something loose too soon on the public without rigorous testing is asking for failure and disrepute.
Maryland isn’t all bad. It has a redneck side.
What is the likelihood that toll roads will become more common if a large component of the proposed infrastructure spending is private money?
It would seem to me if private industry is going to be laying out capitol to build roads there would have to be some mechanism for them to profit from the expenditures.
Toll roads are an old idea. Scandals like this, a bit newer.
That would be a X100 or 5000% fine
From the state that outlawed payday loans because they were unfair, inhumane and immoral.
Even the 17% after 45 days is an effective ~ 140 % annual interest rate.
That’s lefties for ya. They always get their own. Truly liberal they are not.
It’s not the toll you are paying, it’s the expense of coming after you for the toll. Government drones need to be paid.
That why they really don’t want to fix the system.
Try not paying Maryland property tax and see how long it takes before a sign appears on your door saying foreclosed.
Kudos to Kentucky.
Great observation. If the government doesn’t mandate integrity and damn the cost, it won’t get it.
Maryland ought to make the corporate sweethearts eat it.
NOW we would see integrity.
And yet at least the property tax system is a known quantity. Fickle toll road administration is a crapshoot.
I see a lawsuit in the future.
This is an internal problem. It doesn’t need a state law. No wonder government is bogged down.
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