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Phil Andrews

Thursday, February 7, 2013

County Council: Eased Rules for Accessory Apartments, Disabled Hiring Bill Passes and More

Notable outcomes include eased regulations for accessory apartments, passing of the disabled hiring bill and evaluation of potential affordable housing locations.

The Montgomery County Council met Tuesday, Feb. 5. Notable outcomes from the meeting include: County Eases Rules for Accessory Apartments The Montgomery County Council passed a zoning amendment and bill Tuesday that will make it easier for homeowners to add an accessory apartment to a single-family home, The Washington Examiner reported. After almost 10 years of policy discussion, homeowners who want to add a small apartment for an aging parent, a caretaker or a renter can now do so in 90 to 110 days, versus a process that previously took a minimum of five to six months, The Washington Post reported. Residents opposed to the change were concerned it might lead to overcrowding of neighborhood schools, according to The Washington Post, but "…

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Report: Police Aggressively Issue Tickets On ICC

"Police officers are ticketing speeders aggressively,” Montgomery County Councilman Phil Andrews said, according to a report by The Gazette.

Speeders beware, police are ticketing the Intercounty Connector at a high rate. Over the last three months, police officers on the ICC "issued about 10 speeding citations and warnings per day," The Gazette reported, including a total of 887 citations and warnings issued for speeding between October and December. Montgomery County Councilman Phil Andrews (D-Dist. 3) of Gaithersburg said he's heard from constituents that “police officers are ticketing speeders aggressively” on the ICC, according to the report. The ICC is patrolled by the Maryland Transportation Authority Police, according to the report. Andrews has been vocal on ICC issues of late, calling the road overpriced and underused in December. The road's 55 mph speed limit has also …

Brian Klick

8:32 am on Saturday, February 2, 2013

Just another example of taking a potentially great thing, the ICC, and ruining it with utter stupidity. There is no one on the damn thing, multiple lanes, no aggressive turns, and the speed limit is only 55. And then make the police aggressively ticket a road that presents no danger. How about using that police force on all the aggressive driving on 270 or 495? It's one thing to be driving 70mph …   more ›

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

County Council Member Says ICC Underused, Too Expensive

Montgomery County Council Member Phil Andrews proposes a cut in ICC tolls to get more drivers to use the road, NBC Washington reports.

Montgomery County Council Member Phil Andrews says a deep cut in tolls would increase traffic on the Intercounty Connector and he's calling on the state to do it, NBC Washington reported. Andrews says the $8 round-trip rush-hour toll is among the highest in the nation. He would propose "at least a trial period of several months, if not, a year when the tolls would be...cut in half, in hopes of doubling the traffic," according to the report. A decision on the toll rate is up to the Maryland Transportation Authority. A spokeswoman for the MTA told The Washington Post the ICC is meeting both traffic and revenue projections. The road was designed to carry traffic volumes projected for 2030, according to the report. Andrews said he hopes that …

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jag

2:38 am on Saturday, April 27, 2013

"Every road ever built is necessary to keep up with population growth." This is quite possibly the stupidest thing I've read in my entire life.   more ›

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Montgomery Dems Ramp Up for County Exec Race

Former County Executive Doug Duncan met today with pollster and political advisers, according to CenterMaryland.org.

  Will Doug Duncan—Montgomery’s longest-serving county executive—return for a run at an unprecedented fourth term? Duncan's political future came into clearer focus Tuesday after he met with advisers in Gaithersburg to mull the 2014 election, Josh Kurtz writes in CenterMaryland.org. The closed meeting hashed over the results of a new poll “that supposedly showed Duncan handily defeating every other potential Democratic candidate,” according to Kurtz. Speculation has long swirled that Duncan—who served as Montgomery’s executive from 1994 to 2006 before a gubernatorial campaign that ended with him dropping out, citing clinical depression—is primed for a return to county politics. If so, he would be joining a field that already has two …

Craig

5:16 pm on Thursday, January 17, 2013

It is crazy that Doug Duncan is considered a "centrist" but hey, I am all for Dougy D. instead of that hack Leventhal or Phil Andrews.   more ›

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Report: County Wrestles with New State Towing Rules

Officials say the new law complicates enforcement, The Washington Post reported.

  New state rules aimed at protecting motorists from predatory towing clash with existing Montgomery County rules, making already complicated regulations even tougher to enforce, The Washington Post reported.  Confusion over which rules are more stringent—and therefore should take precedent—has officials unsure how to meet an Oct. 1 deadline for implementing the state rules, The Post reported. The new state rules, in part, require large warning signs in parking lots, limit towing fees and “require wreckers to quickly notify drivers when their vehicles are towed,” The Post reported. But it also would do away with practices such as posting 48-hour warning notices on vehicles violating parking rules.  The new state law was the subject of a …

hongfeng

10:11 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

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Thursday, August 2, 2012

On November Ballot: Giving Disabled Access to More County Jobs

The ballot measure would make it possible for people with significant disabilities to hold certain county positions from which they are currently barred.

An amendment to Montgomery County law that would give the government more flexibility to hire people with significant cognitive and physical disabilities will be decided by voters this November. The Montgomery County Council unanimously voted Tuesday to send a proposed charter amendment to the ballot for county voters.  Spearheaded by Councilmember Phil Andrews (D-Dist 3), with the support of County Executive Isiah Leggett, the change would create a program within the county's internal employment system to recruit, select and hire people with certain disabilities for some county jobs. Currently, the language of the county's charter prevents people with significant disabilities from holding some positions within county government, according…

Friday, June 22, 2012

Councilmember Wants More Flexibility to Hire People with Disabilties

Councilmember Andrews says county law blocks people with serious disabilities from some county posts.

Councilmember Phil Andrews (D-Dist 3) wants to reduce disproportionate unemployment among people with disabilities in Montgomery County. This week he urged fellow Montgomery County Council members to place on the November ballot a Montgomery County Charter amendment that would create a "special hiring authority" to recruit and hire people with significant physical or cognitive disabilities for county jobs.  “In order to help reduce the high unemployment and underemployment rate for people with disabilities, Montgomery County has taken a number of important steps to expand opportunities and be a model employer. Now, we have to take this next step,” Andrews said in a statement.  Currently, among internal candidates, veterans and people with …

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Parsons on Politics

Lemonade Warriors

With so many issues left unresolved, you'd think Montgomery County could do a better job at picking its battles.

Sometimes you just have to wonder about the politics of this place. Our local economy is sputtering again, the housing market is flirting with a double-dip, our transportation system is getting more congested and crumbling around us, and local and state budgets are showing years of red ink ahead. Yet, amid all of these truly important issues, what has prompted the most vigorous response from Montgomery County officials lately? Prohibiting fire and rescue personnel from "passing the boot" to raise money for muscular dystrophy and cracking down on illicit lemonade stands at the U.S. Open.  Wow, I sure feel a lot better, how about you? I have always wondered about this "passing the boot" issue. As I understand it, such solicitations are not …

Theresa Defino

9:44 pm on Sunday, July 3, 2011

A warning was given and ignored. Why is this incident being hung on the county council?   more ›

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