//November 21, 2018
HAGERSTOWN — Dozens of people gathered outside of a National Park Service office in Maryland in a push to stop construction of a pipeline under the Potomac River that would connect natural gas produced in Pennsylvania to industries in West Virginia.
News outlets report around 50 people gathered Monday outside of the park service office in Hagerstown to deliver signatures opposing the TransCanada project. The pipeline would cross a narrow band of Washington County before passing under the Potomac River.
TransCanada needs a right-of-way permit from the park service to drill under the C&O Canal National Historical Park, which stretches between Cumberland and the nation’s capital.
Jenny Anzelmo-Sarles with the National Park Service says a final determination regarding the permit hasn’t been made. She says they anticipate making a final determination in the coming months.
-Sign up for your daily digest of Maryland News.
Interview: Incoming MSBA president wants to appeal to young lawyers, increase me[...]
7/6/2023
Democrats await Raskin’s decision on Senate race
6/6/2023
2 finalists for Maryland bar counsel named by Attorney Grievance Commission
6/6/2023
Treasurer’s choice for Md. 529 administrator confounds plan holders
5/6/2023
Families’ college savings values still unclear as treasurer takes over Md.[...]
2/6/2023
US judge blocks Florida ban on trans minor care in narrow ruling, says ‘ge[...]
7/6/2023
US appeals court says people convicted of nonviolent offenses shouldn’t fa[...]
7/6/2023
HIV protection, cancer screenings could cost more if ‘Obamacare’ los[...]
7/6/2023
House Republicans ready contempt vote against FBI director Wray over Biden docum[...]
6/6/2023
PGA Tour and European tour agree to merge with Saudis, end LIV Golf feud
6/6/2023
Submit an entry for the business calendar