Anonymous wrote:Disagree, it is not technical, they are changing the rules to make it easier to build mega gas stations where cars will be lining up and idling all day. They are saying the 500 ft, which is not that much btw, now only applies to the fuel dispensers, not the gas station as a whole. In a mega gas station that can be a significant difference. I would not want that behind my house. A regular gas station is one thing but a mega gas station is another.
"One of the signature compounds of concern is benzene a known human carcinogen," writes Professor Patrick N. Breysse in a March 5 letter. "A few studies have documented increased benzene and other compounds in the air around homes close to service stations. For example, a 2007 study in Greece concluded that gas stations are a significant contributor to the total benzene exposures and that this exposure increases leukemia risk from 3-21%. A more recent study in Spain found that elevated volatile pollutants (hexane and benzene) were detectable up to 75 m from service stations."
https://wjla.com/traffic/metro/will-montgomery-county-s-new-jumbo-gas-station-endanger-residents--15004
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Chevy Chase lake they built an apartment building right next to a gas station. People still chose to live there.
Love seeing Natali turn into a NIMBY now that it’s something that could be built in her district.
1. Yes, people can choose that if they want, just like people can choose to live next to an existing interstate highway. It is something else to build an interstate highway next to someone's home or school.
2. There is a difference between a regular gas station and a mega gas station. Not just the actual gasoline and its storage but also the number of cars idling throughout the day.
There is also a difference between opposing housing and opposing a mega gas station. We need housing. We really don't need a mega gas station.
Anonymous wrote:In Chevy Chase lake they built an apartment building right next to a gas station. People still chose to live there.
Love seeing Natali turn into a NIMBY now that it’s something that could be built in her district.
Anonymous wrote:Until 2015 the distance was 300 feet and it didn't even include housing. The sky didn't fall then.
Anonymous wrote:Yawn. Gas stations are fine.
Anonymous wrote:They want to change the rules for the County so Costco can build a mega gas station in White Oak.
https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/COUNCIL/Resources/Files/20250506_2A.pdf
Mink, Jawando and Friedson are pushing this change. Fani-Gonzalez introduced an amendment to retain more setbacks, but the committee blocked it.
Historically, Costco tried to threaten not to build a warehouse in Wheaton unless they allowed them to build the mega gas station. The community fought back and blocked the gas station. Costco still built the warehouse.
We have enough gas stations in MoCo and do not need mega gas stations next to our kids and our homes.