Skip to content

Federal judge rejects lawsuit seeking gas pipeline in Maryland

Tracy Cannon of the Eastern Panhandle Protectors talks to about 50 people who rallied at the Western Maryland Rail Trail in Hancock, Md., Thursday, May 30, 2019. The group was protesting continuing plans by Columbia Gas Transmission Co. to run a pipeline from Pennsylvania to West Virginia. The pipeline would go under the rail trail, the Chesapeake & Ohio National Historical Park and the Potomac River near Hancock, Md.
Mike Lewis / AP
Tracy Cannon of the Eastern Panhandle Protectors talks to about 50 people who rallied at the Western Maryland Rail Trail in Hancock, Md., Thursday, May 30, 2019. The group was protesting continuing plans by Columbia Gas Transmission Co. to run a pipeline from Pennsylvania to West Virginia. The pipeline would go under the rail trail, the Chesapeake & Ohio National Historical Park and the Potomac River near Hancock, Md.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

A federal judge in Maryland has thrown out a lawsuit aimed at moving ahead with a proposed gas pipeline project that was blocked by state officials.

U.S. District Court Judge George Russell dismissed the lawsuit filed by Columbia Gas on Wednesday.

The company was seeking access to Maryland property through eminent domain proceedings. A board of high-ranking state officials rejected the proposed pipeline across 3 miles of Western Maryland, and the company then took the matter to federal court.

The pipeline would have run under the Potomac River near Hancock and extend from Columbia Gas’ network in Pennsylvania to Mountaineer Gas’ distribution system in West Virginia.

Environmentalists and residents have been vocal about opposing the pipeline, which would carry natural gas.