Baltimore Sun Sunday

9/11 memorial motorcycle ride ending on sour note

- By David Dishneau

HAGERSTOWN, Md. — Leaders of a massive, annual motorcycle procession to the three Sept. 11 crash sites said this year’s fundraisin­g ride, Aug. 19-21, will be their last.

Ted Sjurseth, founder of the nonprofit America’s 911 Foundation, said he’s tired of battling Maryland and Virginia state police and highway agencies’ reluctance to block Washington-area traffic for 1,200 motorcycle­s.

The agencies say they support Sept. 11 memorial events but must maintain safe traffic flow in the congested region.

The problems stem from the first leg of the America’s 911 Ride, from Shanksvill­e, Pa., to Arlington, Va. State agency officials say it can cause 5- to 10-mile backups and stall homebound commuters near the Pentagon.

“Complaints are received every year,” Maryland State Police spokesman Greg Shipley said.

Sjurseth, 55, a computer consultant from rural Lucketts, Va., said that, instead of complainin­g, stalled motorists should reflect on the 3,000 lives lost in the 2001 terrorist attacks and on the sacrifices made daily by first responders.

As the motorcycle­s pass, “instead of flipping them the bird, think about your security,” Sjurseth said.

He’s especially frustrated with Maryland State Police officers, who haven’t provided an escort unit for several years and now dodge his calls, Sjurseth said. He said the foundation has raised $500,000 for police equipment and $330,000 for scholarshi­ps for first-responder families.

“It was like, ‘We do this for you. We have the highest regard for you,’ and it’s sad when it comes down to that,” Sjurseth said.

Shipley said there aren’t enough motorcycle troopers to provide an escort of the size Sjurseth wants. Instead, the ride is escorted by 160 motorcycle officers from other agencies, and state troopers monitor the procession. Shipley said Maryland State Police supported a 2013 law enabling local police to provide escort services statewide for events such as the ride. He said state police have asked Sjurseth to consider having the riders travel in groups of 20 to 30 to reduce traffic congestion, but he refused.

Sjurseth defeated a Virginia Department of Transporta­tion effort to move this year’s procession off of Interstate 66 and onto the chronicall­y congested Capital Beltway and the two-lane George Washington Parkway — the safest route to the Pentagon, the agency said. The department offered to close one beltway lane for the bikers; in past years, it has closed entire roadways.

Sjurseth said the change, announced July 27, would have forced the foundation to reprint booklets and pay $3,000 more in highway tolls. The agency relented, but spokeswoma­n Jennifer McCord portrayed the foundation as uncooperat­ive. She said the group has not filed a requested permit over the years; Sjurseth said he’s gotten a bureaucrat­ic runaround.

He said he’s tried in vain to find someone willing to take over the arduous task of organizing the ride. Now, the foundation is looking for other fundraisin­g options, he said.

The rides began in 2001, two months after hijackers crashed airliners into the Pentagon and New York’s World Trade Center. Another jetliner crashed near Shanksvill­e as passengers and crew fought to regain control of the aircraft.

 ?? JOHN A. BONE/CUMBERLAND (MD.) TIMES-NEWS 2007 ?? America’s 911 Ride began two months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
JOHN A. BONE/CUMBERLAND (MD.) TIMES-NEWS 2007 America’s 911 Ride began two months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

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