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HOT TOPICS
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I-81 Freight Rail Study and Norfolk Southern Cresent Corridor compared and contrasted in new paper for CTB
11/18/07
Because both are rail intermodal efforts
affecting the I-81 Corridor, there has been public confusion over
what these two projects are and how they differ. In a new paper
prepared for the Commonwealth Transportation Board meeting in Roanoke
on November 7, RAIL Solution details the differences and highlights
some curious ways the new NS direction departs from the vision of
its own CEO, Wick Moorman (2nd item below).
Read more...
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Response to "I-81 Crescent Corridor" Initiative
7/9/07
RAIL Solution has been asked our views on
Norfolk Southern's recently announced "I-81 Crescent Corridor"
initiative. To understand its significance, one has to separate what's
old from what's new.
Read more...
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Norfolk Southern's I-81 Strategy
10/19/06
Norfolk Southern President, Chairman, and
CEO Charles "Wick" Moorman made a major address at Hotel
Roanoke, which he called a "coming out party" for the
railroad's I-81 strategy.
Read more...
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A Multi-State Plan Needs Multi-State Involvement
RAIL
Solution is reaching out to Tennesseans,
Pennsylvanians, Marylanders, and
West Virginians.
“Our neighbors need to know
that the H-1581 process offers opportunity
for significant transport- ation
improvements at less cost to taxpayers,
highway users and our environment
up and down the I-81 Corridor. These
citizens need to be pressing their
transportation planners to gain
access to the intermodal rail planning
process.”
Dave Foster
RAIL Solution Exec. Dir.
contact>
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__________
In late April 2006,
people in Western and Southwest Virginia will have a critical opportunity
to speak up for the rural heritage of their communities. They’ll
be asked to comment, in state hearings (see
details), on a proposal to widen I-81, all 325 miles of it in Virginia,
to six, eight, twelve, or even more lanes.
By 2003, trucks were already at three times I-81’s design capacity.
With the expansion, that amount would more than double again by 2021,
with the highway carrying more than twice the current amount of truck
traffic; adding hundreds of thousands of pounds of toxic smog to the air
in mountain and valley corridors; and costing upwards of $13 billion,
to be paid for mainly with tolls for its whole length in Virginia.
How did such a life-changing plan get this far with very little
publicity or citizen input, and what should residents know about the plan?
In 2000, the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT)
released a six-year, pay-as-you-go plan that included proposed upgrades
for especially congested spots on I-81. It was a straightforward proposal
to ease traffic in a dozen or so areas where outdated highway design needed
expansion or other improvements. In 2002, however,
a consortium of major construction corporations, led by Halliburton Corporation
subsidiary Kellogg Brown Root, came up with a much grander plan.
The consortium plan featured a $13 billion
expansion of I-81 in Virginia, with dedicated truck lanes but no dedicated
car lanes. VDOT is now actively negotiating with STAR Solutions, as the
consortium is known. If STAR’s plan is adopted, the consortium would
become the private contractor for a 15-year expansion of I-81, so costly
that state funds alone couldn’t pay for it. STAR Solutions told
Virginia that they had friends in Congress who would see that the
federal government contributed up to $1.6 billion toward the massive
widening plan.
Meanwhile, Congressman Don
Young of Alaska had a vision that dovetailed neatly with the consortium’s
proposal. The powerful chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure
Committee is reportedly eager to leave a legacy: an ambitious “master
plan” for a national network of multi-lane truckways, financed largely
by tolls. Young wants an experimental super truckway close to Washington
so he can showcase his idea of a national system of truck-only lanes to
fellow lawmakers. I-81 fits the bill. Coincidentally, STAR Solution partners
executives contributed more than $150,000 to Don Young's 2004 campaign
for Congress.
Young moved in 2004 to help defray the astronomical
cost of the proposed project by earmarking almost $900 million in federal
money, but the measure didn’t pass. Undeterred, Young came back
in 2005 to insert some $600 million for a
“demonstration project” in a major transportation bill. The
bill passed as SAFETY-LU in August 2005 with only $100 million (of the
original $800 million STAR said it could leverage) earmarked for
truckways and an additional $42.5 million to "relieve freight
congestion on I-81" without a truckway designation.
The amount would be a first installment on $1.6 billion
for Young’s I-81 trucklane project.
Following this disappointing showing by STAR Solutions' lobbyists, VDOT
scaled back plans in their November, 2005 Draft Environmental Impact Statement,
recommending fewer lanes, eliminating separated trucklanes, but sustaining
a $10 billion pavement-only solution to increased freight traffic. Public
hearings identifying possible negative effects of highway expansion
on Western and Southwest Virginia’s physical environment, economy
and quality of life are part of the federally mandated National Environmental
Policy Act process requiring environmental study of transportation alternatives.
Though an EIS should be conducted by an unbiased party, VDOT hired a former
STAR partner, Vanasse, Hangen, Brustlin Inc., to conduct this study.
Simply expanding the highway would not solve existing traffic
problems. Although I-81 has yet to reach saturation level for
cars, it is carrying almost three times as many trucks as it was designed
to handle. Of these, more than two-thirds are “just passing through”
Virginia.
I-81 has become the “East Coast Truck Bypass” because it avoids
bottlenecks on I-95. It’s a key road for interstate truck traffic
all the way from Florida and the Southwest to New York and New England
— now one of the top eight trucking routes in the country.
If this huge highway is built to accommodate freight traffic, Virginia
will face a major financial risk. If toll projections are not met, funds
to meet the deficit will come out of taxpayers’ pockets. A toll
road recently completed outside of Richmond, the Pocahontas Parkway, has
so far yielded a disappointing half of projected tolls. For I-81, VDOT’s
own Chief Financial Officer, Barbara Reese, predicted that even a “hiccup”
in traffic flow could severely impact revenues. Fuel-price hikes, a general
economic slump, or trucks switching to other routes to avoid tolls could
cause such a downturn, leaving Virginia responsible for billions of dollars
in unpaid bonds. VDOT's own study shows massive diversion of trucks to
U.S. 11, 29, 340, I-95 and other routes unequipped to handle increased
congestion.
There are safer, cheaper alternatives, such as higher-speed railroads
that could divert more than half of the freight traffic from
I-81, but these have not been seriously evaluated at the state level.
Instead of seeking public input on the issues of safety, dollars and the
threats to health, the economy and quality of life that the truckway plan
entails — and possible alternatives — VDOT is proceeding with
its consortium no-bid contract negotiations.
Who is selling this snake oil? STAR partners
include Randolph DeLay, brother of the former House Majority Leader, and
the Richmond law firm, McGuire Woods, which helped write the Public-Private
Transportation Act of 1995 that the STAR contract talks are based upon.
These partners are selling STAR's speculative interests to transportation
fund-hungry state and national politicians. McGuire Woods' advertizing
slogan makes it plain: "Relationships that drive results." These
corporate-political relationships are far too cozy.
The public at this point has four main ways to be heard on the
subject: By contacting Governor Tim Kaine,
by attending VDOT's public hearings or submitting comments on line critiquing
the Draft Environmental Impact Study, and by calling upon local leaders,
state representatives, and members of the public to do the same.
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NEXT MEETING:
June 7th at 10am Salem, VA
OF INTEREST
CSX's Innovative I-95 Corridor Proposal
Rail: Perpetually Underfunded
2006 Recap
PROBLEMS with the Tier 1 EIS
-Overview of DEIS.
-RS Response
-VDOT I-81 Site
-Write to VDOT>
-EIS Process Overview
Concerns for:
-Local Leaders
-Business Leaders
-Historic Sites
-Railroad Fans
-Environmentals
MEDIA COVERAGE
-Editorials/News
-Letters to Editor
LEARN MORE
RAIL Solution's I-81 Transportation Issues & Priorities
Maximize Rail/ Minimize Road Expansion
RESOURCES
-VA Gen. Assembly
-Analysis & Reports
-EIS Process
-PPTA Process
-Media Contacts
-Links
-Contact Us
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