Posted on 09/16/2007 5:27:18 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
The Interstate 69 corridor is one of six highways selected for a new federal program to develop multi-state corridors to help reduce congestion, according to Texas transportation officials.
Interstate 69 from Texas to Michigan, and Interstate 10 from California through Texas to Florida, were among the highways selected by the U.S. Department of Transportation as part of its "Corridors of the Future" program.It is aimed at developing innovative national and regional approaches to reduce congestion and improve efficiency of freight delivery, according to Marcus Sandifer, spokesman for the Texas Department of Transportation's Atlanta District.
Eight states, including Texas, will divide $800,000 to be used for an Interstate 69 innovative financing study, he said. Estimated cost of the multi-state project is $17 billion, with the Texas segment costing about $6 billion, he said.
"This means that this is a high priority project not only for the state of Texas but also the top 10 projects in the nation," said Sandifer.
The proposed 2,680-mile corridor would be an international trade route from Mexico to Canada and would facilitate trade from the North American Free Trade Agreement, according to the Corpus Christi Caller-Times.
The Texas segment, also known as Trans-Texas Corridor 69, extends from the Texarkana area through Northeast Texas to Houston and on to the Texas-Mexico border, Sandifer said.
Trans-Texas corridor 69 would combine the Interstate Highway with rail and electrical lines, according Alliance I-69, a group of Texas supporters for the concept.
A definite route has yet to be determined. Harrison County officials have lobbied in recent years for the corridor to pass near Marshall. U.S. 59, a major north-south arterial, handled nearly 23,000 vehicles a day on the north side of its interchange with Interstate 20 in 2005, Sandifer reports. That represented a 24.5 percent increase in traffic since 1995.
"It definitely shows that traffic is increasing over the years, and it's going to keep getting worse and worse as it goes along," Sandifer said. "This does show that there is a need for this project, and that the federal government is ready to fund it.
"Of course, our part will probably be the last part to be built."
That's because state transportation officials will likely begin construction in South Texas, where the corridor is most needed because of congestion, he said. Completion of a three-year environmental study to help determine the route from Victoria is expected by the end of this year, according to the Caller-Times.
Trans-Texas Corridor PING!
I don’t believe this report at all. Just last month President Bush and Prime Minister Harper were telling us that plans like this don’t exist and it’s all a conspiracy theory.
Obviously this news is all a fake.
(/sarcasm of course)
It is amazing all the articles and hundreds of thousands of google links to the SuperHighways, etc.
Yet, there is still a contingent of deniers. They decry these reports as false and say there are no plans to build the SuperHighways from Mexico, through the US, to Canada.
Well they aren't building that bridge to bypass Hoover Dam for nothing! An interstate straight from Mexico (not Baja) to I-10. From I-10 Phoenix, U.S. 93 to I-15 in Las Vegas, then a straight shot to Canada. The only large cities on the route are Phoenix, LV, and Salt Lake City.
Arizona has already finished their part. Dirty Harry Reid got bucks for the bridge but forgot about the bottle neck in the little town of Boulder City between the bridge and LV. When the bridge is completed in 2010, traffic routed south bypassing Hoover Dam through Laughlin because of 9-11 (traffic has about doubled in that time), about 8,000 trucks a day will have to make a turn at one of the two stop lights in the town.
yitbos
I think they were telling us that uniting Mexico, Canada and the U.S. into one EU-style country weren't in the plans. I don't think they pledged to stop highway construction.
The country's growing, traffic's increasing and trade (like it or not y'all) is growing, too. It'd be stupid not to expand the Interstate Highways -- especially in the south and west where the growth is heaviest.
But don't listen to common sense. Just carry on with your silly Amero conspiracy theories. They're based on as much evidence as Rosie's insistence that fire doesn't melt steel, but don't let that stand in your way.
So, how much road tax are the taco benders going to pay?
yitbos
Here in Indiana, we are getting ready to eminent domain whole towns to build our part of the NAFTA superhighway. There was an alternate route that would have used existing roadways, but it wasn’t even considered.
This is a REAL highway. I don’t know if anybody has plans to ultimately build it as a ten-to-twelve-lane car-truck-separated monstrosity outside of Texas. I suspect it will be the usual four to six lanes of capacity (including in Texas, for now).
You’re talking about Canamex, correct? As I understand it, Canamex will merely be a four-lane monstrosity, not ten-to-twelve-lane with rails and pipelines to boot.
They lie lie lie while openly pursuing their agenda.
And we don’t take action and stop the bs. Just enough people are appeased by the continuous lies to keep re-electing the same politicians that allow those underling government planners to implement those projects.
Just like the mexican trucks. They are bound and determined they are going to ram this NAFTA and illegal immigrunts down our throats. I am sick of it!!!!
This is big business running politics. Not American people.
Soure: http://www.governor.state.tx.us/priorities/transportation/images/transtexas.jpg
"I think the 10-12 lane reference is the width of the right-of-way. It would include the actual highway lanes, plus railway(s), utility and pipeline areas, access roadways, etc."
Eight states, including Texas, will divide $800,000
That's going to go far.....
Canamex! Verdad. Cana(da)mex(ico). No U.S.A. in there.
Cuatro carriles, hasta el final verdades pero divididos. Calidad de un estado a otro.
yitbos
excerpt from the Texas Toll party site:
The Trans Texas Corridor is a 4,000 mile plan of supertollways more. The Corridor will include tollways for 12 passenger vehicles lanes, 4 truck lanes, 2 passenger train tracks, 2 commuters train tracks, 2 freight train tracks, underground lines for water, natural gas, petroleum, telecommunication, fiberoptics and overhead high-voltage electric transmission lines and electrical transmission towers.
Plans also include gas stations, garages, restaurants, hotels, stores, billboards, warehouses, freight interchange, intermodal transfer areas, passenger train stations, bus stations, parking facilities, dispatch control centers, maintenance facilities, pipeline pumping stations, and of course, toll booths. The Trans Texas Corridor is the largest engineering project ever proposed for Texas. This statewide network of corridors will measure a quarter mile wide and cost over $180 Billion dollars.
Secret deal with a private foreign company.
Gov. Rick Perry has had secret negations with a company from Spain, Cintra, to hold a 70 year concession for a portion of the Corridor. Perry and Cintra/Zachery withheld the agreement from the public, claiming it included proprietary information, even though taxpayer dollars to the tune of $3.5 million is going to Cintra's partner, Zachry, for planning.
The Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC) is a transportation network in the planning and early construction stages in the U.S. state of Texas. The network, as planned, would be composed of a 4,000 mile (6,000 km) network of supercorridors up to 1,200 feet (370 m) wide to carry parallel links of tollways, rails, and utility lines[1]. The tollway portion would be divided into two separate elements: truck lanes and lanes for passenger vehicles. Similarly, the rail lines in the corridor would be divided among freight, commuter, and high-speed rail. Services expected to be carried in the utility corridor include water, electricity, natural gas, petroleum, fiber optic lines, and other telecommunications services. The Trans-Texas Corridor will allow passenger vehicular speed limits of up to 85 mph (140 km/h). The network will be funded by private investors and built and expanded as demand warrants.
TXnMA- Thanx for the graphic
It’s called I-69 because we’re screwed no matter how you look at it.
BTTT
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