Posted on 10/16/2017 12:11:34 AM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Connecticut abolished tollbooths more than 30 years ago, and every attempt to reinstate them since has been blown out of the water. But that would have to change, says U.S. Rep. John B. Larson, D-1st District, should his proposed underground highway system in Hartford become reality.
For the last eight months Larson has talked to nearly every civic group, news editorial board, local business, municipal government, state agency, and federal office, trying to drum up support for his proposed $10 billion big dig project.
So far, support has been hit or miss for the plan that would sink interstates 84 and 91 under the capitol city and the Connecticut River creating tunnels east to west from Roberts Street in East Hartford to Flatbush Avenue in Hartfords west end, and north to south from the Meadows to Frog Hollow, with a cloverleaf interchange somewhere underneath Coltsville National Historical Park in Hartford.
Federal funding is highly questionable, even from a presidential administration that campaigned on rebuilding the countrys failing infrastructure. Another fiscal hurdle is a combative state legislature that cant adopt its own budget on time.
Still, Larson, who is one of the lead Democrats on the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee, says hes confident he can wrangle 90 percent of the funds out of the federal government, leaving Connecticut to finance the remaining 10 percent.
Last month Larson introduced legislation that would allocate $1 trillion for infrastructure projects throughout the country, which he hopes will include his own pet project, without affecting the national debt. The proposed bill would raise the funds by imposing a carbon tax on fossil fuels, including coal, oil, and natural gas. The revenue would be placed in a designated fund to be used solely for infrastructure projects.
But tolls will have to be part of the Hartford project, Larson said Wednesday during a meeting with the Journal Inquirer.
I think that would be inevitable, the East Hartford native said, adding that if nothing else, tolls would be needed to pay for ongoing maintenance of the ambitious and colossal construction. Besides, every surrounding state with the exception of Vermont uses the much safer electronic transponder tolls to their advantage, while Connecticut gives every motorist and trucker passing through the state a free ride, he said.
We subsidize every other states roads it just doesnt seem fair, he added.
But the real irony is that the Connecticut Rivers levees and viaduct systems need to be redone anyway, he notes.
Designed in response to the floods of 1936 and 1938, the existing system of embankments is prone to underseepage, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Its unlikely water would crest over the elevated mounds, but much like the levee failure in the New Orleans 9th Ward during Hurricane Katrina, the Connecticut hills meant to hold back rising waters are built atop alluvial sand deposits that can allow the rushing river to percolate through the bottom and breach the embankment from underneath.
Engineers are now conducting surveys and plans to shore up the system.
That makes now the perfect time, Larson said, to consider including in the plans a system of concrete tunnels to carry traffic across the city underground, while above connecting neighborhoods long separated by elevated highways, exposing the downtown to the riverfront, and spurring development in prime real estate locations now covered by eight lanes of blacktop highway.
Larson said there were lessons learned from other similar projects, like the $15 billion dig to the north that buried Bostons central artery and was plagued with cost overruns, over 500 leaks, and a fatal ceiling cave-in that killed a passing motorist.
Badly mixed concrete was a factor, something we now know a lot about down here, Larson said, referring to the recent rash of homeowners dealing with crumbling concrete foundations.
Estimated to cost $2.6 billion at the outset, Massachusetts still is paying the bill 10 years later on the final tab that came to $24 billion when interest on debt was factored into the equation.
Still, while most Bostonians groused and griped throughout the constant construction and delays, many now grudgingly agree that the suffering paid off.
Having learned from Bostons construction mistakes, and with an administration ready and willing to pour federal money into infrastructure and job creation, it makes sense to expand the levee study to include plans to bury the Hartford highways, Larson said.
We want to have the bags packed and ready to go should the opportunity arise, he said.
Convert their insane public union pension system to a 401k system like ALL THE TAXPAYERS have...
Connecticut would have more money than they would know what to do with.
You can literally imagine them drooling at the prospect of imposing tolls. What an irresistible idea for politicians.
bfl
Wouldn’t a bridge type structure be cheaper?
Ah, yes...the “big dig” in Massachusetts has proven so successful.
Hey John, I heard of stupid ideas, but that is the worst idea you ever did. Still BSing the citizens of East Hartford/Manchester when you shop at Shop-Rite? You speak conservative in East Hartford, you are a Liberal in the swamp...
^^Know him personally, he and his brother are called East Hartford’s Kennedy brothers’. They grew up in the lower middle class neighborhood of Mayberry Village. I grew up south of the highway in East Hartford.
He’s smoking crack if he thinks he can do this for $10 billion. It will be, at best, TWICE the cost of the Boston ‘Big Dig’. That came in at $12 billion over 10 years ago.
Get a real budget and a real timeline and we can talk. Otherwise, go away Dim!
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