Proposed I-69 truly mammoth
Jan. 01, 2005
By Jim Vertuno, The Associated Press
AUSTIN -
In
what sounds like another tall tale told by a Texan, the Lone
Star State has embarked on an audacious project to build
superhighways so big, so complex, that they will make ordinary
interstates look like cow paths. The Trans-Texas Corridor
project, as envisioned by Republican Gov. Rick Perry in 2002,
would be a 4,000-mile transportation network costing $175
billion over 50 years, financed mostly if not entirely with
private money. The builders would charge motorists tolls.
But these would not be mere highways. They would
be megahighways -- corridors up to a quarter-mile across,
consisting of as many as six lanes for cars and four for trucks,
plus railroad tracks, oil and gas pipelines, water and other
utility lines, even broadband transmission cables.
Supporters say the corridors are needed to handle
the expected NAFTA-driven boom in the flow of goods to and from
Mexico and to enable freight haulers to bypass urban centers on
straight-shot highways that cut across the countryside.
The number of corridors and exactly where they
would run have yet to be worked out for the proposed I-69. But
the Texas Transportation Commission opened negotiations Dec. 16
with the Spain-based consortium Cintra
to start the first phase of the project, a $7.5 billion,
800-mile corridor that would stretch from Oklahoma to Mexico and
run parallel to Interstate 35.
"Some thought the Trans-Texas Corridor was a
pie-in-the-sky idea that would never see the light of day," said
Perry, who has compared his plan to the interstate highway
system, which was started during the Eisenhower administration.
But as the plan rumbles along in the fast lane,
some have called it a Texas-size boondoggle. Environmentalists
are worried about what it will do to the countryside. Ranchers
and farmers who stand to lose their land through eminent domain
are mobilizing against it. Small towns and big cities fear a
loss of business when traffic is diverted around them.
Even the governor's own party opposes the plan.
The GOP platform drafted
at last summer's state convention rejected it because of its
effect on property rights.
Perry is undeterred. "I think it will be a model
for future infrastructure construction in the world," he
predicted.
The tolls would represent a dramatic departure
for Texas, which has traditionally relied on federal highway
funding from gasoline taxes to build roads. But supporters say
the combination of tolls and private money would allow Texas to
pour concrete at a rate that would not be possible through
gasoline taxes alone.