'HOWL FROM THE HIGHWAY'
Edna man thinks Trans-Texas Corridor
would ruin his home,and he wrote a song,
'That New Road,' to say exactly that
March 25, 2007
BY APRILL BRANDON - VICTORIA ADVOCATE
For the past three decades, as Jack
Motley of Edna worked to perfect the land on
his ranch, he did it with visions of his
grandchildren playing and swinging in the
oak trees. Unfortunately, those dreams were
shattered when he found out that a proposed
section of the Trans-Texas Corridor would
cut straight through that land.
"I've spent 30 years building the land,
clearing it, feathering the nest, always
with the vision of my family benefiting from
the land in years to come. As soon as I
first heard about the corridor, those
visions of my kids and grandkids swinging
from the trees were replaced with ones of
cars and semis rushing by," Motley, 59,
said. "I was appalled, angered, hurt. I felt
violated. My family has owned land in Texas
before Texas was even a state and now they
want to build a road right through it."
Motley isn't about to take it lying down.
He decided to voice his anger and
frustration by writing a song, entitled
"That New Road." The song is now being used
in various television and movie projects
about the corridor, Motley said.
The Trans-Texas Corridor is the largest
engineering project ever proposed for Texas.
Adopted by the Texas Department of
Transportation, it will be a statewide
network of corridors that will stretch 4,000
miles and measure up to one-fourth of a mile
wide. The corridor will include toll roads
for passenger vehicles and trucks, passenger
bullet trains, commuter trains, high-speed
freight trains, pipelines of all types, and
electrical transmission towers.
"The song is about the effect the TTC
would have on the land where I live, on my
life, and the lives of my children. But I
didn't write it just for me. There are
thousands of Texans, if not millions, who
will be directly affected by the corridor,"
said Motley, whose ranch is on the north
side of the Lavaca River in Edna.
"I wrote the song because what else was I
going to do? If you have something to say,
you have to find a vehicle to get it said,
and as a songwriter, I wrote a song so my
voice could be heard."
Motley began writing songs about 10 years
ago and soon after began to take guitar
lessons. Motley, a school counselor by day,
released a CD called "In Treatment" in 2005.
But it wasn't until Motley wrote "That New
Road" that his music began to garner more
than just local consideration.
The song first got attention when he sang it
at an open meeting of the Senate
Transportation Committee in early March.
Footage of him singing was picked up by
several news organizations in Texas and
aired in several Texas cities. Soon after,
Bill Molina, a filmmaker who is working on a
movie about the corridor, approached Motley.
Last week, Molina filmed Motley at his ranch
and plans to include the song in the movie.
While Motley isn't sure when the movie
will be done, Victorians will have the
chance to see his performance at the Senate
Transportation Committee meeting when it
airs at 11 p.m. Wednesday night on KUHT-TV
Channel 8's Special Session program.
"My goal with this song is to help call
attention to what is going on. This is a big
issue that people need to be informed about
and it's not going to go away," Motley said.
So what is Motley's solution to the
problem?
"My hopes are that since Highway 59 is
already there, they will use the existing
right of way and, beyond that, I hope
America would realize mass transit is a good
idea and to utilize it more. It's better
than thousands of cars and trucks driving
by. People need to explore the mass transit
option more and realize that while the toll
road is a solution, it's only one solution.
There are smarter choices," Motley said.
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