The Road to Zuni

What is to be done with U.S. 460?

The Times-Dispatch ran dueling op-eds this morning. Pierce Homer, secretary of transportation, makes the case for building a divided, four-lane highway between Suffolk and Petersburg, financing the improvements with tolls and public funds.

Virginia needs an upgraded U.S. 460, Homer argues, for four main reasons: (1) to provide an evacuation corridor out of Hampton Roads in case of hurricanes or other natural disasters; (2) to provide flood-resistant access to communities along U.S. 460, (3) to accommodate the surge of container truck traffic resulting from Hampton Roads ports; and (4) to improve access to the expanding military logistics base at Ft. Lee outside Petersburg. The goals, I think any reasonable person would admit, are all laudable. The question is, are they worth the price tag attached to the project?

The cost is “very substantial,” Homer concedes: in the range of $1 billion to $1.5 billion. Tolls can pay for part of the project, but another $200 million to $1 billion — suggesting a wide range of uncertainty — would have to come from public sources. “Some will brand these sums as excessive or unachievable,” he writes. “But when weighed against our public safety, our economic future, and our national security, these investments in the 460 corridor are necessities of the first order.”

In a companion column, Stewart Schwartz and Lisa Guthrie disagree. Schwartz is executive director of the Coalition for Smarter Growth, and Guthrie executive director of the Virginia League of Conservation Voters.

According to Schwartz and Guthrie, the project is relatively low on the list of Hampton Roads transportation priorities. In contrast to many gridlocked arterials inside the metro area, U.S. 460 is usually free-flowing — and still will be in 20 years!

The big story is that if the new highway is not built, the old U.S. 460 will still be free-flowing along most of its length in 2026. Only the traffic lights in the few towns along 460 contribute to poorer levels of service — a problem that can be addressed by solutions far less costly than a 55-mile-long new highway.

The upgrade would cost between $465 million and $665 million in public funds. That amount of money can pay for a lot of spot improvements to relieve local bottlenecks and leave funds for more pressing priorities.

I’m inclined to agree with Schwartz and Guthrie — at least until more authoritative estimates come in. We need to get a better handle on how much public money the mega-460 alternative would cost. And we need to be able to compare it to the cost and benefits of the “spot improvements” alternative.


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5 responses to “The Road to Zuni”

  1. Toomanytaxes Avatar
    Toomanytaxes

    Pierce Homer sets forth some decent reasons for spending the money, but he also illustrates what’s wrong with transportation in Virginia. He doesn’t rank the project against any goals. He doesn’t examine any alernatives, both as to this route and to other uses for the same money.

    It would be interesting to know who owns land around the right of way.

    Mr. Homer’s article again proves Governor Kaine and the Senate wrong. We need reforms before more funding and taxes.

  2. Ray Hyde Avatar

    I don;t know anything about 460, but for once I’m inclined to agree with Peter Schwartz.

    We can do a lot with spot improvements, like the T intersction near my home that has had the guard rail repaired on what seems like a monthly basis.

    Not everyone agrees we need reforms before funding. Today’s Post had a letter to the editor calling for more road funding and accusing the GA of abdicating their responsibility for making hard choices by signing the no-taxes pledge.

    The letter also called for less development. In the current market that might work, but eventually such a plan will also call for hard choices.

    Let the games begin.

  3. Ray Hyde Avatar

    If we want to figure out the best way to spend our money, maybe we can go to the University of Florida’s College of Engineering.

    They have been awarded $6 million dollars, jointly by USDOT and FDOT for studies on methods of alleviating traffic congestion and rail congestion.

    Notice that the money wasn’t awarded to the school of social studies and social engineering. However it will include a professor of urban planning.

    Where was VA Tech in the competition for this?

    Surely, something like this is better than relying on the (predictable) opinions of Stuart Schwartz.

  4. Larry Gross Avatar
    Larry Gross

    What a coincidence!

    A late weekend trip to Nag’s Head.. using US 460 to and from and I return to BRs blog about – US 460.

    There IS traffic on 460 and yes.. the small towns lights are there but the traffic was very light.. and the slow downs through the small towns very pleasant.

    Very few 18-wheelers although near Wakefield this is a Food Lion Distribution Center.

    TMT touched nailed the issue in my opinion… Here is what Homer said:

    “these investments in the 460 corridor are necessities of the first order”

    his criteria: “weighed against our public safety, our economic future, and our national security”

    This is standard VDOT pablum … each proposed road gets its own unique set of criteria and no two are the same so of course the ability to RANK and PRIORITIZE … is a no-go.

    I will admit that I-64 is a mess and especially so with 18-wheelers because there are not 3 lane and as far as I know trucks are not restricted to the right lanes.. so there is a problem – and it will get worse of more trucks on that road are the future.

    But let me point out – as I’ve done earlier – that Virginia does not really export much in the way of goods via HR ports.

    Those ports.. I think … are for IMPORT of goods from outside to the US … to Walmarts, Dollar Generals, etc…

    My theory is that, in essence, we’re being told that if we want to maintain a free-flow capability between the ports and Richmond – for private autos – that we better add capacity … for trucks .. and
    for some reason.. VDOT has chosen US 460 rather than a 3rd lane on I-64.

    I am NOT comfortable with VDOT making decisions like this.

    I would much rather see an independent study .. by a credentialed source who was given the requirement to recommend OPTIONS with the 3 best alternatives of improving capacity between HR and Richmond – with an eye towards trucks being the driving reason why more capacity is needed.

    AND … in those options .. how to pay for it.

    For instance, if I’m correct.. and it’s really all about the trucks then why not collect tolls from trucks at the weigh stations – and use that money to upgrade either I64 or US460.. incrementally.. over time with the most congested bottlenecks done first.

    In other words.. an intelligent analysis that yields an intelligent upgrade path.

    VDOT has no credibility doing this kind of work. They are traditionally biased toward big, expensive.. major new infrastructure projects and opposed to optimization upgrades… and I have absolutely no confidence that this is the organization that should be recommending reasonable and cost-effective solutions.

    VDOT has corrupted the PPTA process by basically taking away from PPTA the ability to start at square one and recommend OPTIONS. Instead VDOT has chosen what it wants and asked PPTA folks to bid on it – and the result is – of course… that public money has to be spent.

    Public money “might” be needed.. but I’m not believing VDOT…
    let me hear it from some entity that has some credibility.. in the transportation arena.

  5. Larry Gross Avatar
    Larry Gross

    I want to illustrate just how untruthful VDOT is – in presenting issues to the public:

    Here’s is Homers opening statement:

    “Upgrading the 55-mile U.S. 460 corridor between Petersburg and Suffolk is a statewide priority.”

    He uses the word UPGRADE….

    Now read the rest:

    The Virginia Department of Transportation has proposed, and the Commonwealth Transportation Board has approved, a plan to build a modern, flood-resistant, four-lane, divided U.S. 460 just to the north of the current alignment.

    This is a NEW LOCATION road proposal being “spun” as an “upgrade”.

    From the get-go .. VDOT chooses to NOT square with the public… on exactly what they are proposing .. they want the “idea” of “upgrade” to be in the publics mind.

    And they do this because.. the average person is going to wonder right away why a “new” road is needed rather than improving existing roads.

    Notice also.. the PPTA folks didn’t recommend this – CTB.. VDOT’s obedient lapdog.. that VDOT uses to parrot their wants to a public that thinks that CTB is an independent and objective board that guides Va on transportation issues.

    REFORM? how does this current paradigm in Virginia get “reformed”?

    We desperately need a transportation function in our state government but what we need is not what we have and I see little hope that good change is on the cusp…

    What we have, instead, in a huge monolithic bureaucracy powered by state taxes that has no intention of being accountable to the public on performing its mission.

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