91欧美激情

Va. 7 widening poised to move forward at expense of new Loudoun project

WASHINGTON 鈥 Commuters along Va. Route 7 could see the end of a years-old bottleneck soon, but it would come at the expense of the only state money聽for a major new road project in Loudoun County.

Proposed refinements to Virginia鈥檚 transportation funding plan would reallocate $43 million to help fully finance聽plans to widen Va. 7 from four lanes to six lanes for the stretch between Tysons and the Great Falls/Herndon area — just over seven miles. The money聽was聽originally proposed for construction of a new stretch of Northstar Boulevard between Brambleton and U.S. 50.

Virginia Deputy Transportation Secretary Nick Donohue says the initial funding plan, based on project scores, only included a first phase of that widening project.

鈥淭here鈥檚 currently a gap on Route 7 where it鈥檚 six lanes up to Tysons Corner; it鈥檚 then four lanes for about eight or so miles through Fairfax County, and then it鈥檚 six lanes through Loudoun, and by funding both these phases together it would allow you to fully fill in that hourglass at a single time and also hopefully minimize driver inconvenience,鈥 he told the Commonwealth Transportation Board Tuesday.

Doing both phases of the widening at once is also projected to save about $20 million, and Fairfax County staff have suggested that the county could contribute up to $10 million if bids come in higher than expected.

The CTB members and Donohue expect Northstar Boulevard鈥檚 extension will still move forward in the next few years, since it scored highly for funding this year. While they expect it will get money聽next year that would allow construction to begin as soon as 2018, they cannot guarantee it.

Northstar Boulevard is part of a larger planned corridor that includes the Parkway to eventually provide a north-south connection from Interstate 95 using the Prince William Parkway to the area of Interstate 66, then on to U.S. 50, the Dulles Greenway and Va. 7.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no doubt that both these projects are needed, but if we compare the immediate congestion mitigation value of Route 7 to Northstar, it鈥檚 very much apples and oranges,鈥 said board member Scott Kasprowicz, of Middleburg.

鈥淭o do a piece of [Route 7 widening] and leave an hourglass in the middle, I think, would create a traffic nightmare in Northern Virginia. There鈥檚 no question if we go from six to four to six [lanes] we鈥檙e going to have a problem that doesn鈥檛 have a near-term solution [since] we don鈥檛 know when we鈥檒l fund the second phase,鈥 he said in support of the change.

While Northern Virginia District board member Gary Garczynski largely agreed, he worried about taking money聽away from the only large project physically located in the fast-growing area that qualified for funding under the state鈥檚 main project ranking system.

鈥淚t would be essentially taking the only dollars that they were awarded through the H.B. 2 process away from them, with the hope that next year Northstar could be funded,鈥 he said.

The Loudoun County Board of Supervisors could take an official position on the issue at its regularly scheduled meeting Thursday.

The Commonwealth Transportation Board votes Wednesday on overall guidance to put the finishing touches on the spending plan that will come before the board for a final vote in June.

Federal 91欧美激情 Network Logo
Log in to your 91欧美激情 account for notifications and alerts customized for you.