Wednesday, January 07, 2009

"The name isn’t the problem"

Is the TTC dead or not?

1/7/09

By JOANN LIVINGSTON
Waxahachie Daily Blog
Copyright 2009

The Trans-Texas Corridor is dead – maybe.

The Texas Department of Transportation announced during a forum in Austin on Monday that it was scuttling plans for the project as it was envisioned.

In its place is a scaled down model with a new name – Innovative Connectivity in Texas/Vision 2009 – that the agency says will be more in tune with local needs and public concerns.

In his prepared remarks, as published on TxDOT’s Web site, the agency’s executive director Amadeo Saenz said the TTC, as a single project concept, wasn’t what Texans wanted, “so we’ve decided to put the name to rest.”

“That does not mean that we will abdicate our mission. We will still develop transportation projects that move Texas forward,” the remarks read. “We will still partner with local governments and entities, and where appropriate, the private sector, to get needed projects on the ground.

“We will still use all the financial tools that have been authorized by law to get projects to Texans sooner rather than later.”

As originally proposed by Gov. Rick Perry in 2002, the Trans-Texas Corridor would encompass not only lanes for passenger vehicles, but would also bundle lanes for large rigs, freight rail, passenger rail and other utility easements into a bundle that would be 1,200 feet wide.

Complaints against the TTC have ranged from loss of farm and ranch land that has been in families for generations to loss of livelihood, as well as economic devastation for rural Texas. Many people have expressed fears their communities will be bypassed and or cut off by the transportation project that could – if built out completely – include 8,000 miles of roadway criss-crossing the state. Opponents to the project say thousands of acres would be taken from property owners in eminent domain proceedings.

Concerns also have been raised in Texas as to whether or not Perry’s plan is part of a greater agenda that would seek to bring about a North American Union comprised of the United States, Canada and Mexico.

What’s in a name?

TxDOT’s Web site, www.keeptexasmoving.org, reports the Trans-Texas Corridor name “has taken on unintended meaning that can obscure the facts.”

In a conference call from Iraq, where he and several other governors were visiting the military, Perry said, “The days of the Trans-Texas Corridor are over, it’s finished up. The name ‘Trans-Texas Corridor’ is over with.”

TxDOT “is continuing to make good decisions for the state of Texas,” Perry said during the call. “The fact of the matter is we don’t really care what name they attach to building infrastructure in the state of Texas, but the key is we have to go forward and build the infrastructure so the state of Texas and our economy can continue to grow.”

The name isn’t the problem

Concerns about the project haven’t been confined to Texas. The TTC and the issue of toll roads also drew attention from Congress, where U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, passed an amendment that placed a one-year moratorium on tolling existing highways in the state of Texas and also pushed for a permanent prohibition of tolling existing highways. The senator also became involved when concerns were raised after the North Texas Tollway Authority was awarded the contract for State Highway 121 instead of the Spanish-based Cintra. Hutchison garnered assurances from the U.S. Department of Transportation that federal funding would not be impacted.

A spokesman for Hutchison, who is Perry’s likely opponent in the 2010 gubernatorial election, said that in fact the Trans-Texas Corridor name isn’t the problem but rather the cross-state tollways associated with it and the rural land that would be needed to build them.
“When citizens pointed out the flaws in his original corridor idea, specifically trampling private property rights, the Perry administration responded with condescension and arrogance,” said Todd Olsen, an Austin-based spokesman for Hutchison’s gubernatorial exploratory committee. “It wasn’t about a name.”

TxDOT’s www.keeptexasmoving.com

The transportation agency’s Web site indicates parts of the original concept will still be constructed: “Whether in far south Texas, the northeast region of the state or somewhere in between, major corridor projects will be comprised of several small segments no wider than 600 feet, and will no longer be called the Trans-Texas Corridor. Each segment will be referred to by its original name, such as SH 130, I-69 and Loop 9.”

The Web site also notes, “There are currently two TTC projects under development: I-69/TTC, which extends from Texarkana/Shreveport to Mexico (possibly the Rio Grande Valley or Laredo) and TTC-35, which generally parallels I-35 from north of Dallas/Fort Worth to Mexico.”
The Web site says some TTC-35 facilities “could be constructed upon completion of the Tier Two environmental studies and in response to a demonstrated transportation need.”
Ellis County impact

A map on the www.keeptexasmoving.com Web site indicates a preferred route through Ellis County that would bisect the county in half. County commissioners have previously passed a resolution asking that the route – if constructed – be moved so as to run north and south along the Ellis/Hill counties line.

Ellis County Judge Chad Adams and county planner Barbra Leftwich are in attendance at the two-day transportation forum.

In a telephone interview, Adams responded to the TxDOT announcement.

“The message I got this morning in visiting with TxDOT officials is that this is the beginning of a new way of doing business for TxDOT – that they have chosen to be more responsive to the citizens of Texas and their concerns,” Adams said.
“I am certain that all the local elected officials will be paying close attention to how this all plays out in the coming months, and listening very carefully to the voices of our citizens,” he said.
Political activists pleased, but wary

David Stall of Corridor Watch has opposed the project since its inception six years ago – and has headed up the Corridor Watch Web site for the past four.

“Of course, we’re pleased,” he said. “The statements and reports of Vision 2009 that TxDOT released today puts a lot of spin on it, but the result is still a major victory. We’re pleased that the corridor project as it was no longer exists.”

Changes in the project include the corridor’s width being cut in half and its multi-modal element dropped. There’s also an emphasis on using existing facilities, he said.

“TxDOT has indicated there will be greater community and local input on projects as they are developed,” he said, noting however that Corridor Watch’s work isn’t over. The group will continue to monitor the Legislature, watching over bills and working with legislators and attending committee meetings.
“I think we will remain vigilant, although the nature of the effort will change significantly in some respects,” Stall said.
Lawmakers have filed bills, he said, that will ensure the TTC is brought to an end. “We look forward to seeing that happen to make sure that this isn’t the end of the first reel of monster film only to see it come back in a sequel,” he said.

Much of the last four years was spent in educating the public and Legislature about the massive project – with Stall anticipating the education effort will continue in particular with legislators and public officials with a focus on how public/private partnerships are utilized.

He does wonder if public interest and participation will wane now that TxDOT is saying the TTC is no more.

It was the public rallying together that brought pressure on TxDOT, an agency Stall notes is under Sunset Review this legislative session.

“I think that the action today is a very high profile demonstration that public participation can have an impact on statewide and local policy – and we applaud our members and all of those likeminded Texans who have raised their objections,” he said. “The evidence is there today.”
Is there a victory?

Terri Hall of Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom is hesitant at declaring victory.
“We think a lot of this is the fact that the legislative session is about to begin and this is a last gasp by a rogue agency that’s about to be scrapped and rebuilt all over again by the Legislature,” she said. “They’re trying to convince everyone they are listening to the people.” Right now, it’s just “a bunch of words and hot air,” she said. “At the end of the day, no legislation has been repealed, no minute orders have been rescinded, no CDAs scrapped and there are two signed contracts on the first five segments of the TTC,” she said. “They haven’t changed the environmental impact statement documents. … Until all of that’s done, they don’t mean it.”
The EIS documents are pending federal approval and are especially worrisome to Hall, who said if they’re not changed – and no other action taken such as legislation repeal – that TxDOT could resume the project as is when the OK is received from Washington.
“Once the feds give their final approval and put it into the register, there are only six months to litigate,” she said. “Once that deadline expires or passes, there’s no way to stop it after that. … We don’t want to be duped and we don’t want to wake up two years from now and see ground being broken.”
Bills filled

A number of bills have been filed in anticipation of the 81st Legislature, which is set to convene Jan. 13 in Austin.

Among those is House Bill 11 filed by state Rep. David Leibowitz, D-San Antonio, which would repeal authority for the Trans-Texas Corridor by removing any reference to the project from the state’s Tax and Transportation codes.

There is work ahead for the Legislature, agrees state Rep. Jim Pitts, R-Waxahachie, who was co-author on a bill during the 80th Legislature that put the TTC under a moratorium until the 81st session.

“I’m pleased TxDOT recognizes the widespread opposition to the Trans-Texas Corridor,” Pitts said of Monday’s development. “But we still have a lot of work to do next session toward reforming this agency and ensuring it is accountable to the public.”

© 2009 Waxahachie Daily Blog: waxahachiedaily.blogspot.com

To search TTC News Archives click HERE

To view the Trans-Texas Corridor Blog click HERE

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Sen. John Carona files a bill giving six more years of life to private toll road agreements.

LESS-atorium on concession agreements

1/7/08

By Ben Wear
Austin American-Statesman
Copyright 2009

Lost in all the hullabaloo Tuesday over the tragic and oh-so-sudden “death” of the Trans-Texas Corridor was news that the Legislature’s transportation leader filed a bill that same day giving six more years of life to private toll road agreements.

That the bill, SB 404, came from state Sen. John Carona, R-Dallas, is no small thing. Carona is chairman of the Senate Transportation and Homeland Security Committee. With his counterpart on the other side of the Capitol now retired — former House Transportation Committee chairman Mike Krusee — and a majority of Krusee’s committee gone from the Legislature as well, Carona stands as the main mover-and-shaker on the issue.

Carona dropped news of his bill into the middle of remarks he made on a panel at the Texas Transportation Forum at the Austin Hilton.

“To foreclose any option (for building roads) would be foolish,” Carona said during his remarks on what might be coming during the legislative session.

Watching Carona has been interesting over the past two years. He began the 2007 session calling for the replacement of Texas Transportation Commission chairman Ric Williamson, then by late in the session had become something of a mediator between TxDOT and its most vehement critics. Similarly, last spring he sharply criticized current chairwoman Deirdre Delisi as a “missed opportunity” by Gov. Rick Perry in the wake of Williamson’s death, and said lawmakers did not find her “very warm and personable.” Tuesday, he praised Delisi, standing by his side as moderator of the panel, for how she had handled the job in her seven months leading the Texas Transportation Commission and said that “when you’re wrong, you’re wrong, and you have to stand up and say so.”

Last session, the Legislature banned most long-term toll road leases with private companies, granting a handful of exceptions. Beyond that, the overall authority to have such “concession agreements” right now would expire Sept. 1, except for those few exceptions. The state or toll authorities could reach such agreements for those excepted projects until Sept. 1, 2011.

Lawmakers didn’t like that the leases generally last 50 years, meaning that if the tollways bring in more money than expected then the companies running them would end up with profits that could have been used to build other roads if TxDOT instead was operated the roads. They were also concerned about “non-compete” clauses that could mean fewer improvements in free roads near the tollways.

Carona’s bill would extend both of those expiration dates for possible concession agreements by six years.

Carona, both in his manner, his legislation and his rhetoric, seems to be sending the message that while the 2007 session was mostly about fighting over transportation and stopping what lawmakers saw as bad transportation policy, the 2009 session will be about making new and better policy.

Not all legislators interested in transportation will necessarily be in as mellow a mood. But Carona’s opening moves could mean that the inevitable differences of opinion this time around won’t become quite as heated.

© 2009 Austin American-Statesmanwww.statesman.com

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To view the Trans-Texas Corridor Blog click HERE

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"No law has been changed, no minute order rescinded, no environmental document re-done, and there are still two contracts signed..."

Trans Texas Corridor renamed, not dead

TURF supporters demand ACTION, not rhetoric


1/7/08

Terri Hall
Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom
Copyright 2008

TURF reaction to TxDOT announcement:

The announcement by TxDOT Executive Director Amadeo Saenz at the Texas Transportation Forum that the "Trans Texas Corridor, as it was originally envisioned, is no more," is just another in a series of comments to lead opponents into believing the Trans Texas Corridor is indeed dead. TURF believes this is a deliberate move to dupe opponents into complacency, and we expect iron-clad action before we begin celebrating victory.

It's clear from the TxDOT Director's speech, that it's only a name change and the Trans Texas Corridor is, in reality, going underground.

This fact is evident in just about every news source across the state:

  • "'Amadeo told folks at the forum that the Trans-Texas Corridor, as it was originally envisioned, is no more,' Amacker (Saenz spokesperson) said. 'Instead, what we've got is a series of smaller projects. 'Those 'smaller projects' will apparently include the 300-plus miles of what has been called TTC-35 from San Antonio to the Oklahoma border and the I-69 project from the Rio Grande Valley to Texarkana. But they will not be called the Trans-Texas Corridor." -- Austin American Statesman
  • "Other than backpedaling from the Trans-Texas Corridor brand, and the goals and priorities set over the years, the Trans-Texas Corridor remains intact. TxDOT still plans to partner with private corporations to build and lease projects. Toll roads, truck-only lanes and rail lanes are also still on the table. Environmental studies for the I-35 and East Texas corridor segments still chug through the pipeline. And a development contract with Cintra of Spain and Zachry Construction Co. of San Antonio, for projects paralleling I-35, is still valid." -- San Antonio Express-News
  • "The renewed effort now will operate under the name 'Innovative Connectivity Plan.'" -- Houston

No law has been changed, no minute order rescinded, no environmental document re-done (as is required by federal law), and there are still two contracts signed giving two Spanish companies the right of first refusal on segments of the corridor previously known as TTC-35 & TTC-69.

So by every real measure, the Trans Texas Corridor goes on full steam ahead. What today's hype was about is a political ploy to make the public go back to sleep while it gets built under a different name. While we welcome genuine responsiveness from TxDOT and a true repeal of the Trans Texas Corridor, this hardly qualifies.

Lets just say, we agree with Senator Robert Nichols' statement in the Dallas Morning News:

  • "If it is just a name change, and nothing more, I don't think that is going to do much to appease lawmakers," said Nichols, R-Jacksonville.


© 2009 Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedomwww.texasturf.org

To search TTC News Archives click HERE

To view the Trans-Texas Corridor Blog click HERE

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"Once agricultural land is gone, it’s gone forever. We’re already dependent on other countries for gas and oil..."

State scraps plans for Trans-Texas Corridor

1/7/09

By Ron Maloney
The Seguin Gazette-Enterprise
Copyright 2009

SEGUIN — The Trans-Texas Corridor, a much-maligned toll road network championed by Gov. Rick Perry since 2002, dropped from the fast track this week.

On Tuesday, the state transportation commission announced a scaling-down that would half its footprint — and cast doubt over whether parts of it would ever be completed.

Texas Department of Transportation executive director Amadeo Saenz unveiled new guidelines for developing the corridor, a series of interstate-style highways combined with other infrastructure such as railroads, gas and electric lines in a single, 1,200-foot-wide right-of-way.

The first thing to go will be the name, officials say.

Instead of a single, overall project, the corridor will be broken down into its originally-included series of smaller projects, which would be scaled down to fit in a 600-foot right-of-way.

The corridor was intended to provide a series of routes around heavily congested highway.

Perry, who was on tour in Iraq on Tuesday, said the scaled-down version is still in keeping with his vision of relieving traffic.

He added that the state’s current interstate highway grid is congested — particularly around metropolitan areas such as Austin and San Antonio — and needs relief.

A couple years ago, State Rep. Edmund Kuempel, acting on a resolution from Guadalupe County commissioners, made a recommendation to the state that the Trans-Texas Corridor make use of existing highway rights-of-way wherever possible. In Guadalupe County, such a route would use Interstate 10 from where State Highway 130 will enter it in the Kingsbury area to Loop 1604 in Bexar County, and then continue on southward to Interstate 35 and on to Interstate 37.

“This has been in the works for a pretty good while,” Kuempel said. “I think it finally imploded this morning.”

Tuesday’s decision, Kuempel said, does not affect the State Highway 130 project, which he said he hoped would be completed in Guadalupe County by mid- to late-2012.

“That will provide the connection between Interstate 10 and Interstate 35 north of Austin,” Kuempel said. “That connection will be completed, for sure.”

After that, Kuempel said, locals probably shouldn’t hold their breath waiting for the next step.

“The Trans-Texas Corridor was a long term vision over 20 or 30 years,” Kuempel said. “This wasn’t going to happen in two, three, four, five or 10 years.”

Still, Kuempel said, Texas has to look at its future transportation needs and try to prepare for it.

“We do need to look at our transportation system, but they took the input of the citizens of Texas — which has been more negative than positive — to heart, and they’re putting the Trans-Texas Corridor under a rock and looking at other alternatives.”

Kuempel’s chief concern, he said, is that the project not needlessly churn up and destroy farm land.

“I was against going through any more raw land,” Kuempel said. “We need to use existing roads wherever possible, and Interstate 10 and Loop 1604 are two very good roads.”

Precinct 4 Commissioner Judy Cope, who lives off FM 775, said she believed the residents of Guadalupe County would be glad for anything that reduced the scale of the Trans-Texas Corridor — particularly in rural regions like Guadalupe County.

“If it is dead in its current form, I think that’s good for the people of this area,” said Cope, whose home lies in a 10-mile wide “study zone” in south Guadalupe and north Wilson counties proposed as a possible route through this region. “If this is factual, it would be great. This project would have taken out a lot of farm land that could never be replaced.”

When the project’s possible impact on Guadalupe County became known, Cope said she asked state officials when locals would have a plan to view, and she was told it would be years.

It wasn’t easy for Cope or her constituents to hear.

“It left a lot of questions about where it would be, how it would affect the land and how it would affect the people on their land — some of whom have been on the land for generations and hope to hand it down to their descendents,” Cope said. “Nobody knew just where it was going and what they needed to be doing.”

Like Kuempel, Cope said she understood Texas needed to address transportation issues.

“Caterpillar is coming here, and I think Randolph Air Force Base could be fixing for a big expansion and Texas is in far better economic condition than most states,” Cope said. “We’re looking at a lot of people coming to Texas and to this county, and we don’t need to be gridlocked, but we’ve asked that they follow the routes already established by other freeways.”

Once agricultural land is gone, it’s gone forever, Cope said.

“We’re already dependent on other countries for gas and oil,” Cope said. “Certainly, we don’t want to depend on them for our food, too.”

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

© 2009 The Seguin Gazette-Enterprise www.seguingazette.com

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“What it’s going to mean for us is a new name. It’s really the same concept."

State officials scrap Trans-Texas Corridor

1/7/09

By Tim Woods
Waco Tribune-Herald
Copyright 2009

Some local and state officials expressed relief at Tuesday’s announcement that plans for the Trans-Texas Corridor have been called off, while others said the project is simply taking on a new name.

State officials said Tuesday that they are scrapping the proposed network of toll roads known as the Trans-Texas Corridor, a massive transportation project that critics called an expensive boondoggle. Gov. Rick Perry had promoted the plan as a way to relieve Texas highway congestion and meet the exploding demand for freight along a corridor serving four of the state’s six largest cities.

The original corridor route would have stretched from the Texas-Mexico border to the Oklahoma state line, passing just east of Waco parallel to Interstate 35.

“The days of the Trans-Texas Corridor are over, it’s finished up,” Perry said Tuesday on a conference call during a Defense Department trip to Iraq. “The name ‘Trans-Texas Corridor’ is over with.”
However, Texas Department of Transportation Waco-area spokesman Ken Roberts said though the proposed projects replacing the corridor will be smaller in scale, they are not going away altogether.
“What it’s going to mean for us is a new name,” Roberts said. “It’s really the same concept, from the standpoint of expanding our transportation infrastructure through our area in order to meet our future demands for increased infrastructure through Central Texas.”
For local landowners whose property was threatened by the original corridor route, statements like Roberts’ coming from the department are ominous, and worries remain that their land may be taken by eminent domain. “For us on this route, (the Trans-Texas Corridor) still exists,” said Kathryn Pilant, who owns a historic home in Eddy that was threatened by the original corridor route.
Pilant’s Victorian house was built in 1881 and was the childhood home of U.S. Sen. Tom Connally.

Pilant was relieved, though, that the roadway width now being discussed was reduced from 1,200 feet to 600 feet.

State Sen. Kip Averitt, R-Waco, shared Pilant’s concern Tuesday.
“When you get right down to it, today’s announcement doesn’t really change much,” Averitt said. “The individual pieces of the corridor puzzle are still potentially in play, and the Legislature must continue to vigilantly monitor TxDOT’s projects and operations because the concerns of the individuals affected will remain the same.”

Amadeo Saenz, the department’s executive director, unveiled new guidelines Tuesday for developing a network of toll roads, rails and pipelines that have grown ever more controversial since Perry began promoting the idea in 2002. Associates of Perry have said for weeks that the corridor would not take shape as originally envisioned.

Saenz said major corridor projects now will contain several small segments closer to 600 feet wide. Original plans called for corridors up to 1,200 feet wide to allow for rail and other types of transportation and utility transmission lines.
Texas Farm Bureau officials — who have been staunch opponents of the Trans-Texas Corridor — say their worries remain that property owners will lose land or access to it without fair compensation.

“No one disputes, certainly no one at the Texas Farm Bureau, that Texas needs to beef up its transportation infrastructure,” said Texas Farm Bureau spokesman Gene Hall. However, he added, “There’s still going to be some new roads built, and it’s very important. With Texas having one of the worst situations in the nation with respect to eminent domain, we need to pass eminent domain reform that includes fair compensation and compensation for diminished access when property is taken.”

Hillsboro Mayor John Erwin and Baylor University professor Don Greene, who served on the Trans-Texas Corridor Advisory Committee, said Tuesday’s announcement falls in line with the committee’s report to the department.

“The report recommended dropping any references to Trans-Texas Corridor,” Erwin said. “And not only simply dropping the references to it, but to drop the concept of the 1,200-foot-wide monstrosity that was proposed and to continue with specific projects in the various segments of Interstate 35 as needed for current and future traffic loads.”

Erwin said the original corridor plans had Hillsboro residents and business owners worried that commerce in the Hill County seat would be harmed. The corridor would have run well east of I-35, which brings heavy traffic through the city every day.

“We’re highly dependent on Interstate 35, and I feel that this is going to assure that Interstate 35 and any associated projects are going to stay close to (the current I-35) footprint, and that is very good news for Hillsboro,” Erwin said.

Averitt said he would stand behind landowners’ and residents’ desires with respect to future infrastructure plans.

“As I’ve said from the beginning, if Texans don’t want the Trans-Texas Corridor — or whatever name TxDOT gives it tomorrow — it will not happen,” Averitt said.

Staff writers Regina Dennis and Wendy Gragg and the Associated Press contributed to this story.

twoods@wacotrib.com

757-5721

© 2009 Waco Tribune-Heraldwww.wacotrib.com

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"Instead of referring to the Trans-Texas Corridor name, officials will identify each segment of the original plan separately."

Transportation plan stays, but name goes

1/07/09

By Patrick Driscoll
San Antonio Express-News
Copyright 2008

AUSTIN — Seeking to renew enthusiasm for a massive road-building plan that scared people by its very name, the Texas Department of Transportation has decided to reinvigorate it — by dropping the name.

“We've decided to put the name to rest,” Director Amadeo Saenz told more than 1,000 people Tuesday morning at the Texas Transportation Forum, according to a text of his speech. “The Trans-Texas Corridor, as it was known, will no longer exist.”

The corridor actually hasn't existed “as it was known” for years now, Saenz explained later. It's been evolving, often under fire, ever since Gov. Rick Perry unveiled the 50-year blueprint in 2002.

Back then, the vision showed 1,200-foot-wide swaths of toll lanes, rail lines and utility lines criss-crossing the state.

TxDOT officials later said the roads and rails might not be in the same corridors, and so the rights of way wouldn't have to be so wide. They also said segments would be built only as needed, and existing roads would be widened instead where possible.

But many people couldn't shake the wide berth shown in the original drawings. They added up acreage and projected the paths of the 4,000-mile network — and got scared.

“A lot of fear developed,” recalled state Sen. Robert Nichols, who at the time served on the Texas Transportation Commission, which oversees TxDOT. “With that fear came opposition.”

Anger from thousands of landowners and activists flooded public hearings, first in 2006 for the corridor's twin along Interstate 35 and again last year for a route through East Texas.

TxDOT refined plans, announcing that adding lanes to I-35 south of San Antonio was the priority over a virgin route. Last year, the Transportation Commission broadened that intention, promising to always first consider using existing rights of way for any corridor project.

On Tuesday, Saenz said the agency also will try to keep widths within 600 feet. Going wider, especially if roads and rails are put together, would be the exception rather than the norm.

“The right of way will be whatever you need to build the asset,” he said. “But the chance of it being all put together in one corridor is slim.”

Other than backpedaling from the Trans-Texas brand, and the goals and priorities set over the years, the corridor remains intact.

TxDOT still plans to partner with private corporations to build and lease projects. Toll roads, truck-only lanes and rail lanes also still are on the table.

Environmental studies for the I-35 and East Texas corridor segments still chug through the pipeline. And a development contract with Cintra of Spain and Zachry Construction Corp. of San Antonio for projects paralleling I-35 still is valid.

The difference now is that instead of referring to the Trans-Texas Corridor name, officials will identify each segment of the original plan separately.

Booting the corridor's name could freshen the concept and maybe clear the air some before this year's transportation-heavy legislative session starts next week.

“We can now focus on the real issue, which is additional road capacity and the means to finance the same,” said Senate Transportation Committee Chairman John Carona, R-Dallas.

State lawmakers plan to put TxDOT, toll roads, privatization, gas taxes and other issues in the frying pan. Carona said all financing options will be needed.

“It's going to be a big chapter, it's going to be a great chapter,” he said of the upcoming session.

Perry, speaking from Iraq on a conference call with reporters, concurred that the state needs private investments in roads.

“Our options are relatively limited due to Washington's ineffectiveness from the standpoint of being able to deliver dollars or the Legislature to raise the gas tax,” he said. “So we have to look at some other options.”

Still, the name change has roused excitement.

“We're real pleased that a project once described as unstoppable has now screeched to a halt,” said David Stall of the citizens' group Corridor Watch.

He said his group will continue to watch developments.

R.G. Ratcliffe and Janet Elliott of the Austin Bureau contributed to this report.

Portions © 2009 San Antonio Express-News.www.mysanantonio.com

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"Toll roads, private development, foreign investment — "will probably be reincarnated in various road projects during the next two decades."

Trans-Texas Corridor plan officially axed, at least for now

1/7/08

By GORDON DICKSON
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Copyright 2008

The often-cursed Trans-Texas Corridor is no more.

State officials say they’ve officially pulled the plug on the proposed statewide network of toll roads, rail lines and utilities, an estimated $184 billion project that for more than two years has been loudly opposed by dozens of lawmakers and thousands of ordinary Texans.

"The Trans-Texas Corridor is dead. It was not what the people of Texas wanted," said state Rep. Vicki Truitt, R-Keller.

But planners cautioned that many of the proposal’s controversial components — toll roads, private development, foreign investment — will probably be reincarnated in various road projects during the next two decades.

A sample of projects for which tolls and private investment will still be considered:

A proposed Interstate 35 toll road bypass from North Texas to San Antonio. State officials plan to continue their 3-year-old environmental review, although they’ll ask the Federal Highway Administration to delete the Trans-Texas Corridor name.

Construction of Loop 9, a proposed 240-mile toll road encircling Dallas and Fort Worth.

Relocation of freight railroad tracks in dense Fort Worth neighborhoods.

Fresh approach

Gov. Rick Perry unveiled the Trans-Texas Corridor in 2001 as a fresh approach to improving statewide truck, car and rail traffic.

A key feature was to use tolls as a revenue source to make up for a chronic shortage of state and federal gas tax dollars.

But after the state Transportation Department hired Madrid-based Cintra to develop a master plan for the Trans-Texas Corridor, it quickly became a magnet for controversy.

Diverse forces, from rural conservatives to urban liberals, began to speak in unity against the project. Thousands of Texans flooded public hearings, saying they feared that tolls would be rammed down their throats and private property would be seized for corporate profit.

Some even argued that the Trans-Texas Corridor would undermine the United States’ sovereignty by facilitating a "North American Union" among the U.S., Mexico and Canada.

Many arguments lacked merit, department spokesman Christopher Lippincott said. Even so, he said, "The name Trans-Texas Corridor itself became an impediment to talking about the problem. It set something off in people. That is our responsibility as a department. We could have done a much better job explaining what we needed to do."

Speaking on a conference call from Iraq, where he is visiting troops with other governors, Perry said highways that would run parallel to north-south I-35 are still needed. The state’s commitment to building roads is what attracts many companies and jobs to the state, he said.

"I think the concept of the Trans-Texas Corridor is frankly one that got misunderstood," Perry said.

Supporters concluded that the plan was too broad — too uniform for a state with a diverse mix of traffic problems — and needed to be revisited.

"You’re seeing state government being responsive to the concerns expressed by the citizenry while at the same time moving ahead with the transportation infrastructure we really need," said Bill Meadows of Fort Worth, who last year was appointed to the five-member Texas Transportation Commission.

New name and plan

Amadeo Saenz Jr., executive director of the Texas Department of Transportation, announced the demise of the Trans-Texas Corridor at the annual Texas Transportation Forum.

But Saenz spoke optimistically about his plan to continue building toll roads and rail lines under a new name, Innovative Connectivity in Texas.

The new plan still encourages construction of toll roads connecting Texas cities and ports, but with more restrictions. Among the examples are:

Rights of way should be only about 600 feet wide, compared with 1,200 feet proposed in the Trans-Texas Corridor.

New roads should be built on the state’s existing highway grid whenever possible.

In each area where a road project is proposed, local decision-makers should be assembled to guide the initial planning. The Trans-Texas Corridor was mostly planned at the Transportation Department in Austin.

Existing highway names and numbers should be kept wherever possible. The Trans-Texas Corridor plan had called for roads to be relabeled — TTC-35, for example.

North Texas reaction

In the Metroplex, officials supported the decision to nix the Trans-Texas Corridor, although they still support increased funding for traffic relief.

The region intends to use alternative financing such as tolls for Loop 9 and an extension of Texas 360 south of Arlington, said Michael Morris, transportation director for the North Central Texas Council of Governments.

"I think the governor was right — with 20 million people moving to the Interstate 35 corridor, something had to be done," Morris said.

But Morris criticized the "top-down process."

"It was sort of conceived in a backroom and just announced."

Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief lamented that toll roads are still very much in North Texas’ future. The state lacks resources to handle its growing traffic problems without them, he said.

"Financially, we still have no choice," he said. "It’s critical we at least have some planning process for our future transportation needs."

Staff writer Mike Lee contributed to this report, which includes material from The Associated Press.
GORDON DICKSON, 817-685-3816

© 2009 Fort Worth Star-Telegram: www.star-telegram.com

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“If they are not moving forward with the TTC concept, then why have they asked for its approval from the FHWA?”

TxDOT Announcement a Clever Ruse

1/6/09

Press Release
Eastern Central Texas Sub-Regional Planning Commission (ECTSRPC)
Copyright 2009

Holland, Texas – Today’s surprise announcement by Amadeo Saenz, Executive Director of TxDOT, that the Trans-Texas Corridor is dead, has many believing this is nothing more than a clever political maneuver right before the 81st Legislative Session begins next week.

“If Mr. Saenz and TxDOT are to be taken seriously that the TTC is dead, then we call on him today to demand that the Environmental Impact Study for the TTC be rescinded and start the entire process over,” demanded Mae Smith, President of the Eastern Central Texas Sub-Regional Planning Commission (ECTSRPC).

Just a few months ago, TxDOT submitted a request for approval of their final environmental study for the Trans-Texas Corridor I-35 segment from the Federal Highway Administration and are awaiting its decision. “If they are not moving forward with the TTC concept, then why have they asked for its approval from the FHWA?” asked Smith, noting that until this action is taken, Mr. Saenz’s comments can be viewed as no more than a political statement.

The ECTSRPC was formed immediately after the Legislature adjourned in 2007, under a little-known statute of Section 391 of the Local Government Code. Section 391 allowed the five cities in Bell and Milam County which include Bartlett, Holland, Little-River Academy, Rogers and Buckholts, to form a regional planning commission to combat the Trans-Texas Corridor. Since that time, nine commissions have formed across the state forcing TxDOT to change their plans and appear to be working more closely with local governments.

“We appreciate the wisdom of the Texas Legislature to put laws into place in the Texas statute that gave us the ability to form a completely autonomous commission to fight the State’s lead transportation agency without any strings attached,” added Smith. “We hope the legislature will guard against any efforts to infringe on our local control.”

TxDOT has indicated it will be using their Corridor Advisory Committees and Corridor Segment Committees as a way to garner “local input” to guide them through their new plan. “That’s exactly why we formed our regional planning commission,” noted Smith who also pointed out that TxDOT’s corridor committees were not developed until after the local government commission began forming and requiring the agency to coordinate the TTC with their local governments.

TxDOT’s new plan does away with utilizing the Trans-Texas Corridor name and reduces the width of the corridor in most places from 1,200 feet to 600 feet. It also removes the “non-compete” clause from Comprehensive Development Agreements that prohibit improvements on existing highways.

“The only serious change is the removal of the ‘non-compete’ clause and most other changes are nothing more than window dressing,” stated Smith. “Although this is a great step in the right direction, we believe this is nothing more than a clever ruse prior to the Texas Legislature convening in Austin next week.” “There will be a new Speaker of the House and a new Chairman of the House Transportation Committee, which all legislation, good and bad for TxDOT, will have to pass through. What better political move could be made than an announcement that the TTC is dead right before the Session,” Smith concluded.

The ECTSRPC has held several coordination meetings with the agencies involved with the TTC project including Region 6 Environmental Protection Agency, TxDOT, Texas Parks and Wildlife, Texas Natural Resource Conservation Service and most recently the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. They have also received a letter from the FHWA making it clear they are currently in the process of reviewing the final environmental study for approval.

“We have no indication from TxDOT or any of the other agencies that they will be pulling back the TTC concept,” stated Smith.

Smith said the ECTSRPC’s next action will be completing the Draft Buckholts to Bartlett Rural Transportation Plan, which the 391 Statute authorizes them to prepare. “As the only planning agency in our region with the singular task of representing the rural communities in Eastern Bell County and Milam County, we felt it was critically important that we develop a transportation plan that reflects the view of the people who live here.” The first public meeting on the draft plan will take place January 13, 2008 in Holland at 6:30 p.m.


Contact: Mae Smith, President 254-657-2460

"We need to stick to our guns and make sure our cities and the folks who live within them are protected."

We Are Not Going To Back Down

1/6/09

Kathy Palmer, President
South Central Texas Sub-Regional Planning Commission
Copyright 2009

“The Trans Texas Corridor, as it was originally envisioned, is no more,” Karen Amacker (TxDOT spokesperson) told 1200 WOAI news just today.

Before we have “No More TTC Parties” however, let me explain what that means.
  • The TTC project instead of being one large project as originally proposed, will now be broken down into many smaller projects with each having their own individual name.
  • The width of the route will be changed from 1200 feet to approximately 600 feet in most places.
  • The route will still include in some areas, not only vehicular traffic, but rail and truck only lanes.
Please do not misunderstand me, this is a great accomplishment and one that would not have occurred had folks not decided enough was enough. What I hope to prevent however, is folks thinking we won the battle and therefore the war is over. It is far from over.

In TxDOT’s own Vision 2009 document (TxDOT-Vision-2009) page 5, you will see the following:

“What’s in a Name? Quite a lot. The Trans-Texas Corridor name has taken on unintended meaning that can obscure the facts. The Texas Department of Transportation has decided to put the name to rest. Instead, we will implement a corridor program that will house the tools of innovative project development and delivery springing from TTC events, but will use the names generally associated with individual projects from the beginning, such as State Highway 130, Interstate 69, and Loop 9.”

The DEIS (Draft Environmental Impact Statement) for the TTC concept is still under review and awaiting final approval from the Federal Highway Administration. TxDOT does not have any intent to dump that DEIS and start over, which means that if/when it is approved, it will have the original TTC concept in it thus allowing it to be used if TxDOT chooses to revert back to the original concept. I am not saying they will, but if folks do not stay vigilant and make sure they don’t, depending on who is in office and what the Texas Legislature allows or disallows, anything can happen.

Now you may ask, how does the Legislature have anything to do with the TTC Concept continuing?

The Legislature is who dictates the funding. If they withdraw the funding, then and only then will the project die. At that point, in order for any part of the project to move forward, funding must be found, whether it be state money, federal money or a combination thereof.

For those of us that have been involved in this for some time, we saw the writing on the wall of the name change when the Corridor Advisory Committee reports (See TTC I-35 report link HERE) stated that the TTC name evoked negative images in most Texan’s minds. We knew the only logical thing TxDOT could do was to dump the TTC name in the hopes that folks would then begin to back off.

I know I am not alone when I say that backing off now is the farthest thing from my mind.

I will be addressing the SCTSRPC in our meeting tomorrow and again tomorrow night at the East Central Citizen’s Forum to reiterate that now more than ever we need to stick to our guns and make sure our cities and the folks who live within them are protected.

It might take more effort now than before, since there may be more than one project related to the old “TTC” that will require coordination, but we did not form the Commission just to turn around and dissolve it at the drop of a hat.

I look forward to continuing working with TxDOT as we strive to assist them in providing for the transportation needs of the future while protecting what we have worked so hard to build in the past. Stay strong, stay focused, do your homework and research what you hear. Remember that knowledge is power.

Have a very Happy New Year!

© 2009 South Central Texas Sub-Regional Planning Commission: www.sctsrpc.blogspot.com

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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

"Until that law is changed in our legislative session this spring, they can still do whatever they want to do."

State Officials change Corridor Plan

1/6/09

By Donna McCollum
KTRE-TV (Lufkin - Nacodoches)
Copyright 2008

NACOGDOCHES COUNTY, TX - By trade Larry Shelton is a woodworker. When he's not building cabinets he joins the thousands of East Texas property owners in the fight against the Trans Texas Corridor.

"We were right in the middle of the proper corridor," said Shelton of his rural Nacogdoches County home. The voting member of the Piney Woods Sub Regional Planning Commission is the local voice facing state and federal agencies. He's not easily convinced hearing the news that TxDOT is calling TTC dead. "I'm not really surprised that it took TxDOT 5 years to come to the same conclusion that the people of Texas arrived at immediately," said Shelton.

In Martinsville, the corridor would have sliced right through the school district. Children wrote letters to government offices begging them to reconsider. But the children won't be learning a lesson of victory from their teacher, Jan Tracy, another grassroots advocate against the TTC. "It's very broad," referring to a law passed in 2003 supporting the transportation system. " "And until that law is changed in our legislative session this spring, they can still do whatever they want to do. That's what we're concerned about. "

You'll find the Independent Texans blog claiming "partial victory in fighting the mammoth Trans-Texas Corridor", but writers still call it a "TxDOT spin".

Major corridor projects will now comprise several small segments overseen by local interests. Nacogdoches County Judge Joe English is serving on the segment committee that runs from texarkana to the Angelina River bridge. "In the segment that will go through Nacogdoches County we'll have public hearings on it and get the public's input one more time. "

Like the corridor route, the debate is taking a different direction. You'll hear more opposition concerning toll roads and the use of private public contracts. The issues remain, no matter what the Trans Texas Corridor is called.

Gov. Rick Perry, during a conference call from Iraq, said the smaller version isn't a rejection of his vision. He says his office will continue to work with legislative leaders on building more highways.

Meanwhile, the Piney Woods Sub Regional Planning Commission will meet with TxDOT on January 22nd at the Nacogdoches County Courthouse.

© 2009 WorldNow and KTRE: www.ktre.com


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"This was the Tony Soprano version of highway construction."

Texas kills 50-year road building plan after outcry

1/6/08

By Jim Forsyth
Reuters
Copyright 2008

SAN ANTONIO- Texas road officials on Tuesday scrapped a $180 billion plan to build a giant system of toll roads and commuter rails criss-crossing the state in favor of a smaller slate of infrastructure projects.

The state Department of Transportation abandoned the Trans Texas Corridor, the centerpiece of Gov. Rick Perry's long-range transportation plan, after objections from communities and farm groups along the planned route, which would have involved seizing large swaths of private property.

In 2002, Perry unveiled an ambitious plan to build 4,000 miles (6,437 km) of transport corridors a quarter mile wide, which would include room for high-voltage power lines, commuter and freight rail lines, and five road lanes in each direction.

In an "updated vision" for the plan, Texas officials want to build several smaller, narrower segments stretching from San Antonio to the Oklahoma border and from the Rio Grande Valley to Texarkana.

"Texans have spoken, and we've been listening," said Amadeo Saenz, executive director of the Department of Transportation. The new plan "goes a long way toward addressing the concerns we've heard."

A spokeswoman for Perry said the new plan was welcomed.

"The Trans Texas Corridor was merely a concept," the spokeswoman, Allison Castle, said. "Transitioning to an updated vision for infrastructure in the state is a positive move."

President-elect Barack Obama has made rebuilding the nation's infrastructure a crucial part of his economic stimulus plan, and many governors, from California to New York, are already vying for dollars.

Investment banks have raised hundreds of millions of dollars to invest in infrastructure projects, and developers, long accustomed to doing deals overseas, are eager to launch projects in the United States.

The Texas Farm Bureau, as well as landowners along the proposed corridor, had heavily opposed the original plan because large swaths of private property would have been seized by the state through eminent domain proceedings.

"This would have been the largest taking of private property in the state's history," Farm Bureau spokesman Gene Hall said, noting that Over 500,000 acres (202,343 hectares) of land could have been transferred to state control from private hands.

Citizens groups like Corridor Watch have opposed the project for years, warning that Perry's push to raise funds by selling operating rights to private companies in exchange for highway building funds would raise costs for consumers.

"This was the Tony Soprano version of highway construction," David Stall of Corridor Watch said, referring to the HBO television series about a fictitious New Jersey mobster. "They give away the farm in exchange for a road project."

Such groups also warned that Perry's plan would have put Texas roads in the hands of foreign owners.

Spain's Cintra Concesiones de Infraestructuras de Transporte S.A. had been tapped to finance a portion of the megaroad project in exchange for leasing and operating rights for 50 years.

A Cintra spokesman was not immediately available to comment.

Legislators feared that private developers would benefit at the expense of taxpayers and they had already barred Perry from signing more deals in some areas.

That two-year moratorium on new deals expires in the second half of this year and citizens groups are calling on lawmakers to extend it.

(Additional reporting by Chris Baltimore in Houston and Joan Gralla in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)


© 2009 Thomson Reuters: www.uk.reuters.com

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“There has been nothing done other than the transportation director making this announcement using political doublespeak.”

TxDOT says ‘Trans-Texas Corridor’ is dead

1/6/08

By David Tanner, staff writer
LandLine Magazine
Copyright 2009

Texas transportation officials say the massive toll-road proposal known as the Trans-Texas Corridor is dead.

But Texas Department of Transportation Executive Director Amadeo Saenz said TxDOT will continue to pursue new infrastructure – including toll roads – under a revised plan unveiled Tuesday, Jan. 6, during the annual Texas Transportation Forum.

“The Trans-Texas Corridor, as a single project concept, is not the choice of Texans. So we’ve decided to put the name to rest,” Saenz stated in prepared remarks during the forum.

“That does not mean that we will abdicate our mission. We will still develop transportation projects that move Texas forward.”

Saenz said TxDOT will continue to use the financial tools authorized by law. Those include public-private partnerships and toll roads.

The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association has criticized the corridor plan since Gov. Rick Perry proposed it in 2002 because of, among other reasons, the proposed toll rate of 50 cents per mile for heavy trucks.

OOIDA has also opposed the private ownership of roadways by foreign companies. Texas officials had tapped Spanish company Cintra to design and build the first leg of the proposed Trans-Texas Corridor.

Saenz said the new plan, which he referred to as Innovative Connectivity in Texas/Vision 2009, will consist of individual projects instead of one large project or corridor.

But it looks like only the names have changed.

“Projects that had been developed under the heading of the Trans-Texas Corridor will now become a series of individual projects,” Saenz stated. “For example, Loop 9 in Dallas will be known and developed as Loop 9, not the ‘donut’ of TTC-35. Interstate 69 will be known and developed as Interstate 69, not Trans-Texas Corridor 69.”

Opponents of the Trans-Texas Corridor say it’s the same book but with a different cover.

“Not one law has been changed, and not one Texas Transportation Commission minute order has been rescinded,” Terri Hall, director of TURF, the Texans United for Reform and Freedom, told Land Line.

Hall said talk of the Trans-Texas Corridor being “dead” has been circulating for months in political circles.

“There has been nothing done other than the transportation director making this announcement using political doublespeak,” she said.

Lawmakers will convene next week in Austin for the 2009 legislative session.

Hall points out that there’s been a change in leadership in the state House since the previous session. Texas lawmakers meet in session every other year.

david_tanner@landlinemag.com

© 2009 LandLine Magazine: www.landlinemag.com

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"All of the individual projects that were adopted under the TTC umbrella will remain as stand-alone projects."

Trans Texas Corridor: Dead or Still Breathing?

1/6/09

By Kevin Davis
KXXV (Waco-Temple-Killeen)
Copyright 2008

AUSTIN - The reports of the death of the Trans Texas Corridor may have been greatly exaggerated.

Amadeo Saenz, executive director of TxDOT announced on Monday "the TTC is not the choice of Texans." However, on the same day, Governor Perry talking to reporters overseas suggested the move was mostly a name change, saying "The name 'Trans Texas Corridor' is over with. We're going to continue to build roads in the state of Texas."

In fact, all of the individual projects that were adopted under the TTC umbrella will remain as stand-alone projects. The method of funding through toll roads run by private-public partnerships will remain the same. The only major difference is the proposed mileage to be used by roads will drop from 1400 miles to only 300 miles.

Todd Hill, of Burnt Orange Report, says there are similar problems within the new implementation that haven't been fixed. For example, the revenue from the toll roads will go towards private entities, some of whom operate outside the country.

"If you're going to put a tollbooth up, it should be to pay for the infrastructure that you had built. Once it's paid for, take it down, but in this case they own the rights, they reap the benefits of it, and that money doesn't come back to Texas. All that money goes out of state, out of country, and disappears, and we still have the same transportation issues."

Hill sees the move by TxDOT as a way to change public perception at a critical time when the Obama administration is considering massive amounts of spending on infrastructure as part of its economic stimulus package. "By them chunking these projects into small pieces that they can get the funding they need to get these projects enacted and built and in essence you'll have the TTC come to fruition just in chunks in pieces."

The TTC has never been popular with Texans, let alone Central Texans, and Chris Lippencott of TxDOT admitted as much today in a press conference.

"As a department, TxDOT could have done a better job of explaining to people what we were trying to accomplish. I certain think there are folks who thought we had bit off more than we could chew, that we were focused on the wrong components of solving our transportation problems."

The final makeup of the plan formerly-known-as-Trans-Texas-Corridor won't solidify until the Obama Administration releases the details of its economic stimulus package. Until then, it's anyone's guess whether the result will be more like the TTC, or a completely new idea.


© 2009 KXXV www.kxxv.comm

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"If it is just a name change, and nothing more, I don't think that is going to do much to appease lawmakers."

Trans Texas Corridor is dead, TxDOT says

1/6/09

By MICHAEL A. LINDENBERGER
The Dallas Morning News
Copyright 2008

AUSTIN – After six years of bold plans, big talk and fierce pushback, the Texas Department of Transportation announced Tuesday that the Trans-Texas Corridor is dead, burying with it Gov. Rick Perry's visionary but controversial idea to string the state together with some 4,000 miles of highways, toll roads and rail lines.

"Make no mistake: The Trans-Texas Corridor as we have known it no longer exists," TxDOT executive director Amadeo Saenz said in a speech at an annual transportation conference. In its place will be a smaller, more deliberate plan that assesses individually each of the scores of projects once lumped together as part of the TTC.

The impact on Dallas-area projects should be minimal, TxDOT officials said. Local leaders had hoped that private firms selected to build the Trans-Texas Corridor would have eventually taken on two large projects in North Texas, including the Loop 9 toll road in southern Dallas and, much later, a 240-mile outer loop that planners have long envisioned for North Texas.

Neither of those projects has been awarded any state funding and will need to be built as toll roads, said Tim Nesbitt, Loop 9 project manager for TxDOT. But private firms have already expressed interest in Loop 9 and could well develop it as a standalone project even though the Trans-Texas Corridor is dead.

"I guess you could say Loop 9 is a desirable project in the eyes of the Cintra Zachry team," Nesbitt said, referring to one of two consortia previously selected to develop the early stages of the TTC. The project is still under environmental review and probably couldn't begin until 2012 under any circumstances, he noted.

But while the demise of the Trans-Texas Corridor won't stop road building in North Texas, its death serves as a milestone in the debate over the role that private toll roads, and tolls in general, should play in Texas – a debate that has raged since Perry unveiled his grand idea in 2002.

The Trans-Texas Corridor had always seemed more of a concept than an actual road plan. But at its core, the plan called for $175 billion in spending over the next 50 years to run highways, rail lines and data lines from Oklahoma to Mexico, and from east to west in southern Texas. It was routinely billed as the biggest transportation project since President Dwight Eisenhower persuaded Congress to launch the interstate highway system in the 1950s.

But beyond its huge scope, the most radical feature of the plan, and the part most cherished by Perry, was the proposal to let private companies foot huge portions of the bill. In return, they would earn the right to collect ever-increasing tolls from Texas drivers for decades to come.

Lawmakers initially went along with the idea, and in 2003 approved sweeping changes to Texas law to get the project started. But the idea, especially the way it would be financed, never gathered broad support.

And when TxDOT announced the TTC could take 1,200 feet of right-of-way through the length of Texas, rural landowners rebelled too, making the project one of the most controversial in modern Texas history. The issue dogged Perry throughout his 2006 re-election campaign and helped unite increasingly furious lawmakers, who in 2007 attempted to slow, but not kill, the project.

TxDOT, by its own admission, at first turned a deaf ear to the criticism. But in the past 18 months, it has spent hundreds of hours at dozens of public hearings trying to appease its critics. The crowds remained almost universally hostile.

The same lawmakers who were so angry in 2007 return to Austin next week for the 2009 session, and Tuesday's announcement by TxDOT chief Saenz showed that neither his agency nor the governor – whose staff was involved in the decision to kill the TTC – want to wage the same fight all over again.

"The Legislature has been clear; they want transformation," Saenz said. "That handwriting is on the wall, in big bold letters."

Perry sought to play down the significance of Saenz's announcement Tuesday. Talking to reporters from Iraq, where he was visiting soldiers, the governor said, "The fact of the matter is that we really don't care what name they attach to building infrastructure in the state of Texas. The key is that we have to go forward and build the infrastructure so that the state of Texas and our economy can continue to grow."

He noted, for instance, that the most important part of the plan to him, its reliance on private capital to help finance toll roads, remains a key priority and an approach he expects will be continued.

"We'll continue to use all the tools available to build the infrastructure," Perry said. "That's one of the reasons the Legislature agreed with us back through the previous legislative sessions that we needed to have more tools in our tool box, if you will, to build the needed infrastructure."

Whether lawmakers will go along with those plans is unclear. Faced with billions of dollars in unmet annual transportation needs, the state may embrace private toll roads as a last resort, but many lawmakers remain upset over what they see as Perry's high-handedness in pushing the TTC.

Sen. Robert Nichols, a former TxDOT commissioner, said lawmakers will be looking closely at Tuesday's change in plans. "If it is just a name change, and nothing more, I don't think that is going to do much to appease lawmakers," said Nichols, R-Jacksonville.

Leaders of the grassroots groups that have opposed the project from its beginning celebrated the news. They said the announcement went well beyond a simple name change. David Stall, co-founder of the advocacy group Corridor Watch, said Tuesday the will of the people had prevailed.

"It was a bad project pushed in the face of legislative and public opposition and now there is a price to pay," Stall said. "The result is a major victory. The overarching statewide Trans-Texas Corridor that was a reality is no longer."

Staff writer Christy Hoppe in Austin contributed to this report.

© 2009 The Dallas Morning news: www.dallasnews.com

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“I would be cautious to believe anything at this point from TxDOT.”

Not everyone believes Trans Texas Corridor is really dead

1/6/09

By Kevin Reece
KHOU-TV (Houston)
Copyright 2008

WALLER COUNTY -- When we last visited Odis Styers at his Hempstead ranch he sounded resigned to the fact that his life -- and his land -- were about to change. “I hate to say it’s a snowball headed downhill that you can’t stop, but it kind of appears that way,” Styers said.

That speeding snowball was the Trans Texas Corridor. The plan was to build lanes four football fields wide for cars, trucks and trains. The two superhighways were to stretch north to south across Texas.

It was to be built with the help of a Spanish company who would collect tolls in Texas for 50 years.

It would have gone through Styers ranch. He and other opponents were very vocal during a series of public hearings last February. The controversy even made it to YouTube with a video about the proposed "land grab."

TXDOT yielded to that pressure Tuesday and announced it is backing away from the grand plan formed six years ago.

“The Trans Texas Corridor, as it was originally envisioned, is no more,” said TxDOT's Karen Othon.

TxDOT said the project is “clearly not the choice of Texans."

In Waller County, however, they’re not celebrating yet because TxDOT isn’t saying the project is officially dead. Instead, they are saying they now have a new vision for the Trans Texas Corridor.

“I would be cautious to believe anything at this point from TxDOT,” said Trey Duhon III, a community activist.

Duhon and others point out that TxDOT's new vision has only made some of the proposed highways smaller. In fact, we asked if the original proposed corridors are now off the table.

“I cannot say for sure. I cannot say for sure," said Othon. "We’re still in the development stages.”

Governor Rick Perry spoke to us from Iraq Tuesday. "Well, I think the issue at hand here is it will substantially scale down, and the terminology of Trans Texas Corridor will go away.”

“I would be cautiously optimistic," responded Duhon. "I don’t think it’s going to change anything that we’re doing in trying to protect private property rights.”

Property rights they fear may still be at risk by a smaller highway with a different name.

© 2009 KHOU-TV: www.khou.com

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