[Texgreen] Fwd: MoPac Tolls

Bill Holloway bill.holloway@gmail.com
Mon, 15 Jan 2007 22:15:27 -0600


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sondra Sondregger <ohnereue@mac.com>
Date: Jan 15, 2007 8:11 PM
Subject: what do you think?
To: Bill Holloway <bill.holloway@gmail.com>




BEN WEAR: GETTING THERE

Looking at 'managed' tolls on new MoPac lanes
Monday, January 15, 2007




Amid all the roiling about whether several Austin highways should be
expanded as tollways, plans to add toll lanes to MoPac Boulevard (Loop
1) have been churning away quietly below the radar.

That's about to change.

In mid-March, the Texas Department of Transportation will release a
detailed proposal to add "managed lanes" to MoPac between Town Lake
and Parmer Lane. And if all goes smoothly =97 a huge "if" in the world
of public policy and highway construction =97 MoPac north of the river
could have eight lanes by the end of 2010. That's one more on each
side.

But you 'd have to pay to use those two new lanes.

Which brings us back to managed lanes, an approach that would be a
Central Texas first if it happens on MoPac. But not necessarily a
last.

Austin City Council Member Brewster McCracken has been pushing managed
lanes as an alternative to creating full-fledged toll roads on U.S.
183, Texas 71 and other highways in a proposed second wave of tollways
dubbed Phase 2.

The MoPac project is considered Phase 3, though it might occur before Phase=
 2.

So what's a managed lane?

That can vary, both in design and toll scheme, from place to place.
But it's a lane that might be free for some vehicles such as buses or
carpools and charge tolls for other vehicles. In some cases, there is
"congestion pricing" in which the toll rate rises and falls to assure
that the managed lane remains free-flowing. If traffic congests, the
price would go up to temporarily cull users.

John Kelly, the Transportation Department's lead consultant on the
MoPac project, provided general details of the $102 million plan.

=95No added right of way: Central Austin neighborhoods made it clear
years ago that MoPac shouldn't expand outward. And the Union Pacific
railroad, at least for now, is loathe to give up some of its 60 feet
of right of way. But, Kelly says, he and his team, on paper, have
contrived to wedge a fourth lane into the skinniest section of MoPac
from Town Lake to RM 2222. Which means . . .

=95Narrower lanes: MoPac lanes, 12 feet wide in most places, would go to
11 feet. However, the two added lanes would be 12 feet wide, with a
4-foot buffer from the three free lanes, allowing people to drive
around stalled or wrecked cars in the managed lane. Aside from
scattered 11-foot sections on MoPac, officials say there are 11-foot
lanes across Central Texas.

=95No concrete barriers: The managed lanes would be separated from
existing lanes with stripes and flexible pylons. There would be entry
and exits points at each end and two places in between.

=95Who pays? That will be subject to debate. But Kelly recommends that
no tolls be charged only for buses and van pools.

Want to know more about managed lanes?

The Transportation Department has scheduled a forum on them at 6 p.m.
Tuesday at the Thompson Conference Center on the University of Texas
campus.

Getting There appears Mondays. For questions, tips or story ideas,
contact Getting There at 445-3698 or bwear@statesman.com.


--=20
"When you pray, move your feet."

     -- African proverb