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State Legislature Devises Plan to Fix Highway
Trouble spots
The plan includes the state's share of major projects
including the Alaska Way Viaduct and 520 Bridge replacement.
What does the 2005 Funding Package promise for future transportation
investment in Washington?
The 2005 Washington State Legislature provided a 16-year
expenditure plan to take care of some of Washington State's
most critical transportation needs. Over 270 projects will
be funded by package that will make roads and bridges safer
as well as ease choke points on the system. The following
is on overview of what type of projects are included in the
funding.
At-Risk Structures - $2.98 billion for
30 projects
The "At-Risk Structures" category includes $2.98
billion to rehabilitate or replace 30 existing bridges. The
work will extend the lifetime of the bridges to ensure they
can continue to meet daily needs, as well as stand up to earthquakes
and the eroding effects of moving water.
- Alaskan Way Viaduct - $2 billion
This is the State's contribution towards replacing this
aging and earthquake vulnerable structure.
- SR 520 Bridge - $500 million
The State's contribution towards replacement of the SR 520
floating bridge. The money will complete the design work
and some construction. Additional funding is expected from
tolling and regional sources.
- Bridge Seismic Retrofit - Central Puget Sound $87 million
These projects will strengthen supporting columns of bridges
to resist earthquake damage. Central Puget Sound has two
seismic zones with the highest ground movement in the state.
Other Seismic Improvements: 152 bridges
for $87 million
- Bridge Replacements - $391 million, 26 projects:
Replaces bridges that are deteriorating and/or are too narrow
for current usage. The work will also improve the environment
for fish and habitat.
- Safety Investments - $279 million for 106 projects
Projects statewide with high accident histories, run-off-the-road
or median crossover dangers.
Strategies include:
- Remove fixed objects on the roadside
- Install guardrail
- Build passing lanes to reduce or prevent head on collisions
- Illuminate county road intersections to avoid nighttime
accidents
- Replace intersections with interchanges to prevent broadside
collisions
- Widen roads to provide inattentive drivers an opportunity
to recover prior to leaving the roadway
- Build sidewalks and pedestrian bridges and install pedestrian
signals to provide pedestrians a safer walk.
These projects will provide the following
performance outcomes:
- Fix problems at 52 specific high accident locations and
corridors
- Install 73 miles of cable median barrier to protect motorists
from crossover accidents on multi-lane highways
- Add approximately 25 new lane miles of roadway
- Reduce the number of injury accidents by approximately
1100 per year (24 percent reduction in the number of accidents
within the project limits)
Multi Modal Improvements - $94.8 million
for 8 projects
Passenger Rail
Improving Amtrak Cascades service with:
- Projects that will support better on-time performance
- Greater track capacity at King Street Station
- Upgrades to state-owned train equipment
Environmental - $108 million for 21 projects, plus funding
for future fish barrier removal projects
Projects to address existing environmental impacts from previous
highway construction.
This work includes:
- Removing fish passage barriers, which prevent fish from
moving upstream to spawn
- Repairing a chronic roadway problem that repeatedly creates
environmental impacts to fish as a result of in-stream work
needed to protect the highway from failing.
- Building new storm water run-off projects to ensure the
slow discharge of clean water into streams and lakes for
fish and public use.
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