SUSTAINABLE EUGENE?
Eugene Sustainability Quiz
Eugene Sustainability Commission
steps toward sincere sustainability
City Manager or democracy?
Regional Transportation Plan: $817 million for roads
2010-2015: Cities & County $186.5 million for roads
EWEB's $85 million new maintenance yard
U of O Arenas - Bus Rapid Transit - big box stores
hospitals - disasters - intelligent urban design - trains
grass seed to grains - food security, no more field burning

WEST EUGENE PORKWAY
WETLANDS: West Eugene Transportation, Land and Neighborhood Design Solutions - WEP alternative
Mayoral Election bypasses highway history
Kitty Piercy's West Eugene Collaborators excluded neighborhood groups, tolerates half a WEP
Jim Torrey wasted money promoting WEP after June 2001 "No Build" consensus by Fed, State, County & City
the 2001 City vote for the WEP - a federal, not local, decision
WEP violated laws signed by Nixon and LBJ
Lane County: Bobby Green vs. Rob Handy

related websites: forestclimate.org - oilempire.us - permatopia.com - road-scholar.org
feedback to mark at permatopia dot com

 

2004 Lane Council of Governments report admits WEP traffic snarl

graphics below copied from

Congestion Management System Baseline Report
for the Central Lane Transportation Management Area

September 2004

on the web at www.lcog.org/PDF/CMS09-01final.pdf

v/c stands for "Volume to Capacity" - a measurement of traffic congestion. Note that this graphic means LCOG admits the WEP would overload 6th and 7th Avenues and Interstate 105 (Washington-Jefferson bridge). Fixing Beltline is the real express connection between Interstate 5 and the western edge of the metropolitan region.

 

 

a close-up view of the above graphic

 

1997 Supplemental Draft EIS admits WEP would clog 6th and 7th

 

 

 

1996 ODOT traffic study shows 6th and 7th would be oversaturated

An arterial road such as the 6th / 7th couplet has an approximate capacity of 10,000 cars per lane per day (source: ODOT "Main Street" publication, also FHWA personal communication).

Note that 7th Avenue east of Garfield Street would be at 54,000 cars per day, more than the approximate 40,000 cars per day capacity.

FHWA's "Logical Termini" standards require a project to consider impacts beyond the ostensible terminus if the project forces additional road construction not analyzed and approved in the environmental document. Therefore, since the WEP would overload road capacity beyond the eastern terminus of Garfield Street, the EIS needs to include the "downstream" impacts that WEP traffic would have on this road.