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


WETLANDS:
West Eugene Transportation, Land and Neighborhood Design Solutions

SLIDESHOW:
virtual tour, hidden history

2 page summary (pdf)

Permanent Cancellation?
WEP not 100% dead yet

WEP removed from State Transportation plan November 2006, Feds issued No Build decision March 2007

  • ODOT needs to transfer wetlands to BLM for permanent cancellation - put a survey stake through WEP's heart
  • City of Eugene needs to rename City owned parcels as "parkland" to prevent a new WEP proposal

West Eugene Collaborative: two flavors of elites exclude 9 neighborhood groups
welcomes proposal for reviving half of the WEP

Fake Alternatives

top lies about WEP

WEP a Federal, not city, decision

WETLANDS alternative

  • Cost of Alternative ($17, $88 or $169 million)
  • Purpose and Need met by WETLANDS (not by WEP)
  • Avoidance criteria met by WETLANDS
  • Roosevelt Blvd. is a better connector between Beltline and 99, it serves northwest Eugene neighborhoods better than WEP could. Some local traffic would use Roosevelt, regional through traffic would bypass on Belt Line.
  • transfer WEP money to finish Beltline, fix Roosevelt / 99 intersection
    two options for completing Beltline: (1) if Peak Oil is here, (2) if Peak Oil is not yet here. The larger option could convert Beltline to an interstate highway - perhaps I-605?
  • transfer ODOT / City lands for WEP to BLM's West Eugene Wetlands Project
  • new roads: First - 99 - Second Connector, Barger Road Extended & Trainsong Connector (to NW Expressway)
  • fix West 11th intersections (would cost about $2 million, the cost to complete WEP study), other road repairs
  • bicycle paths and lanes, pedestrian safety enhanced by road test for drivers license renewals
  • land use shifts to coordinate transit and development, mixed use centers, co-housing neighborhoods
  • "Saving Oil in a Hurry" - practical steps toward coping with sudden energy shortages, road safety, speed limits
  • upgrade Amtrak to enable high speed trains to Seattle
  • Second and Garfield: ideal location for Eugene's new hospital (central & accessible)
  • I-5 / Beltline interchange: a practical, cheaper alternative ignored by ODOT
    I-5 Willamette River Bridge: a cheaper alternative
  • Bus Rapid Transit on Hwy 99 instead of WEP makes more sense

the money was not there

WEP would worsen traffic

articles

WEP dictionary

hidden history of the WEP

maps

one of the most illegal highways ever

West Eugene Wetlands

How $100 million could have been saved

originally prepared in 2002

Summary

The I-5 / Beltline project is the backbone of the effort to relocate downtown Eugene and Springfield to the "Gateway" area, part of the on-going "Californication" of the Willamette valley. A cheaper, less ugly alternative of "collector - distributor" (local/through) lanes, Bus Rapid Transit and LUTRAQ type land use shifts to support compact urban design in the Gateway / Coburg Road area would address the interchange safety and traffic capacity problems.


 

The most common complaint at the June 5, 2002 public hearing was that interchange safety issues should be separated from the project’s massive impacts on the Gateway commercial district. The EA needs to be rewritten as an Environmental Impact Statement (due to the considerable socioeconomic impacts, including induced growth facilitated by freeway expansion upon agricultural soils and the potential future expansion of the Urban Growth Boundary northward along I-5 to the river. This EIS should include a C-D / BRT / LUTRAQ alternative, which would solve the problem of separating safety concerns from capacity problems in a way that had "legal sufficiency" regarding "independent utility" and "segmentation." This alternative would meet the EA’s purpose and need.

This project would reconstruct the existing interchange into a giant Los Angeles style spaghetti bowl. Officially budgeted at $53 million in the "TransPlan" (the region’s highway budget), the current estimate ranges from $104 million to $122 million.

The Gateway Spaghetti Bowl would widen Beltline to 10 lanes west of I-5 (including ramps), one of the widest highways in Oregon. I-5 would also be widened to eight lanes between Beltline and I-105, which would require the demolition and reconstruction of the Harlow Road bridge over the freeway (there is not room for the extra southbound lanes underneath it). The Beltline overpass of I-5 would also need to be rebuilt to accommodate the proposed interchange design. Neither bridge reconstruction appears to be factored into the project’s cost. The EIS should provide an itemized list of construction costs for each segment of the project.

Beltline would have a much wider footprint west of I-5, requiring eminent domain condemnation of the Register-Guard's property between their parking lot and the current property line (on the south side - the parking lot and building would not be in the path). Several homes on the south side of Beltline might need to sell some of their backyards, according to figure 4-3 in the Environmental Assessment, and the reconstruction of Harlow Road over I-5 would probably force condemnation of a few homes on the west side of the interstate.

This boondoggle is a key part of the long-term effort to relocate downtown Eugene and Springfield to the Coburg Road and Gateway areas. However, a major component of the relocation - the new Peace Wealth hospital site on the McKenzie River floodplain - is not yet part of this highway plan. Once the hospital discloses its plans, even more highway construction would be planned, at even greater cost. While it is true that final design plans have not been revealed, NEPA requires environmental analysis to include discussion of projects that are reasonably forseeable. In contrast, the EA did not even mention the hospital plans, let alone begin preliminary analysis of the hospital (and associated facilities) impact on Springfield traffic patterns. This omission makes the entire EA invalid.

This project would be more appropriate for southern California than Oregon. A much cheaper alternative could be implemented, borrowing from Portland’s "Land Use, Transportation, Air Quality" solution (which substituted land use shifts and improved public transportation for the "Western Bypass").

A LUTRAQ solution for Gateway could include fixing the "merge / weave" problems at the cloverleaf with "collector - distributor" lanes to separate interchange from through traffic Northbound I-5 already has a c/d lane, and the Environmental Assessment states that it had one-third the number of accidents of the southbound I-5 segment between 1994 and 1998. This could be done for much less money than the EA proposed alternative, which would make I-5 and Beltline the widest highways in Oregon, larger than anything I've seen in Portland.

A second component would be taking the proposed Bus Rapid Transit system seriously as a way to cope with congestion, rather than as a token afterthought. The EA has TWO PARAGRAPHS that mentions BRT (pp. 2-5 & 3-27), and ignores any consideration of using BRT to reduce traffic congestion or transit oriented development to utilize BRT. The region is likely to get money for the BRT or the now-doubled-in-cost I-5 / Beltline interchange, and we must choose as a region which project is more likely to be needed in 2025, after the peak of world oil produtcion. BRT is planned to make a loop from downtown Springfield to Gateway to Coburg Road to downtown Eugene – but ODOT’s plans for the area barely mention it. Making BRT function well would require addressing poor land use design in north Eugene and Springfield that makes any transportation facility - highway or transit - unable to address congestion.

A third suggestion is to contract the Urban Growth Boundary to prevent traffic congestion and preserve farmland along the McKenzie River. There is a lot of farmland slated for what is euphemistically called "development" north of Beltline on both sides of I-5. If these plans are built, Beltline, Coburg, and Gateway will be snarled beyond repair. Last year, Symantec clearcut a filbert orchard for its new facility, a building now being mothballed as the company has decided to outsource its operations to a subcontractor (which will be located back in downtown Eugene). Figures 3-8 and 3-10 in the EA show that the current land use plans seek to pave all of the remaining farmland inside the UGB, paving over prime soils on both sides of I-5. (It’s not easy to grow food on poor quality clay soils on the hillsides, something that planners should learn before approving more soil destruction.) Perhaps Springfield will rename its "Filbert Festival" the "Peace Health Pavement" festival. If Eugene and Springfield focused on downtown revitalization at a serious level, this sprawl could be prevented - and there would not be any "need" for the Los Angeles style Spaghetti Bowl.

 

Ultimately, if the farmland is paved over north of Beltline inside the UGB, there would be immense pressure to expand the UGB all the way north to the McKenzie River (riverfront speculative development can be very profitable, if the global economy holds together that long), including a new I-5 interchange between Beltline and the McKenzie River (there is enough room to add a new, modest sized interchange outside the current UGB, which would reduce the pressure at Beltline/Coburg Road - but there is no money for any of this).