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

These photos were taken May 25, 2005 at an ODOT presentation at Willamette High School in north Eugene. The eastern terminus photo shows a significant expansion of the WEP design compared to earlier designs used in the 1997 Supplemental Draft EIS (the design used to sell the WEP to the Eugene voters in 2001) and the subsequent "Alternative A Mitigated" design crafted in 2003. Citizens who want to know what schemes are being hatched by ODOT and its contractors have to attend - in person - these intermittent events in order to learn about these sorts of subtle design changes that carry very large price tags. While the maps were shown to the public for viewing, ODOT staff and their contractor did not call attention to this substantial change in design.

In October 2005, ODOT unveiled a new variation that eliminated the grade separated overcrossings of WEP at 6th / 7th Avenues, and reverted back to the Couplet Alternative that was discarded in 1985 as unpopular and unworkable. A detailed description will be posted on this site shortly.

 

Eastern Terminus

WEP grade separated interchange over southbound 7th Avenue
a larger option than 1997 "Modified Alternative" and 2003 design changes
note that eastbound WEP would overcross 7th Avenue and then merge into it
1997 design considered until 2004 would have eastbound WEP terminate at new street light near existing 5th / 7th intersection

Eastbound WEP traffic would not be able to turn left to access northbound Highway 99.

This map was posted on ODOT's website in January 2006, it makes the ramp configuration of this alternative much more clear.

 

 

WEP / Seneca - Bertelsen intersections

WEP would not have left turns onto Seneca north or southbound
(Seneca would have left turns onto WEP in both directions)
This truncated design was selected due to extreme congestion at WEP / Seneca that would require an expensive grade separated interchange to accommodate all directions of travel. Westbound WEP traffic would need to turn at Bailey Hill and then double back on 7th Avenue to reach southbound Seneca. Eastbound WEP traffic would need to go south on Bailey Hill, west on 7th and then north on Seneca to reach the industrial area north of Seneca / WEP.

Much of the forest around the WEP / Bailey Hill intersection is part of Bertelsen Nature Park, administered by the BLM.

 

Bertelsen intersection

The WEP would decimate the Bertelsen Nature Park area east of Bertelsen Road. Bertelsen Slough, an important tributary of Amazon Creek, is southeast of the proposed intersection.

 

 

Beltline / WEP interchange

Danebo overcrossing, no WEP connection

 

 

Terry Street Extended / Amazon Creek Crossing

The WEP bridge over Amazon Creek would be just west of the Terry Street / WEP intersection. Most of the land around the Terry Street / Amazon Creek area is part of the BLM nature park (the forested area that would be sliced by the Terry Street extension is a tree farm owned by the Weyerhauser plywood factory on Danebo Avenue). The new bicycle path is the white line along Amazon Creek, and the railroad line is barely visible in this photo (it crosses Danebo between the words "Danebo" and "Ave" and it goes under Beltline about the location of the letter "B").

 

 

WEP / Green Hill intersection - at western edge of Eugene

The northeast, southeast and southwest quadrants around this intersection are mostly BLM preservation lands. The northwest quadrant is land owned by ODOT and it is reserved for future "wetland mitigation" area to offset the destruction of intact ecosystems, a practice mandated by the Clean Water Act yet is a poor imitation of natural processes. There is not enough land in the West Eugene Wetlands to properly "mitigate" all of the impacts of the Porkway plus all of the associated paving that would follow in the wake of the WEP (more big box stores, more subdivisions, tributary roads, etc.)