The Norman Transcript

Local news

October 28, 2008

Rail group criticizes ODOT

?OnTrac members wants to see Crosstown Expressway shifted

OKLAHOMA CITY --?Oklahoma Department of Transportation officials were criticized for their tactics at a Monday press conference at the state Capitol.

The criticism comes from a group that has been promoting a 200-foot shift of the Interstate-40 Crosstown Expressway to preserve the Union Station railyard and central Oklahoma's future intermodal hub opportunities.

Oklahomans for New Transportation Alternatives Coalition or OnTrac held the press conference to respond to recent statements by ODOT director Gary Ridley and to urge Gov. Brad Henry to listen to all sides.

Ridley wrote letters to the mayors of four communities that passed resolutions asking Gov. Brad Henry to convene an independent gubernatorial commission to evaluate rail transportation needs in central Oklahoma. The cities are Norman, Shawnee, Chickasha and El Reno.

Ridley asked the cities to hear an ODOT presentation and reconsider the current Interstate-40 Crosstown alignment.

One city --?Shawnee -- took a vote on whether to rescind their resolution, after a request by Oklahoma Secretary of Transportation Phil Tomlinson, a Shawnee resident. It was turned down by a 5-2 vote of the city commissioners. El Reno and Chickasha are the other cities that passed resolutions, although neither has reconsidered their original vote.

"A lot of hard questions by Shawnee councilmembers and they did not back down," said OnTrac political director Dr. Charles Wesner, a retired Norman dentist.

Ridley wrote in his Oct. 15 letter to Mayor Cindy Rosenthal that modifying the engineering for the Crosstown Expressway would result in a five-to-eight year delay and an additional cost of $240 million to $340 million.

"It will be extremely difficult for the department to guarantee the safe operation of this fracture critical bridge to the year 2020," Ridley wrote.

OnTrac communications director Marion Hutchison questioned Ridley's numbers and time lag and said highway engineers had told them that reengineering the Crosstown to move parts of it about 200 feet to the south and add two rail overpasses would cost about $30 million to $50 million.

"It's going to cost a lot more than $30 million or $40 million to put back in a hub," Hutchison said, if the railyard is destroyed. "All we are asking is that we have an opportunity to discuss this."

He said the change in the Environmental Impact Statement could be accomplished by an amendment and should not have to be redone. Ridley wrote that the the EIS took from 1996 to 2002 to complete.

Hutchison said preserving the railyard was especially important with recent $4 a gallon gasoline prices and ozone restrictions.

OnTrac officials alleged that ODOT had issued "not very veiled threats," against future highway projects in the four cities.

One of the instances cited was ODOT's announcement just before the rail resolution vote by Norman city councilmembers that closing the Lindsey Street interchange could be part of the $108 million Interstate-35 widening project, negatively impacting Norman businesses in that area.

Another option offered by ODOT officials for the Lindsey Street interchange was bisecting the new $19 million Marc Heitz Chevrolet store with an access road.

"We took that as a not very veiled threat," said state Rep. Wallace Collins, D-Norman, OnTrac legislative director. "I think it was the heavy hand of government. We think that's what's going on around the central Oklahoma communities. They're pressuring us to back down."

Ridley had also indicated the Little Flower Church, Wheeler Park, the Latino Community Development Agency and the Neighborhood Services Organization would probably be destroyed if the Crosstown Expressway was relocated.

Hutchison showed maps at the press conference that appeared that all the affected parties would be intact with the adjustment of the highway and said the right-of-way purchased and cleared by ODOT was sufficient.

Garl Latham of Latham Railway Services of Irving, Texas has formerly worked with the Dallas Area Rapid Transit System or DART.

Latham said the Oklahoma City railyard is the nexus of transportation for the state.

This is why it's an issue to well beyond the central Oklahoma area," he said. "We are talking about something that can't be replicated. ... This is a very critical juncture for future transportation planning."

Norman's mayor said Monday evening that they have not heard back from Gov. Henry in response to her Sept. 26 letter that accompanied a copy of Norman's rail resolution passed three days earlier.

Rosenthal said when she received the letter from Ridley she shared it with other councilmembers. She said only one councilmember got back to her on it.

"Nobody has asked that we reconsider," she said of the councilmembers, although the councilmember in question suggested they listen to the ODOT presentation.

She noted that Norman's resolution did not say ODOT had all the facts, nor did OnTrac have all the facts.

"The whole part of the resolution is to bring together all the parties who have relevant facts," she said. "We would like the governor to take one last look at it."

Wesner said ODOT has never taken their proposal seriously.

"And the governor has never seen it. He totally takes ODOT's advice," Wesner said.

Hutchison said work on the Crosstown has been suspended because of a ruling from the Federal Surface Transportation Board that ruled the abandonment of one of the lines going into Union Station had been misrepresented.

ODOT spokeswoman Terri Angier told The Associated Press that a statement from Ridley would be forthcoming.

Carol Cole-Frowe 366-3538 ccole@normantranscript.com

Text Only
Local news
  • Memorial Day Veterans, community remember the fallen

    Wesley Carroll lives on, but countless numbers of his friends and family have been laid to rest after their service in conflicts dating as far back as the 18th century....

    May 28, 2012 1 Photo

  • Deputies arrest 10

    Cleveland County sheriff’s deputies made 10 arrests in a Saturday night and early Sunday morning saturation patrol....

    May 28, 2012

  • Troopers release name in Thunderbird drowning

    Oklahoma Highway Patrol troopers have released the deceased’s name in a weekend drowning at Lake Thunderbird....

    May 28, 2012

  • Holiday fun

    Sunday wasn’t just another church night at Harvest Church. The church’s pre-Memorial Day fellowship event featured a monster truck show, bike stunts and fireworks, among other things....

    May 28, 2012

  • Volunteers clean up Bishop Creek

    Norman’s Bishop Creek is home to a lot more than frogs, turtles and water skimmers, a group of volunteers say....

    May 27, 2012

  • Missouri Daily Life More travelers to hit the road this Memorial Day

    NEW YORK — More Americans will hit the road this holiday weekend than a year ago. And they’ll have a bit more money to spend thanks to lower gas prices....

    May 27, 2012 1 Photo

  • OBA names officers

    TULSA — Brad Swickey, president and CEO of Valliance Bank in Oklahoma City, was inducted as chairman of the Oklahoma Bankers Association at the OBA’s 115th Leadership Forum and Annual Convention, held May 14 and 15 at the Renaissance Hotel ...

    May 27, 2012

  • Rig count down by 3 to 1,983

    HOUSTON — The number of rigs actively exploring for oil and natural gas in the U.S. is down three this week to 1,983....

    May 27, 2012

  • Cornerstone Metals Recycling opens in Norman

    Cornerstone Metals Recycling has officially opened a recycling facility in Norman at 2350 Industrial Blvd. The facility will provide easy access drive-through for recyclers in the Norman area including South Oklahoma City, Moore and Pauls ...

    May 27, 2012

  • Agriculture Department spurring exports

    International Market Development Coordinator Barbara Charlet is constantly finding new ways to introduce Oklahoma’s agricultural products to foreign markets. With 18 years of experience in the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and ...

    May 27, 2012

The Business Marquee
Facebook