The Fayette Citizen-News Page

Wednesday, July 25, 2001

State highway help: Don't hold your breath

Fayette's road projects remain on back burner

By DAVE HAMRICK
dhamrick@TheCitizenNews.com

Don't expect progress anytime soon on federally funded road projects in Fayette County.

"We've had some stumbling blocks in getting projects pushed through the process," admitted David Millen, project engineer for the state Department of Transportation.

Millen oversees federally funded road projects in a multi-county region that includes Fayette, and fielded questions from local residents and officials during a town hall meeting Monday on transportation issues hosted by state Sen. Mitch Seabaugh.

Seabaugh organized meetings in the two counties he represents, Fayette and Coweta, this week.

Although plans to widen Ga. Highway 54 from Ga. Highway 74 into Coweta County are listed in Millen's work program for this fiscal year, the Atlanta Regional Commission is expected to approve a transportation plan Tuesday that lists the project for completion in 2010, according to Fayette County Commission Chairman Greg Dunn, who is the county's representative on the ARC.

Air quality attainment is to blame for the holdup, he said. Although $8 billion in federal funding for Atlanta region projects has been freed up and difficulties over air quality ironed out at least for now Fayette's projects are on a back burner, Dunn said.

That's because at the time the air quality issues were resolved, the projects hadn't yet been subjected to the model being used by the federal government to determine how much each project will affect air quality, and ARC is fearful that pushing any of those projects forward might jeopardize the whole funding package, said Millen.

"It's where they were in the process when the air quality issue hit us," he said.

The Hwy. 54 project actually is slated for 2002 on the ARC plan, Dunn said, but the bridge over Line Creek associated with that project is listed for 2010.

"It certainly does not make sense to have a four-lane road with a two-lane bridge," Dunn said. ARC also places a lower priority on Fayette projects, Dunn added, because other counties' traffic problems are far worse.

"Hopefully, some of these things can be shifted in funding," Millen said, but didn't hold out much hope of that.

DOT hopes to start buying right of way soon for the Hwy. 54 project, Fayette's top priority, Millen said. The idea is to get all the preliminary work done and then shelve the projects, hopeful that funding will be shifted when some other project drops off the list due to unforeseen delays.

Several other counties have a leg up on Fayette, though, he said, because they have special purpose local option sales taxes devoted to transportation. "They have that big pot of money they can use to buy right of way and do preliminary engineering, and when the money becomes available they're ready to go," he said.

Without a SPLOST, Fayette must wait until DOT can find the money, and with billions being funneled into major public transportation projects and larger road projects like the so-called Northern Arc the first phase of an outer perimeter those funds are hard to come by, he added.

Another problem, he said, is a mandate from federal safety agencies to replace 50 bridges within the next three years. Those projects come from "a different pot of money," but getting them done will occupy a lot of DOT's attention, he said.

Among major projects Fayette officials hope to see funded in the foreseeable future are the Hwy. 54 widening, widening Hwy. 74 from 54 to Ga. Highway 85, widening Hwy. 85 from Hwy. 74 to Ga. Highway 92, widening Hwy. 54 east to the county line, widening Hwy. 92 south from Jimmie Mayfield Boulevard to McBride Road, and building the first phase of a pedestrian path along Redwine Road.

The Hwy. 54 east project might get done sooner than others, said Millen, because it's tied in with higher priority projects in Clayton County.

Faced with lack of progress on the major projects, residents attending the meeting had to content themselves with informing Millen and local transportation officials of problems on local streets and roads.