February 12, 2012 - 02:39
     
Environmental groups oppose Corridor K
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Conservation groups in Tennessee and North Carolina said last week they are encouraged by news that the agencies are looking at developing two-lane routes mostly along existing roads, which, with necessary improvements, would meet the transportation needs of local communities.

Environmental and conservation groups are lining up to oppose Corridor K routes through the mountains while supporting improvements to existing highways, according to news releases from several organizations.

Conservation groups in Tennessee and North Carolina said last week they are encouraged by news that the agencies are looking at developing two-lane routes mostly along existing roads, which, with necessary improvements, would meet the transportation needs of local communities.  Previous proposals for completing the unfinished segments of Corridor K focused on cutting new highways through the Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee and the Nantahala National Forest in North Carolina.  Both DOTs are now considering two-lane alternatives with lighter environmental footprints at significantly reduced costs to federal and state taxpayers.

"A massive, four-lane highway through the mountains of this region is overkill, both in terms of the price tag and environmental harm. It's great news the agencies are considering more reasonable alternatives," said DJ Gerken with the Southern Environmental Law Center. In North Carolina, he said, the DOT's own studies show that improvements to existing two-lane highways in the project area will exceed the needed traffic capacity for decades.  "They can't ignore an alternative that costs half as much and avoids paving through an environmental treasure. Federal law is clear on this."

NCDOT, in its draft environmental study released in August 2008, presented a project that would cost $378 million and cut a 2,870-foot tunnel under the Snowbird Mountains, requiring excavation of 3 million cubic yards of rock.  Conservation groups and citizens protested, arguing that reasonable improvements to existing two-lane roads in the area would serve local traffic needs at less than half the cost and with far less impact on the pristine Stecoah and Cheoah Bald Areas of western North Carolina.  The Army Corps of Engineers, which must issue permits for the remaining sections of Corridor K in both states, HYPERLINK "http://www.southernenvironment.org/uploads/fck/file/corridor_k/Corps letter to NCDOT Oct 2009.pdf"told NCDOT in October it must consider the alternative of upgrading and improving existing two-lane roads.

"We are extremely gratified that NC DOT will be giving full consideration to the alternative of upgrading and improving existing two-lane highways. A new four-lane highway through sensitive mountain habitat would have unacceptably destructive impacts to wildlife habitat and water quality. Upgrading existing highways has always made the most sense," said Hugh Irwin with the Southern Appalachian Forest Coalition.

In Tennessee, TDOT is weighing alternatives for completing the section of Corridor K through the Ocoee River Gorge. In a recent report to a citizen's advisory panel convened to help TDOT consider design options, the agency confirmed its intention to give full consideration to alternatives that improve existing two-lane highways. It outlined a range of possible two-lane and four-lane routes, including a corridor based on existing Highway 64, and estimated the two-lane options would cost as little as half the four-lane options.  The most expensive option, construction of a new four-lane highway through the Cherokee forest north of the Highway 64, would cost as much as $1.3 billion, whereas improvements to Highway 64 could be completed for as little as $304 million.

"WaysSouth is pleased at this signal that agencies are beginning to recognize that the historic approach of building more and bigger highways is neither environmentally nor economically sustainable," said Jim Grode, executive director of WaysSouth.

"The Sierra Club has long been advocating reasonable and practical alternatives to road projects.  We are gratified that the Corps of Engineers in North Carolina and now TDOT for the Ocoee segment of Corridor K have recognized that four-lane superhighways may not be appropriate for the southern Appalachian mountains," said Axel Ringe with the Tennessee Chapter of the Sierra Club.

The Southern Environmental Law Center has placed the Ocoee region on its “Top 10 Endangered Areas in the South list, noting “The Ocoee Region’s natural attractions are in the path of ‘Corridor K,’ an outdated plan to link Chattanooga and Asheville with an unbroken chain of four-lane highways. Completing Corridor K with these interstate-size roads would devastate wildlife habitat, send polluted runoff into clear-running streams, and take a huge and unnecessary bite out of taxpayers’ wallets.” SELC is making the case that there is little need for all this new asphalt, that there are better and more efficient ways to promote economic development, and that massive new highways would jeopardize the region’s true economic engine: the scenic beauty and natural features that drive outdoor recreation and tourism.

 


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