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http://www.tfhrc.gov/pubrds/05jul/07.htm good source of info http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/03/04/wroad04.xml
Construction for TTC-35 will likely not begin before 2010; I'm not sure about TTC-69 but it's probably similar. TTC-35 alignment-specific "tier two" planning can't even begin until the process for selecting a general route (4-10 mile wide possible alignment path) is complete, which will be late 2007. I suppose when a photo for SH 130 shows up, it could be captioned as roughly like, "Although the width of its right-of-way is only half that of the planned TTC-35, SH 130, shown here, is expected to be the TTC-35 segment through the Austin area." What might be more useful, however, would be a map of Texas showing the preferred routes, nonphotoness notwithstanding. Deh 12:20, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Re: the fact that all of the proposed highways lead to Mexico:
Has anyone asked "WHY are we doing this?"
Since the entire Trans-Texas Corridor will be approximately 4000 miles long and the widest portion of any corridor will 1200 feet (slightly less than 1/4 mile) why is the required land nine times as much as the total area of all the corridors?
There are gross inaccuracies in official statements about the TTC. The first section above states a "1200 foot" wide corridor. Gov. Perry's web site, Priorities - Contention/Reality, states "roughly twice the width of the interstate highway". The Trans Texas Corridor web site, KeepTexasMoving, states in their RAC 1, that "the corridor has a centerline length of approximately 506 miles and an area of approximately 4983 square miles", that is an average width of 9.85 miles. The web site goes on to say, in direct contradiction to the 1200 foot width stated above and the Governor's estimate, that "the corridor proceeds south as a 4 mile wide corridor centered on I 35 just north of Denton, Texas. Here it becomes a ten mile wide corridor...." With inaccuracies of this magnitude, how much faith can be put in the veracity of the other statements made by the proponents of the project.<!- - [2] [3] - -> Original complaints from: User:Wbthomasiii 18:32, 18 January 2007.
Parts of this section sounds to me like a beat up by those opposed to the concept with limited basis in fact. Is it really possible in US or Texan law and has there really been any suggestion that land is going to be purchased via eminent domain and then sold for a profit to developers for redevelopment in whatever way they see fit to finance the project? This is what the above seems to suggest to me. I would have thought land could only be acquired to be used for the corridor and therefore there is no profit going on here. Also siezed hardly seems NPOV to me. Unless I'm mistaken the land will still be bought, even though the agreement of the owner need not be obtained. Siezed suggest no due compensation will be paid ala Mugabe. Something like acquired as we already use is sufficient. Nil Einne 19:34, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
Please stop adding inaccurate information. Statements like "The Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC) is a transportation network funded by foreign spanish investors in the planning and early construction stages in the U.S. state of Texas." are completely false considering that only a small portion, (Segments 5 and 6) of SH 130, is being built by Cintra-Zachry. Whether either one will be involved in later projects concerning TTC-10, TTC-35, or TTC-69, etc... is yet to be seen. Most of the entire network is still in the planning phase and no contract has been written yet. Putting a statement like that in the first sentence is very misleading and completely wrong. If you want to address the Cintra involvement, that is best places under the TTC-35 section. -- Holderca1 23:06, 31 July 2007 (UTC)
The first two paragraphs are not only without references, but written from a non-neutral point of view. Benandorsqueaks ( talk) 05:28, 7 March 2008 (UTC)
Reference [2] (regarding the noise rendering the area surrounding the TTC) is a link to someone's blog, which shows an image of an unsourced document which makes the claim that the combined noise around the TTC will render the area within one mile uninhabitable.
Surely someone's blog isn't an encyclopedic reference. Further, the unsourced document makes a less-than-compelling argument about the noise surrounding the TTC. Does someone have a legitimate source? If not, perhaps we should remove the whole sentence. Mateoee ( talk) 19:38, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
(I'd link to the article -Marshall News Messenger, Jan 7 of 2009-, but it will disappear in a couple of days.)
The Trans-Texas Corridor is dead, but local leaders said some of its positive aspects won't get buried in the rubble. State officials announced Tuesday the death of plans for a network of toll roads across Texas. Since 2002, Gov. Rick Perry had promoted a set of highways, rail and utility lines , but the ida met opposition, including from rural residents fearful of a land grab by the government. Perry said projects such as Interstate 69 \— which would run from northeast Texas to the Rio Grande Valley \— and highways that will run parallel to north-south Interstate 35 will continue. "The days of the Trans-Texas Corridor are over, it's finished up," said Perry, who had proposed the idea as a way to relieve highway congestion in Texas. Speaking on a conference call from Iraq, Perry said, "The name 'Trans-Texas Corridor' is over with." The governor said it's not a public relations failure on his part or a rejection of his views. He said Texans realize, as he's been pointing out, that there's major congestion along I-35 and other highways. He said Texans want to see their leaders have broad visions and not be "sticking our heads in the sand." "I'm not afraid of taking on big and tough issues," Perry said. Amadeo Saenz, executive director of the Texas Department of Transportation, said major corridor projects will comprise several small segments closer to 600-feet wide. Original plans called for corridors up to 1,200-feet wide to allow for several modes of transportation and utility transmission facilities. Chris Lippincott, TxDOT spokesman, said the announcement reflects the opinions and guidance the agency has received regarding the Trans-Texas Corridor. Interstate 69 is still a priority to the department and will now be a stand-alone project. "The name is dead. The roads will continue," Lippincott said. "These are roads that are needed for the state."
Harrison County Precinct 3 Commissioner James Greer is a member of Alliance for I-69. He is among several East Texans attending a state transportation forum in Austin to discuss solutions to the state's mobility challenges.
"I think it was a very smart idea (to scrap the Trans-Texas Corridor)," Greer said.
It should not affect plans to build I- 69 along U.S. 59, he added. He and Gregg County Judge Bill Stoudt agreed that the Trans-Texas Corridor's negative image led to its demise. Keeping proposed interstate highways no wider than 600 feet should win over more landowners' affections, they said.
"The cost was horrendous," said Stoudt, adding that there was talk of Texas spending between $30 billion and $50 billion for the projects over 30 years or more, "and that doesn't even take into consideration what the present needs are."
Stoudt said he hopes the death of the Trans-Texas Corridor will signal a rebirth of funding for other highway projects, such as the expansion of George Richey Road and Texas 149 in Gregg County. He's heard rumblings that the Texas Transportation Commission might promote projects on a regional scale, such as Texas 130 in Austin and other plans to end traffic bottlenecks on Interstate 35 between San Antonio and Dallas/Fort Worth. "Quite frankly, when they say it like that," the judge said, "I think they're going to build a better coalition."' Kar98 ( talk) 17:33, 9 January 2009 (UTC)
The section entitled "As alternatives to California seaports" seems to be taking a couple of references out of context and spinning them to say something incorrect. It currently reads:
One component of the TTC will stretch from new and expanded ports on the Pacific coast of Mexico all the way up to the Great Lakes.[20] Proponents of the TTC intend on drawing shipping traffic away from U.S. ports in California (Los Angeles and Long Beach) and direct that traffic to Mexican seaports.[21]
Since the Trans-Texas Corridor was, by definition, designed to be contained within Texas, there's no way that a TTC route would stretch up to the Great Lakes, let alone into another country. Furthermore, Reference #20 doesn't say that it will. What it does say is that a TTC-69 route could be part of a corridor that would move freight from the Great Lakes to Mexico, or vice-versa; that has been the stated purpose of the federal I-69 plan all along, so there's no news there. The implication that TTC "proponents" were trying to move traffic from American ports to Mexican ports is simply unfounded conspiratorial theory, which unfortunately characterized so much of the publicized debate on the TTC in the late '00s and obscured much opportunity for serious discussion on how to address future transportation issues in Texas. The source noted for that sentence, Reference #21, doesn't exist, but the organization that owns the internet domain (the Gulf Coast Strategic Highway Coalition) makes no mention of ports in Mexico.
An accurate wording of the section (both for facts and for verb tense) would be:
One component of TTC-69 could have been part of a freight corridor that stretched from ports on the Pacific coast of Mexico to the Great Lakes.[20] Depending on the level of traffic on that route, opponents argued that it would draw shipping traffic away from U.S. ports in California (Los Angeles and Long Beach) in favor of Mexican seaports.
However, given that the TTC concept is dead and that correcting the two sentences essentially guts them of their original content, the entire section should probably just be removed to make it simple. Or it could be moved (using corrected content) to the Criticism section.
Mbrewer41 ( talk) 01:08, 27 May 2011 (UTC)
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http://www.tfhrc.gov/pubrds/05jul/07.htm good source of info http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/03/04/wroad04.xml
Construction for TTC-35 will likely not begin before 2010; I'm not sure about TTC-69 but it's probably similar. TTC-35 alignment-specific "tier two" planning can't even begin until the process for selecting a general route (4-10 mile wide possible alignment path) is complete, which will be late 2007. I suppose when a photo for SH 130 shows up, it could be captioned as roughly like, "Although the width of its right-of-way is only half that of the planned TTC-35, SH 130, shown here, is expected to be the TTC-35 segment through the Austin area." What might be more useful, however, would be a map of Texas showing the preferred routes, nonphotoness notwithstanding. Deh 12:20, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Re: the fact that all of the proposed highways lead to Mexico:
Has anyone asked "WHY are we doing this?"
Since the entire Trans-Texas Corridor will be approximately 4000 miles long and the widest portion of any corridor will 1200 feet (slightly less than 1/4 mile) why is the required land nine times as much as the total area of all the corridors?
There are gross inaccuracies in official statements about the TTC. The first section above states a "1200 foot" wide corridor. Gov. Perry's web site, Priorities - Contention/Reality, states "roughly twice the width of the interstate highway". The Trans Texas Corridor web site, KeepTexasMoving, states in their RAC 1, that "the corridor has a centerline length of approximately 506 miles and an area of approximately 4983 square miles", that is an average width of 9.85 miles. The web site goes on to say, in direct contradiction to the 1200 foot width stated above and the Governor's estimate, that "the corridor proceeds south as a 4 mile wide corridor centered on I 35 just north of Denton, Texas. Here it becomes a ten mile wide corridor...." With inaccuracies of this magnitude, how much faith can be put in the veracity of the other statements made by the proponents of the project.<!- - [2] [3] - -> Original complaints from: User:Wbthomasiii 18:32, 18 January 2007.
Parts of this section sounds to me like a beat up by those opposed to the concept with limited basis in fact. Is it really possible in US or Texan law and has there really been any suggestion that land is going to be purchased via eminent domain and then sold for a profit to developers for redevelopment in whatever way they see fit to finance the project? This is what the above seems to suggest to me. I would have thought land could only be acquired to be used for the corridor and therefore there is no profit going on here. Also siezed hardly seems NPOV to me. Unless I'm mistaken the land will still be bought, even though the agreement of the owner need not be obtained. Siezed suggest no due compensation will be paid ala Mugabe. Something like acquired as we already use is sufficient. Nil Einne 19:34, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
Please stop adding inaccurate information. Statements like "The Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC) is a transportation network funded by foreign spanish investors in the planning and early construction stages in the U.S. state of Texas." are completely false considering that only a small portion, (Segments 5 and 6) of SH 130, is being built by Cintra-Zachry. Whether either one will be involved in later projects concerning TTC-10, TTC-35, or TTC-69, etc... is yet to be seen. Most of the entire network is still in the planning phase and no contract has been written yet. Putting a statement like that in the first sentence is very misleading and completely wrong. If you want to address the Cintra involvement, that is best places under the TTC-35 section. -- Holderca1 23:06, 31 July 2007 (UTC)
The first two paragraphs are not only without references, but written from a non-neutral point of view. Benandorsqueaks ( talk) 05:28, 7 March 2008 (UTC)
Reference [2] (regarding the noise rendering the area surrounding the TTC) is a link to someone's blog, which shows an image of an unsourced document which makes the claim that the combined noise around the TTC will render the area within one mile uninhabitable.
Surely someone's blog isn't an encyclopedic reference. Further, the unsourced document makes a less-than-compelling argument about the noise surrounding the TTC. Does someone have a legitimate source? If not, perhaps we should remove the whole sentence. Mateoee ( talk) 19:38, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
(I'd link to the article -Marshall News Messenger, Jan 7 of 2009-, but it will disappear in a couple of days.)
The Trans-Texas Corridor is dead, but local leaders said some of its positive aspects won't get buried in the rubble. State officials announced Tuesday the death of plans for a network of toll roads across Texas. Since 2002, Gov. Rick Perry had promoted a set of highways, rail and utility lines , but the ida met opposition, including from rural residents fearful of a land grab by the government. Perry said projects such as Interstate 69 \— which would run from northeast Texas to the Rio Grande Valley \— and highways that will run parallel to north-south Interstate 35 will continue. "The days of the Trans-Texas Corridor are over, it's finished up," said Perry, who had proposed the idea as a way to relieve highway congestion in Texas. Speaking on a conference call from Iraq, Perry said, "The name 'Trans-Texas Corridor' is over with." The governor said it's not a public relations failure on his part or a rejection of his views. He said Texans realize, as he's been pointing out, that there's major congestion along I-35 and other highways. He said Texans want to see their leaders have broad visions and not be "sticking our heads in the sand." "I'm not afraid of taking on big and tough issues," Perry said. Amadeo Saenz, executive director of the Texas Department of Transportation, said major corridor projects will comprise several small segments closer to 600-feet wide. Original plans called for corridors up to 1,200-feet wide to allow for several modes of transportation and utility transmission facilities. Chris Lippincott, TxDOT spokesman, said the announcement reflects the opinions and guidance the agency has received regarding the Trans-Texas Corridor. Interstate 69 is still a priority to the department and will now be a stand-alone project. "The name is dead. The roads will continue," Lippincott said. "These are roads that are needed for the state."
Harrison County Precinct 3 Commissioner James Greer is a member of Alliance for I-69. He is among several East Texans attending a state transportation forum in Austin to discuss solutions to the state's mobility challenges.
"I think it was a very smart idea (to scrap the Trans-Texas Corridor)," Greer said.
It should not affect plans to build I- 69 along U.S. 59, he added. He and Gregg County Judge Bill Stoudt agreed that the Trans-Texas Corridor's negative image led to its demise. Keeping proposed interstate highways no wider than 600 feet should win over more landowners' affections, they said.
"The cost was horrendous," said Stoudt, adding that there was talk of Texas spending between $30 billion and $50 billion for the projects over 30 years or more, "and that doesn't even take into consideration what the present needs are."
Stoudt said he hopes the death of the Trans-Texas Corridor will signal a rebirth of funding for other highway projects, such as the expansion of George Richey Road and Texas 149 in Gregg County. He's heard rumblings that the Texas Transportation Commission might promote projects on a regional scale, such as Texas 130 in Austin and other plans to end traffic bottlenecks on Interstate 35 between San Antonio and Dallas/Fort Worth. "Quite frankly, when they say it like that," the judge said, "I think they're going to build a better coalition."' Kar98 ( talk) 17:33, 9 January 2009 (UTC)
The section entitled "As alternatives to California seaports" seems to be taking a couple of references out of context and spinning them to say something incorrect. It currently reads:
One component of the TTC will stretch from new and expanded ports on the Pacific coast of Mexico all the way up to the Great Lakes.[20] Proponents of the TTC intend on drawing shipping traffic away from U.S. ports in California (Los Angeles and Long Beach) and direct that traffic to Mexican seaports.[21]
Since the Trans-Texas Corridor was, by definition, designed to be contained within Texas, there's no way that a TTC route would stretch up to the Great Lakes, let alone into another country. Furthermore, Reference #20 doesn't say that it will. What it does say is that a TTC-69 route could be part of a corridor that would move freight from the Great Lakes to Mexico, or vice-versa; that has been the stated purpose of the federal I-69 plan all along, so there's no news there. The implication that TTC "proponents" were trying to move traffic from American ports to Mexican ports is simply unfounded conspiratorial theory, which unfortunately characterized so much of the publicized debate on the TTC in the late '00s and obscured much opportunity for serious discussion on how to address future transportation issues in Texas. The source noted for that sentence, Reference #21, doesn't exist, but the organization that owns the internet domain (the Gulf Coast Strategic Highway Coalition) makes no mention of ports in Mexico.
An accurate wording of the section (both for facts and for verb tense) would be:
One component of TTC-69 could have been part of a freight corridor that stretched from ports on the Pacific coast of Mexico to the Great Lakes.[20] Depending on the level of traffic on that route, opponents argued that it would draw shipping traffic away from U.S. ports in California (Los Angeles and Long Beach) in favor of Mexican seaports.
However, given that the TTC concept is dead and that correcting the two sentences essentially guts them of their original content, the entire section should probably just be removed to make it simple. Or it could be moved (using corrected content) to the Criticism section.
Mbrewer41 ( talk) 01:08, 27 May 2011 (UTC)
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