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I-69 in MS

Started by Grzrd, June 08, 2011, 11:38:59 PM

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Grzrd

No progress on SIU 11 in foreseeable future:

http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/jun/08/i-269-loop-stays-on-track/

Quote
... Meanwhile, as to I-69, a federal Record of Decision has been received for the 120-mile Segment 11 from Benoit to Robinsonville, and Tagert was asked by local engineer Cecil Sowell what the schedule was for moving ahead.
The plain answer is, there is no schedule, said Tagert, because "we need to have a federal transportation re-authorization bill" to revive funding. "I'm looking forward to seeing it built, but there is no committed funding for it today... "

As I understand it, the federal reauthorization bill, if it happens this year at all, will be lucky to fund current highway maintenance needs, much less new highway projects.  Another potential source of funding would be innovative financing funding for I-69, which has been discussed at this thread:

https://www.aaroads.com/forum/index.php?topic=2920.0

I-69 in MS is composed of four SIUs: SIUs 9, 10, 11, and 12.  SIU 9 is the SIU closest to metro Memphis and a "system approach" was developed for it which basically provided for an "I-69" route through Memphis along currently existing interstates, including existing alignment in Mississippi along I-55 (TDOT has four new terrain projects at the northern end of their section of "I-69" SIU 9: http://www.tdot.state.tn.us/i69/segment9/maps/segment_map.pdf) and an "I-269" loop around Memphis, which will be a new terrain alignment in Mississippi (http://www.gomdot.com/Home/Projects/Studies/Northern/I269/Home.aspx), with Tennessee's section incorporating completed and under-construction (http://www.tdot.state.tn.us/sr385/default.htm) sections of TN 385, as well as a short "Future I-269" segment from the Mississippi state line to TN 385. A succinct discussion of the "system approach" can be found here:

http://www.tdot.state.tn.us/i69/segment9/newsletters/0107.pdf

"I-69" SIU 9 in MS is complete; the initial groundbreaking for "I-269" SIU 9 in MS from the TN state line to MS 302 will take place on June 23 (Mississippi's "I-269" SIU 9 also includes three other projects that are each expected to begin in two to four years, and completion of all of "I-269" SIU 9 in Mississippi is currently expected to be around 2020); [there is a separate "Interstate 269" thread on the Southeast page https://www.aaroads.com/forum/index.php?topic=1329.50].

SIU 10 in MS is complete and is described by MDOT as follows:

Quote
From the intersection of I-55/I-69 just south of Nesbit, I-69 runs west towards Tunica (Robinsonville)(shared route with MS Hwy 304)".

Prior discussion of SIU 10 mileage markers can be found here:

https://www.aaroads.com/forum/index.php?topic=83.25

A ROD was issued for SIU 11 in the latter part of 2010.  Here is a link to a map of SIU 11:
http://mdot.ms.gov/documents/environmental/Projects/Archived%20Projects/Project%20Studies/District%201%20and%202/I-69%20Section%2011%20-%20Robinsonville%20To%20Benoit/Figures.pdf (page 4/40 of pdf)


More information about SIU 11 can be found here:

http://mdot.ms.gov/documents/environmental/index.php?dir=Projects/Archived%20Projects/Project%20Studies/District%201%20and%202/I-69%20Section%2011%20-%20Robinsonville%20To%20Benoit

Also, Clarksdale has recently installed "Future I-69 Corridor" signs along part of the SIU 11 corridor:

http://www.pressregister.com/articles/2011/04/06/news/doc4d9b12f614e3d422793615.txt

Quote
The unveiling of the "Future I-69"  signs on the U.S. Highway 61 Bypass signals that Clarksdale will become part of the interstate system stretching from Canada to Mexico, Northern Highway Commissioner Mike Tagert observed Friday.
"The sign is not a small thing,"  said Tagert. "It's a game changer for the Mississippi Delta that starts the momentum for the future."

There has also been occasional discussion of an "I-169" Greenville Connector.  MDOT's page on the Greenville Connector can be found here:

http://www.gomdot.com/Home/Projects/Studies/Central/GreenvilleConnector/pdf/MapOfAlternatives.pdf

froggie also has a page devoted to the Greenville Connector:

http://www.ajfroggie.com/roads/i169.htm

To sum it up, not much should happen on SIU 11 in near future: I suspect most, if not all, of I-69 Corridor work in MS in near future will be along "I-269" SIU 9; however, maybe reauthorization bill and/or innovative financing study will jump-start progress on SIU 11.

SIU 12 includes the Charles W. Dean Bridge over the Mississippi River and a short approach from Mississippi.  Here's a link to a map of SIU 12 (which is located primarily in Arkansas):

http://i.imgur.com/cedC7.jpg

Here's a link to two perspectives of the current design of the Charles W. Dean Bridge:

http://www.garverusa.com/portfolio/transportation/greatriver.php


Grzrd

#1
Quote from: Grzrd on June 08, 2011, 11:38:59 PM
No progress on SIU 11 in foreseeable future:
http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2011/jun/08/i-269-loop-stays-on-track/
" ... Meanwhile, as to I-69, a federal Record of Decision has been received for the 120-mile Segment 11 from Benoit to Robinsonville, and Tagert was asked by local engineer Cecil Sowell what the schedule was for moving ahead.
The plain answer is, there is no schedule, said Tagert, because "we need to have a federal transportation re-authorization bill" to revive funding. "I'm looking forward to seeing it built, but there is no committed funding for it today... ""

MDOT released an "update" on I-69 SIU 11 on August 15:
http://www.gomdot.com/Home/MediaRoom/newsreleases/PressReleaseDetail.aspx?ID=815201195147

Quote
I-69 Project
I-69 is a new cross-county interstate that will connect Benoit to Alligator in District Three in the Delta region. The project is currently in the environmental stage. The corridor has been set and it is expected that the environmental document will be approved by FHWA this year.

Grzrd

#2
Quote from: Grzrd on August 20, 2011, 10:21:37 PM
MDOT released an "update" on I-69 SIU 11 on August 15 ...
"I-69 is a new cross-county interstate that will connect Benoit to Alligator in District Three in the Delta region. The project is currently in the environmental stage. The corridor has been set and it is expected that the environmental document will be approved by FHWA this year."

The environmental document for SIU 11 has been approved, surveying for highway design has begun, and ROW acquisition is anticipated to begin in approximately one year:
http://www.gomdot.com/Home/Projects/Archives/Updates/Northern/Home.aspx

Quote
The Environmental Document for I-69 has been approved. Currently, surveying is being done for the design of the highway and right-of-way acquisitions are anticipated to start in one year.

Grzrd

#3
Quote from: Grzrd on June 08, 2011, 11:38:59 PM
No progress on SIU 11 in foreseeable future:
Meanwhile, as to I-69, a federal Record of Decision has been received for the 120-mile Segment 11 from Benoit to Robinsonville, and Tagert was asked by local engineer Cecil Sowell what the schedule was for moving ahead.
The plain answer is, there is no schedule, said Tagert, because "we need to have a federal transportation re-authorization bill" to revive funding.

I-69 in MS is composed of four SIUs: SIUs 9, 10, 11, and 12.  SIU 9 is the SIU closest to metro Memphis and a "system approach" was developed for it which basically provided for an "I-69" route through Memphis along currently existing interstates, including existing alignment in Mississippi along I-55 ...and an "I-269" loop around Memphis, which will be a new terrain alignment in Mississippi ...

"I-69" SIU 9 in MS is complete; the initial groundbreaking for "I-269" SIU 9 in MS from the TN state line to MS 302 will take place on June 23 (Mississippi's "I-269" SIU 9 also includes three other projects that are each expected to begin in two to four years, and completion of all of "I-269" SIU 9 in Mississippi is currently expected to be around 2020); [there is a separate "Interstate 269" thread on the Southeast page https://www.aaroads.com/forum/index.php?topic=1329.50].

SIU 10 in MS is complete and is described by MDOT as follows:
"From the intersection of I-55/I-69 just south of Nesbit, I-69 runs west towards Tunica (Robinsonville)(shared route with MS Hwy 304)". 

A ROD was issued for SIU 11 in the latter part of 2010.  Here is a link to a map of SIU 11:
http://mdot.ms.gov/documents/environmental/Projects/Archived%20Projects/Project%20Studies/District%201%20and%202/I-69%20Section%2011%20-%20Robinsonville%20To%20Benoit/Figures.pdf (page 4/40 of pdf):


SIU 12 includes the Charles W. Dean Bridge over the Mississippi River and a short approach from Mississippi.  Here's a link to a map of SIU 12 (which is located primarily in Arkansas):
http://i.imgur.com/cedC7.jpg
Here's a link to two perspectives of the current design of the Charles W. Dean Bridge:
http://www.garverusa.com/portfolio/transportation/greatriver.php

With Mississippi's section of "I-269" SIU 9 currently planned to be completed around 2020, I became curious as to planned sequential process for SIU 11.  Assuming somewhat normal federal funding, the SIU 11 FEIS indicates that SIU 11 would be rolled out over a nineteen year period and construction would proceed in roughly the following sequence: (1) 2016 - From current western terminus of SIU 10 to SR 4 interchange south of Tunica, (2) 2019 - Clarksdale to Cleveland, (3) 2020 - Tunica to Clarksdale, and (4) 2026 - Cleveland to Great River Bridge (Charles W. Dean Bridge).  There is also a non-interstate grade widening of SR 8 from Rosedale to Cleveland scheduled for 2029.
(http://sp.mdot.ms.gov/Environmental/District%201%20and%202/Archived%20Projects/Project%20Studies/I-69%20Section%2011%20-%20Robinsonville%20To%20Benoit/Executive%20Summary.pdf) [summary of progression is on page 9/18 of the pdf; page S-9 of the document].

Quote
Subsequent to selection of the Preferred Alternative, the project was reviewed to consider the applicability of recent guidance on major projects receiving federal funding. Construction of the proposed I-69 SUI 11 is envisioned to be phased over the next 19 years. Therefore, the project was determined to consist of five distinct and operationally independent phases. The five phases (sections) are detailed in Appendix G and summarized as follows:
Section 1: 18.465 miles, SR 304 Interchange to South of SR 4 Interchange
Anticipated Letting Date: 2016
Section 2: 31.549 miles, South of SR 4 Interchange to North of SR 6 Interchange
Anticipated Letting Date: 2022
Section 3: 48.160 miles, North of SR 6 Interchange to South of SR 446 Interchange
Anticipated Letting Date: 2019
Section 4: 22.807 miles, South of SR 446 Interchange to Great River Bridge
Anticipated Letting Date: 2026
Section 5: 17.764 miles, SR 1 at Rosedale to Cleveland
Anticipated Letting Date: 2029

Here's a description of the proposed SR 8 widening (page 8/18 of pdf):

Quote
SR 8 Improvements
The Preferred Alternative would include the widening of SR 8 from Cleveland to Rosedale. SR 8 would have a five-lane section extended west of Cleveland to a point west of the SR 8-Cleveland Interchange, where the roadway would transition to a four-lane divided section and remain this way until the eastern edge of Pace. At that point, the roadway would transition to a five-lane section through the built-up area of Pace. At the western edge of Pace, the roadway would then transition back to a four-lane divided section and remain this way to a point slightly east of Rosedale where it would again transition to a five-lane section and remain this way to the intersection with SR 1.

For the I-69 Corridor in Mississippi as a whole (I-269 and I-69), it looks like there could be steady progress over the next twenty years.  I will be very interested to see how I-69 alternative financing study being prepared by Atkins North America for AHTD will propose to finance construction of the Great River Bridge (Charles W. Dean Bridge) in SIU 12.  Seems like in the most optimistic scenario the bridge is at the very least about 15 years away.

Hmmmmm... which I-69 bridge will open first?  Mississippi River or Ohio River?

Roadmapfan66

Where is the new Interstate 69 currently signed in Mississippi?

I was looking at a Youtube video of a new portion of I-69 near Memphis, Tennessee...all of a sudden it shut down because of an error, but I will try to go back to it.  Internet Explorer shut the video down for my safety, but I am wondering where the I-69 shields are appearing as of now?

Scott C. Presnal
Morro Bay, CA
--- SCP

rickmastfan67

Quote from: Roadmapfan66 on January 10, 2012, 11:44:24 PM
Where is the new Interstate 69 currently signed in Mississippi?

I was looking at a Youtube video of a new portion of I-69 near Memphis, Tennessee...all of a sudden it shut down because of an error, but I will try to go back to it.  Internet Explorer shut the video down for my safety, but I am wondering where the I-69 shields are appearing as of now?

Scott C. Presnal
Morro Bay, CA

This link shows all of I-69 that is signed. ;)

rickmastfan67

Rumor has it that I-69 has been shortened again.  I was just talking to Chris Lawrence and he says that the signs that announce the Start/End of I-69 have been moved back to the Tunica/DeSoto County Line once again (the original place) from the previous location @ the old MS-304 intersection area.  Does anybody have picture proof of this?

Grzrd

Quote from: rickmastfan67 on January 11, 2012, 03:03:14 AM
Rumor has it that I-69 has been shortened again.  I was just talking to Chris Lawrence and he says that the signs that announce the Start/End of I-69 have been moved back to the Tunica/DeSoto County Line once again (the original place) from the previous location @ the old MS-304 intersection area.  Does anybody have picture proof of this?

Why would they move the signage back to the Tunica/DeSoto county lineThe Executive Summary of the SIU 11 FEIS defines SIU 10 as follows [page 2/18 of pdf]:

Quote
SIU 10 includes the portion of relocated SR 304 in De Soto County between I-55 and the first interchange east of SR 3 as well as a spur to the
south of that interchange connecting the relocated SR 304 with the old two-lane section of SR 304. From the relocated SR 304 interchange to slightly north of the spur's intersection with old SR 304, the design of the spur meets interstate standards. SIU 10 is open to traffic.

It seems like the short stretch of I-69 in Tunica County is "legal" in the sense that it is part of SIU 10, which received a ROD several years ago.  Also, I suppose it would now be "legal" if it were a part of SIU 11 because the ROD has been issued for SIU 11.  Either way, I don't see the point of removing signage from the short stretch in Tunica County.

Grzrd

#8
MDOT's 2012-15 Draft STIP does not project much activity for the "non-I-269" part of the I-69 Corridor.  Basically, repayment of the debt service on the bonds for the paving of SIU 10 MS 304/I-69 from I-55 to US 61 is scheduled for 2012-15 (page 55/305 of the pdf).  I did not see any scheduled projects for SIU 11 in Bolivar, Coahoma, or Tunica counties.

Grzrd

#9
Quote from: rickmastfan67 on January 11, 2012, 03:03:14 AM
Rumor has it that I-69 has been shortened again.  I was just talking to Chris Lawrence and he says that the signs that announce the Start/End of I-69 have been moved back to the Tunica/DeSoto County Line once again (the original place) from the previous location @ the old MS-304 intersection area.  Does anybody have picture proof of this?
Quote from: US71 on April 29, 2012, 10:32:24 PM
Quote from: Steve on April 29, 2012, 10:05:18 PM
So... how was Memphis?
Had a great time! We drove ... all of I-69 in Mississippi
(above quote from Official Announcement Memphis Road Meet April 28! thread)

Is the rumor true?

Grzrd

#10
This article, although primarily about a proposed new levee for the Yazoo River, contains a statement from Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant that he supports the SIU 11 segment of I-69 (at least he is not attacking it as "wasteful spending"):

Quote
Gov. Phil Bryant .... also supports for the proposed Interstate 69, which would parallel U.S. 61 from Tunica to south of Cleveland.

Quote from: Grzrd on April 30, 2012, 09:40:03 AM
Quote from: rickmastfan67 on January 11, 2012, 03:03:14 AM
Rumor has it that I-69 has been shortened again.  I was just talking to Chris Lawrence and he says that the signs that announce the Start/End of I-69 have been moved back to the Tunica/DeSoto County Line once again (the original place) from the previous location @ the old MS-304 intersection area.  Does anybody have picture proof of this?
Quote from: US71 on April 29, 2012, 10:32:24 PM
Quote from: Steve on April 29, 2012, 10:05:18 PM
So... how was Memphis?
Had a great time! We drove ... all of I-69 in Mississippi
(above quote from Official Announcement Memphis Road Meet April 28! thread)
Is the rumor true?

Did anyone at the meet notice where the current START/END signage for Mississippi's current southern (western?) terminus of I-69 is located?

Grzrd

Quote from: Grzrd on May 12, 2012, 09:48:34 AM
This article, although primarily about a proposed new levee for the Yazoo River, contains a statement from Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant that he supports the SIU 11 segment of I-69

This article indicates that, beyond stating general support for SIU 11, Governor Bryant expresses hope that Mississippi's Congressional delegation will come up with some SIU 11 funding in the next reauthorization bill:

Quote
Bryant also mentioned the impact of interstate highway running through the heart of the Delta.
"The proposed Interstate 69 would make investments and opportunities available to citizens in northwest Mississippi," said the governor. "Our professional delegation is working hard to make sure adequate funding is passed along for highway development projects. I look forward to passing the Federal Transportation Act and I hope that it will include funding for the construction of Interstate 69."

At the very least, SIU 11 appears to be on the radar screen (still doesn't mean any money will result, but who knows?)

Grzrd

#12
Quote from: Grzrd on May 14, 2012, 05:37:24 PM
This article indicates that, beyond stating general support for SIU 11, Governor Bryant expresses hope that Mississippi's Congressional delegation will come up with some SIU 11 funding in the next reauthorization bill:
Quote
Bryant also mentioned the impact of interstate highway running through the heart of the Delta.
"The proposed Interstate 69 would make investments and opportunities available to citizens in northwest Mississippi," said the governor. "Our professional delegation is working hard to make sure adequate funding is passed along for highway development projects. I look forward to passing the Federal Transportation Act and I hope that it will include funding for the construction of Interstate 69."

MAP-21 does not include earmarked funding for specific projects, including SIU 11.  That said, it is important to remember that, as noted in this post in the "Interstate 269" thread, Mississippi is making rapid progress on its "I-269" part of the SIU 9 I-69 corridor and most, if not all, of I-269 in Mississippi will be under paving contracts in 2015.

Quote from: Grzrd on December 22, 2011, 02:10:42 PM
With Mississippi's section of "I-269" SIU 9 currently planned to be completed around 2020, I became curious as to planned sequential process for SIU 11. (http://sp.mdot.ms.gov/Environmental/District%201%20and%202/Archived%20Projects/Project%20Studies/I-69%20Section%2011%20-%20Robinsonville%20To%20Benoit/Executive%20Summary.pdf) [summary of progression is on page 9/18 of the pdf; page S-9 of the document]
Quote
Subsequent to selection of the Preferred Alternative, the project was reviewed to consider the applicability of recent guidance on major projects receiving federal funding. Construction of the proposed I-69 SUI 11 is envisioned to be phased over the next 19 years. Therefore, the project was determined to consist of five distinct and operationally independent phases. The five phases (sections) are detailed in Appendix G and summarized as follows:
Section 1: 18.465 miles, SR 304 Interchange to South of SR 4 Interchange
Anticipated Letting Date: 2016
Section 2: 31.549 miles, South of SR 4 Interchange to North of SR 6 Interchange
Anticipated Letting Date: 2022
Section 3: 48.160 miles, North of SR 6 Interchange to South of SR 446 Interchange
Anticipated Letting Date: 2019
Section 4: 22.807 miles, South of SR 446 Interchange to Great River Bridge
Anticipated Letting Date: 2026
Section 5: 17.764 miles, SR 1 at Rosedale to Cleveland
Anticipated Letting Date: 2029

In conjunction with the I-269 projects, a 2016 letting for the first section of SIU 11 would still constitute great progress.  However, SIU 11 construction will to some degree require a coordinated effort with Arkansas in terms of the timeline for construction of the I-69 Mississippi River Bridge. Arkansas has a lot of big projects on its plate in addition to I-69 and minimal money to fund them.  On the other hand, maybe SIU 11, in conjunction with the US 82 Greenville Bridge, will provide a useful corridor on its own and be reason enough for Mississippi to keep up the pace for SIU 11 construction.

edit

As recently noted in the Interstate 269 thread, included as part of the presentation materials for the Desoto County, Mississippi I-269 Corridor Study is a map showing MDOT's I-269 construction schedule:

Grzrd

Quote from: Grzrd on July 14, 2012, 10:11:12 AM
maybe SIU 11, in conjunction with the US 82 Greenville Bridge, will provide a useful corridor on its own and be reason enough for Mississippi to keep up the pace for SIU 11 construction.
Quote from: mcdonaat on November 02, 2012, 12:51:32 AM
When Mississippi opens their segment of I-69 near Greenville, what are the chances it will be signed as such? I'm hoping it becomes Bypass 82 so mainline 82 will remain through town.
Quote from: Grzrd on November 02, 2012, 07:43:19 AM
^ The 82 bypass is not part of the proposed I-69.  Froggie has a webpage with a good map showing the relationship between I-69, 82 bypass, and a proposed I-169 connecting the two routes: http://www.ajfroggie.com/roads/i169.htm
(bottom 2 quotes from Mississippi thread)

I recently came across a July 25, 2010 article (before I joined this forum) entitled, Should I-69 go through Greenville? It provides good background on the politics behind the selection of the currently proposed I-69 route through the Mississippi Delta.  Although 2.5 years is a relatively short period of time, does the following question regarding the economic sense behind a Greenville routing need to be revisited?:

Quote
The Interstate 69 bridge's close proximity to the new U.S. 82 bridge and its price tag – $715 million – raises a question: Why spend money on a new I-69 bridge at Benoit when there is now a completed interstate-grade bridge near Greenville? Wouldn't it make more sense and save taxpayer dollars to have I-69, dubbed the "NAFTA Highway"  and stretching from the Great Lakes to the Mexican border, cross the Mississippi River near Greenville as opposed to Benoit?

The article does seem to answer its own question by noting the interests of Arkansas:

Quote
No Greenville
The site of the Greenville bridge was never considered in the study for I-69 as it, too, sits between river bends.
Plus, the Greenville site was unattractive to Arkansas. If Greenville had been considered, I-69 would have only skirted extreme South Arkansas, leaving no access to the rest of the state, particularly the Arkansas Delta.
This left the two-bridge strategy. The new bridge at Benoit had to be built. And, Greenville had to have a new structure because of the transportation hazards to both river and road traffic posed by the old Greenville span.

However, Arkansas currently seems to have I-69 as an extremely low priority. Does the routing of I-69 through Mississippi (and Arkansas and Louisiana) need to be revisited?

lamsalfl

I don't see how the L-shaped routing through MS and AR helps national traffic other than local communities.  It really needs to be more diagonal between Memphis and Shreveport to be worth it.  Therefore I'd have a bridge further upriver of Benoit. 

Grzrd

#15
Atkins North America recently completed its I-69 Innovative Financing Study Final Findings and the Executive Summary (January 2013) and the Final Findings report on the current status of I-69 in Mississippi as follows (page 9/122 of pdf; page 4 of document):



There is really nothing new in the summary, but it does emphasize that SIU 12, which includes the Great River Bridge/Charles W. Dean Bridge, is essentially ready for construction if federal funds become available in the future, whereas SIU 11 would need more preliminary work to be completed before construction could begin.

Anthony_JK

Quote from: lamsalfl on December 14, 2012, 01:47:00 PM
I don't see how the L-shaped routing through MS and AR helps national traffic other than local communities.  It really needs to be more diagonal between Memphis and Shreveport to be worth it.  Therefore I'd have a bridge further upriver of Benoit. 

I believe that Arkansas City was one of the original proposed crossings, but was rejected due to wetland impacts. Benoit was a compromise that everyone could accept.

NE2

It would have made more sense to follow the US 79 corridor (in conjunction with possibly improving the river crossings at Memphis). Less stairstepping makes for a shorter distance.
pre-1945 Florida route log

I accept and respect your identity as long as it's not dumb shit like "identifying as a vaccinated attack helicopter".

Grzrd

#18
Quote from: NE2 on April 29, 2013, 10:58:11 AM
Less stairstepping makes for a shorter distance.

Speaking of stairstepping, the transition from N/S SIU 9 to E/W SIU 10 makes references to I-69 in this June 16 article about the proposed east-west widening of Star Landing Road of about six miles from Tulane Road west of I-55/69 to Getwell Road east of I-55/69, and which includes a proposed new interchange for I-55/69, a situation in which the reader has to be aware of I-69's route, and overlap with I-55, through that area:

Quote
Some 100 Star Landing residents and landowners were specifically invited to a recent public session in Southaven on the Star Landing Corridor.
Greeting them were DeSoto and Mississippi Department of Transportation officials at eight tables, each covered by an aerial map of the proposed east-west widening of about six miles from Tulane Road in the west to Getwell Road on the county's east ....
Tracy Huffman, consulting engineer to the county with the Waggoner firm ....
Public comments will be incorporated into an environmental assessment that's required by the federal government for the county and state to obtain funding for corridor work, a county priority being assisted by MDOT. The study cost is about $700,000, obtained from federal sources; further steps in the process, including any eventual construction, will cost millions and have yet to be obtained.
The deadline for completion of the assessment is May 2014, after which detailed engineering design and right of way acquisition can begin, said Huffman. He said any "dirt work"  may be four or five years away, provided funding is available ....
"A widened, safer Star Landing may be the primary road they'll use in the future between I-69 and Church Road."  ....
In 2011, the average daily traffic count for Star Landing Road was 3,200. The figure is forecast by MDOT to soar to 37,000 vehicles per day between U.S. 51 and Interstate 55, due to planned developments along U.S. 51 and Star Landing and the addition of the proposed I-69 interchange at Star Landing.
Meanwhile, traffic on Church and Goodman roads also is expected to soar ....
DeSoto County has been identified as one of Mississippi's fastest-growing counties, and early studies for the Star Landing project envision an eventual scenic route from U.S. 78 in the east to U.S. 61 in the west that could help deliver more than 11,000 jobs and about $1.2 billion annually in economic development. This vision poses a landscaped parkway of 22 miles, capped by a diamond-type interchange at I-55.

Avalanchez71

Quote from: NE2 on April 29, 2013, 10:58:11 AM
It would have made more sense to follow the US 79 corridor (in conjunction with possibly improving the river crossings at Memphis). Less stairstepping makes for a shorter distance.

It would make more sense to number US 79, US 59.

Grzrd

#20
Quote from: Grzrd on June 08, 2011, 11:38:59 PM
Here is a link to a map of SIU 11:
http://mdot.ms.gov/documents/environmental/Projects/Archived%20Projects/Project%20Studies/District%201%20and%202/I-69%20Section%2011%20-%20Robinsonville%20To%20Benoit/Figures.pdf (page 4/40 of pdf)
Quote from: Grzrd on April 28, 2013, 01:23:06 AM
Atkins North America recently completed its I-69 Innovative Financing Study Final Findings and the Executive Summary (January 2013) and the Final Findings report on the current status of I-69 in Mississippi as follows (page 9/122 of pdf; page 4 of document):
Quote from: NE2 on May 14, 2013, 07:08:26 PM
I doubt I-69 will ever be completed in MS.
(NE2 quote from Interstate 269 thread)

As recently posted in the Interstate 269 thread, all of I-269 (I-69 SIU 9b) is now under construction. Paving contracts are yet to come, but completion is now in sight.

The completed I-69 SIU 10, in addition to being part of I-69, could alternatively be viewed as an extension of the I-269 "half-loop" around Memphis .... which leads to the question of when, if ever, Mississippi will begin work on SIU 11.  With Arkansas not doing much on I-69, Louisiana doing even less, and Tennessee waiting for federal funds for SIU 8, will Mississippi be able to justify construction on SIU 11 in the absence of significant progress by the nearby states?

It should be an interesting political process.

richllewis

#21
From the Mississippi Board

QuoteThere are going to be hearings on the Road System in Mississippi. The article states that Mississippi does not have enough money for new highways as well as maintenance of the system. Public hearings will be held throughout the state. The article is at:

http://www.msnewsnow.com/story/22808269/state-task-force-on-highways-will-hold-town-hall-meetings

That probably includes new I-69 construction from Robinsonville to Benoit.

thefro

Quote from: richllewis on July 26, 2013, 05:00:19 PM
From the Mississippi Board

QuoteThere are going to be hearings on the Road System in Mississippi. The article states that Mississippi does not have enough money for new highways as well as maintenance of the system. Public hearings will be held throughout the state. The article is at:

http://www.msnewsnow.com/story/22808269/state-task-force-on-highways-will-hold-town-hall-meetings

That probably includes new I-69 construction from Robinsonville to Benoit.

Pretty much every other state is going through the same issues since they rely on taxes on gasoline which generally haven't been raised to keep up with inflation.  They're going to need to find funding for both maintenance on existing roads and construction of new roads.

If they find enough money, it could actually make I-69 more likely to happen (as Indiana has done with Major Moves & Major Moves 2020).

Grzrd

Quote from: richllewis on July 26, 2013, 05:00:19 PM
From the Mississippi Board
QuoteThere are going to be hearings on the Road System in Mississippi. The article states that Mississippi does not have enough money for new highways as well as maintenance of the system. Public hearings will be held throughout the state. The article is at:
http://www.msnewsnow.com/story/22808269/state-task-force-on-highways-will-hold-town-hall-meetings
That probably includes new I-69 construction from Robinsonville to Benoit.

An August 8 Task Force Transportation Update suggests that there will not even be ROW acquisition for any sections of I-69 SIU 11 from Robinsonville to Benoit during the 2015-2017 time frame (page 74/76 of pdf):



However, it looks like there are plans to add lanes to I-55/I-69 from MS 304 to MS 302.

codyg1985

Looks like MDOT really wants to get I-10 widened through most of the state.

What project are they referring to with the I-59 interchange at MS 42? There is already an interchange in place there.
Cody Goodman
Huntsville, AL, United States



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