Wednesday, July 29, 2009

$29 million road (a)head for Grandview

Posted by Casey Lyons on Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 10:53 AM

click to enlarge bottsroad.JPG

Anticipating increased traffic when industry in the area expands and the NNSA/Honeywell facility comes online, officials from Missouri Department of Transportation and City of Kansas City are pushing a $28.9 million road project to improve the interchange of Botts Road and Missouri 150 in Grandview.

MoDot officials say the "diverging diamond" configuration is suited to handle additional car traffic, which will result from additional industrial development in the area, including about 2,100 new employees at the NNSA/Honeywell facility that produces non-nuclear parts for nuclear weapons systems.

Last night's public hearing in Grandview drew a tiny crowd; with only 30 minutes left, the court reporter had only entered two statements into the public

record, both of which came from the no nukes set.

"I am concerned about pollution from the old and proposed sites, concerned about the danger to the plant's near and far neighbors because the plant is a prime target for terrorist, and concerned about beefing up nuclear weapons at a time when the world must instead be abolishing these weapons," said Jane Stoever, of Overland Park, Kansas.

MoDot officials said no special design considerations were made for

hazardous materials transport because the NNS/Honeywell site is not

expected to handle radioactive stuff.

"There's more hazardous or specialty material going through 71 Highway or the Triangle than here," said Steve Porter, spokesman for MoDot.

If approved as designed (the public comment

period ends August 11), the road will handle approximately 50,000 daily

car trips on MO-150 (up from 17,000 today) and 12,000 on Botts Road (up

from about 2,000), said Lideana Laboy, an engineer with HTNB. There's

also some bike/pedestrian paths should that ever catch on. Construction

would commence in the spring of 2010 and conclude by late 2011, if all

goes according to plan.

As proposed, the interchange allows truck traffic -- which will make up

about 10 percent of total traffic, according to MoDot officials -- to

get up to speed quickly and merge into higher speed travel lanes.

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