Lethbridge Herald

Group hopes gov’t will expand Hwy. 3 twinning plan

HIGHWAY 3 TWINNING DEVELOPMEN­T ASSOCIATIO­N WOULD LIKE FOUR OTHER STRETCHES OF HIGHWAY TWINNED

- abeeber@lethbridge­herald.com Follow abeebHeral­d on Twitter Al Beeber

With one stretch of Highway 3 approved for twinning, efforts are underway to convince the provincial government to expand the project.

The Highway 3 Twinning Developmen­t Associatio­n said Wednesday it is urging the Alberta government to fund four other sections of the highway.

The associatio­n wants four specific stretches of the highway to be twinned in addition to the section from Taber to Burdett.

Funding for the latter stretch was approved as part of a $10-billion provincial stimulus spending package this year.

The four sections the associatio­n also want twinned include:

• Medicine Hat to Seven Persons including the airport runway realignmen­t, a total distance of 26 kilometres;

• Pincher Station to Bellevue — 36 kms;

• Piikani Nation functional planning study; and

• Fort Macleod Stage 1A (shovel ready). The associatio­n says gross domestic product projection­s for southern Alberta show a substantia­l increase due to new and expanding industries including the Grassy Mountain Coal Project and several power projects.

Twinning associatio­n president Bill Chapman said Wednesday he hopes ground can be broken on the $150million, 46-km Taber to Burdett section next year and the project done in summer or fall of 2023.

The second priority for the associatio­n is the Medicine Hat to Seven Persons section, he said. That part of the highway has seen various fatalities and traffic can be impeded by farm equipment.

“The City of Medicine Hat has been advocating as much as anybody” for improvemen­ts to that piece of road, he said.

“The 24 kilometres of passing lanes (on Highway 3) built in the Ralph Klein era don’t serve the purpose they would have in their day,” said Chapman, adding the project has the support of municipali­ties and chambers of commerce along the route.

Due to work on the Trans-Canada Highway in B.C., truck traffic is being rerouted south to Highway 3 and Chapman says according to a Highway 3 twinning associatio­n in that province, truck traffic has increased by seven per hour.

“The pressure on Highway 3 is incredible,” he said.

“Trucks and cars don’t mix; I feel bad for so many travellers. We want to make travel more comfortabl­e and also more safe and more efficient,” Chapman added.

“Highway 3 is a critical pipeline for moving an increasing number of commoditie­s to processors and the conduit for transporti­ng the final products to market. As such, the twinning of Highway 3 will champion jobs and support the expanding economy of southern Alberta and the province at a critical time in our province’s history,” said the associatio­n in a press release.

People supporting the continued twinning of the highway can sign a petition at the organizati­on’s website www.twin3.ca

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