The Daily Courier

No bypass until 2040

- By RON SEYMOUR

The widening of Highway 97 through Peachland or constructi­on of a bypass is at least two decades away, town council heard this week. “It really is 20 years down the road,” Steve Sirett, Ministry of Transporta­tion district manager for the Okanagan Shuswap region, told councillor­s on Tuesday. “The existing highway will not approach capacity until 2040.” But a variety of short- and mediumterm improvemen­ts are likely for the existing corridor, including installati­on of traffic lights at the highway and Trepanier Road. Those options will be presented at a meeting to be hosted this spring by the ministry. It has been more than three years since transporta­tion ofÀcials held an open house in connection with the long-running Peachland transporta­tion study. “We recognize it’s been a while since we’ve been before the public,” Sirett said. “Understand­ing what the public feels about all the options will help us move forward.” Informatio­n to be presented at the upcoming public meeting, for which there is currently no date, will include cost estimates for both building a bypass around the town of 5,500 people and widening the existing two-lane highway to four lanes. “How do you estimate the cost on a project that’s not going to start for 20 years,” asked Coun. Pam Cunningham. “That’s part of the problem,” Sirett responded, adding the Ànancial informatio­n would be of a high-level, conceptual nature and likely to change in the future. Many people in Peachland favour a bypass, believing it would create a quieter, more pedestrian-friendly environmen­t. But some critics say a bypass, which would likely be built mostly on Crown land, would be enormously expensive and isn’t warranted. “It’s been three years and I know the public is very much wanting to get together and chat with the ministry,” Mayor Cindy Fortin said. So far, in a study process that dates back Àve years, the ministry has identified both a preferred bypass route that mostly skirts all existing developmen­t, as well as full-suite of improvemen­ts to the existing highway, including widening it to four lanes. A government decision on whether to build a bypass or widen the existing highway is likely many years off, councillor­s heard. Peachland has the only two-lane stretch of Highway 97 from south of Penticton to north of Vernon. Despite its narrower configurat­ion, the existing highway performs reasonably well in terms of both moving trafÀc and safety considerat­ions, ministry ofÀcials say.

 ?? Special to the Westside Weekly ?? The line shown in orange shows the possible route of a highway bypass around Peachland. Ministry of Transporta­tion officials this spring will hold a public meeting on the long-running Peachland transporta­tion study.
Special to the Westside Weekly The line shown in orange shows the possible route of a highway bypass around Peachland. Ministry of Transporta­tion officials this spring will hold a public meeting on the long-running Peachland transporta­tion study.

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