Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Work to widen U.S. 67 wins $10M U.S. boost

- NOEL OMAN

The Arkansas Department of Transporta­tion has won another competitiv­e grant to help pay for a project to widen two sections of U.S. 67 in Pulaski and Lonoke counties.

The $10 million grant under a U.S. Department of Transporta­tion program is the second the project has received this year. The agency received $40 million in June that will help defray the state’s share of the cost of the work, which could reach $160 million.

The agency also received a $4 million grant from the same program to help pay for a railroad overpass as part of a north-south connector from U.S. 278 to the Arkansas 83 Spur in Monticello.

“We’re very happy, obviously, about this,” Kevin Thornton, the department’s assistant chief for administra­tion, told the Arkansas Highway Commission at its meeting Wednesday.

The projects were part of the 70 in 44 states for which the U.S. Transporta­tion Department awarded $1 billion in grants under the Better Utilizing Investment­s to Leverage Developmen­t, a discretion­ary grants program that targets regionally significan­t projects.

The federal agency said it employs such discretion­ary grant programs to “use a rigorous merit-based process to select projects with exceptiona­l benefits, explore ways to deliver projects faster and save on constructi­on costs, and make needed investment­s in our nation’s infrastruc­ture.”

The state Transporta­tion Department made an applicatio­n for a grant for a third project — a railroad overpass and realignmen­t of Arkansas 89 in Mayflower. It was

awarded no money.

But in response to a question from commission member Marie Holder of Little Rock, Thornton said federal transporta­tion officials will hold a debriefing on why the Mayflower work wasn’t considered as strong as the other projects.

The U.S. 67 project, apparently, was a strong one.

It will focus work on a 2.5-mile section of the highway between Main Street and Vandenberg Boulevard in Jacksonvil­le and a 2.8-mile section between Arkansas 5 and Arkansas 89 in Cabot.

Jacksonvil­le, population 28,253, and Cabot, population, 26,352, are close to Little Rock Air Force Base, a major economic generator in the region. The base is home to the world’s largest fleet of Lockheed C-130 Hercules and Super Hercules, a tactical airlift aircraft.

The project for which the grant was awarded includes building an overpass, converting the frontage roads to one-way operation and reconstruc­ting two interchang­es to make it a modern interstate-quality thoroughfa­re. Up to 80,000 vehicles travel daily through the corridor,

Other money available for the project includes proceeds from the statewide 0.5% sales tax voters approved in 2012 as part of the $1.8 billion Connecting Arkansas Program, which is a state-level program targeting regionally significan­t constructi­on. It will be the last project to be built under the program.

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