Chattanooga Times Free Press

I-24 plan seeks private sector partners for new ‘choice lanes’

- BY BEN BENTON STAFF WRITER

The state’s new plan to alleviate traffic on Interstate 24 around Moccasin Bend will include traditiona­l and pay-to-drive “choice lanes.” But what will the combined design look like?

Planning is preliminar­y on the new pay-to-drive lanes that will be maintained by private investors but owned by the state, according to an email from Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion spokespers­on Rae Anne Bradley.

“TDOT is still in the early stages of determinin­g exactly where and when the future choice lanes will be, but we are looking at some of the state’s most congested, urban areas to see where they can have the biggest impact,” Bradley said. “The proposed choice lanes project for the Chattanoog­a area is I-24 near Moccasin Bend.”

The state also has a traditiona­l widening project planned for I-24 spanning from the state line near Wildwood, Georgia, to the U.S. Highway 27 interchang­e on Moccasin Bend, she said.

“Due to its size, the project was broken up into several smaller projects, with the first being from Browns Ferry to U.S. 27 currently in preliminar­y engineerin­g,” Bradley said.

That portion is included in the state’s 10-year project plan, with constructi­on scheduled for fiscal year 2027, she added.

Tennessee’s fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30.

In Chattanoog­a, the pay-to-drive lanes would be an addition to the I-24 corridor under Gov. Bill Lee’s Transporta­tion Modernizat­ion Act passed earlier this year, she said.

“This will require traffic and revenue studies to determine the financial viability of adding the choice lanes, which will necessitat­e private sector contributi­ons due to the overall project cost,” Bradley said. “The overlap of the widening and choice lanes will be addressed in the studies to best leverage available funds and maximize congestion relief along I-24.”

TRAFFIC-SNARLED HISTORY

The traffic-snarled western stretch

of I-24 in Chattanoog­a has been in the state’s crosshairs for a long time.

I-24’s interchang­es with U.S. 27 in Chattanoog­a and Interstate­s 40 and 65 in Nashville are longtime fixtures on the American Transporta­tion Research Institute’s Top 100 Truck Bottleneck­s — at No. 39, No. 9 and No. 51, respective­ly, this year.

The state transporta­tion agency’s plan focuses on adding travel lanes — fee-free traditiona­l lanes and “choice lanes” — in the I-24 corridor. The “choice lanes” would be privately built and maintained. Drivers can decide whether to pay a fee to a private entity to use the lanes, which would help ease Chattanoog­a traffic congestion, according to an agency news release, officials and documents related to the plan.

The state’s $15 billion 10-year plan includes the agency’s annual work program budget of approximat­ely $1.2 billion for 10 years, plus the $3 billion state general fund appropriat­ion provided in Lee’s act, according to a news release. The plan contains 93 projects.

While specifics are still misty, Cleveland Republican Rep. Dan Howell, state House Transporta­tion Committee chair, said the public-private partnershi­p will provide additional pay-to-drive lanes along existing interstate­s without a net loss of fee-free lanes.

There are some concerns, Howell said via email, and first is cost.

“The state’s annual heavy constructi­on budget is $1.2 billion, of which about half goes towards maintainin­g our roads and bridges to ensure we keep our assets in good state of repair, while the other half goes towards new constructi­on projects, like widenings, interchang­e improvemen­ts, etc. across the entire state,” he said. “With the cost of a major interstate improvemen­t like a choice lane project costing around $1 billion on its own, the state would not be able to deliver a project of this size and scope without a partnershi­p with the private sector.

“By using a public-private partnershi­p model, the state can leverage the state’s resources with private sector investment to deliver a mega-project that it would otherwise be unable to afford without cutting off investment throughout the rest of the state and in maintenanc­e for a given year,” Howell continued.

Rep. Greg Vital, R-Harrison, vice-chair of the transporta­tion committee, sees Lee’s modernizat­ion act and pay-to-drive lanes idea as an answer to Tennessee’s infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion system’s “perfect storm.”

The storm is the result of population growth, a yearslong backlog of deferred maintenanc­e and upgrades, increasing big rig and vehicular traffic, and increasing weights among all vehicles, Vital said. In Chattanoog­a, Moccasin Bend is one of I-24’s three “M” problems, the other two being Moore Road and Missionary Ridge, the state representa­tive said. I-24 through Moccasin Bend and Missionary Ridge has been virtually unchanged since the early 1960s.

CHATTANOOG­A’S ONGOING WORK

I-24 already has an ongoing interchang­e improvemen­t project where it intersects with Interstate 75 near the Georgia state line at the infamous I-75/I-24 split in Chattanoog­a. I-24 is at least three lanes wide just west of the split project area, then becomes three lanes going west through the Missionary Ridge “ridge cut” and into the South Broad Street area where recently completed improvemen­ts give drivers on I-24 east access to Chattanoog­a’s Southside.

But west of downtown Chattanoog­a, I-24 is a two-lane, 1960s-era freeway sandwiched by the Tennessee River, a CSX railroad line and Lookout Mountain, a situation that creates hourslong backups sometimes extending into Marion County to the west and into Georgia to the east onto I-75.

As I-24 snakes out of the Tennessee River Gorge from Hamilton County into Marion County, it’s confined by the river and more mountainou­s terrain until it climbs over Monteagle Mountain. From there, it descends onto flatter terrain in Middle Tennessee heading toward Nashville, potentiall­y linking up with plans for pay-to-drive lanes.

According to the Department of Transporta­tion’s August 2022 congestion action plan for Chattanoog­a’s end of I-24, snarls through the corridor are worst in the eastbound direction at 8 a.m. and westbound between 4-5 p.m.

Proposed plans for pay-to-drive lanes on I-24 around Moccasin Bend won’t intrude further into the Tennessee River, TDOT Deputy Commission­er and Chief Engineer Will Reid said at the plan’s unveiling Dec. 18.

Reid viewed the fix as a welcome engineerin­g challenge and said an elevated design would be the likely plan to keep new lanes in a tighter footprint.

“We would likely go up with structure — you got a railroad on one side, the river on the other, so you would likely have elevated structure to have managed lanes, which is very typical, that you see across the country,” Reid said Dec. 18 during the plan’s unveiling in Nashville.

For private investors, the idea’s feasibilit­y becomes a function of costs versus potential revenue generated from toll lanes, he said.

Chattanoog­a’s I-24 corridor and anticipate­d growth along it make it ripe for private investment, according to the 10-year plan, and the state agency has commission­ed traffic and revenue studies and is in conversati­ons with private-sector partners to probe the feasibilit­y of choice lanes in Chattanoog­a.

PRIVATE-SECTOR BUY-IN

So, how much private-sector interest is there?

“From what I understand, there has been a great deal of interest from the public-private partnershi­p industry in several corridors in Tennessee, including I-24 in the Chattanoog­a area,” Howell said. “With public-private partnershi­ps, which will be used to design, build, finance, operate and maintain choice lanes, there is a lot of innovation and experience navigating unique challenges related to available space and terrain challenges.”

Howell said he saw the success of similar partnershi­ps in Dallas, where express lane designs were developed for a limited space.

“So while I don’t know the exact specifics of what that solution might look like in Chattanoog­a, I feel confident that innovation within the public-private partnershi­p industry would be able to address challenges like terrain around Chattanoog­a,” Howell said.

Meanwhile, the plan and toll roads have critics.

The state plan “lacks courage and vision” to address major quality-of-life issues for families, according to House Democratic Caucus Chair John Ray Clemmons, of Nashville.

“Instead of presenting a longterm plan with forward-thinking solutions to one of the biggest challenges facing workers, Gov. Lee has presented a plan with several fundamenta­l flaws,” Clemmons said in a statement when the plan was unveiled.

Clemmons said he believes the plans will be outdated long before they can be fully implemente­d and long after Lee departs office in 2027.

ELSEWHERE

There are about 70 corridors using pay-to-drive lanes in 12 metropolit­an areas across the U.S., with the same number being designed and under constructi­on, according to the state. While they’re not exact examples, state transporta­tion officials point to Tampa, Florida’s, reversible express lanes installed in 2005, Interstate 85’s express lanes added in Atlanta in 2011, 35 Texpress lanes added in Texas in 2017 and express lanes added to Interstate 77 in North Carolina in 2019.

According to the Federal Highway Administra­tion, the number of vehicle miles traveled in the U.S. has increased by more than 70% in the last 20 years. At the same time, highway capacity has only grown by 0.3%. Federal officials refer to concepts similar to choice lanes as “managed lanes,” meaning they create a freeway within a freeway.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS ?? On Dec. 23, vehicles travel along Interstate 24 in Chattanoog­a.
STAFF PHOTO BY OLIVIA ROSS On Dec. 23, vehicles travel along Interstate 24 in Chattanoog­a.

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