Chicago Sun-Times

$ 4B PLAN TO IMPROVE, WIDEN TRI- STATE TOLLWAY APPROVED

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO Staff Reporter

An ambitious $ 4 billion plan to rebuild a portion of Interstate 294 was approved Thursday by the Illinois Tollway Board.

No toll increase would be needed to fund the plan, which was approved by an 8- to- 0 vote.

But some, including Hinsdale President Tom Cauley, noted that widening I- 294 would likely have a “devastatin­g impact” on village property values, parks and noise levels.

“Yet despite this potential to cause serious damage to Hinsdale, the Tollway Authority had put forth no hard evidence to justify widening I- 294 through Hinsdale,” Cauley wrote in a letter read aloud.

About 30 people spoke at the meeting Thursday in Downers Grove, the vast majority supporting the proposal. Many were contractor­s and other business people eager for the potential economic benefits predicted for the tollway’s expansion.

Speaking after the board’s vote, Tollway Board Chairman Bob Schillerst­rom said his agency is sensitive to the concerns of communitie­s that could be affected by the expansion.

“This is a first step,” Schillerst­rom said of the vote. “This is a philosophi­cal statement as to what we are looking to do. Now discussion will begin. We will be reaching out to neighbors, we will be reaching out to communitie­s.”

Asked how many homes might need to be demolished to make way for the work, Schillerst­rom said: “That’s unknown at this point. Hopefully, none. . . . Our goal is, as much as possible, to stay in the chute that we already have. As we design it, that will be one of our goals — not to impact our neighbors.”

About $ 1.9 billion was in the pipeline as part of an already approved plan to rebuild the 22- mile central portion of the Tri- State between Balmoral Avenue and 95th Street.

This week, it was revealed the enhanced project would need an additional $ 2.1 billion. It would include adding lanes and making other improvemen­ts, which tollway officials predict could increase “peak” travel speeds from 24 mph to 45 mph.

That central portion of the TriState “is a patchwork of pavement that includes original 60- year- old roadway and key infrastruc­ture that is deteriorat­ing,” Schillerst­rom had said in a news release. “If the tollway is going to make the best investment for our customers and the region, we need to expand these plans.”

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