Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

I-11 in Nevada: Where do we go next?

- Robert Lang This column was posted on lasvegassu­n.com at 2 a.m. today.

As he does every August, Brian Greenspun is taking some time off and is turning over his W here I Stand column to others. Today’s guest columnist is Robert Lang, the executive director of the Lincy Institute and Brookings Mountain West at UNLV, and a professor of urban affairs at the university.

Now that Nevada’s initial section of Interstate 11 to Phoenix is complete, the Nevada Department of Transporta­tion is soliciting input on where the road should go next. Given that Arizona is responsibl­e for completing I-11 south from our state line to Phoenix, and is actively working to do so, Nevada can plan additions to I-11 north within the state.

Most of the discussion so far has focused on a proposed road that links Las Vegas to Reno and I-80. I believe the plan is shortsight­ed; a state-only discussion misses the bigger purpose of I-11 — to link the desert Southwest’s two biggest metros (Las Vegas and Phoenix) to Portland and Seattle, the most populous metros in the Pacific Northwest.

My 2011 book, “Megapolita­n America,” shows that by 2040 the desert Southwest and Pacific Northwest “megapolita­n areas” will be home to nearly 25 million people. Interstate 11 does not belong to Nevada. Rather, I-11 is a national highway that should connect major megapolita­n clusters.

Currently, there is no direct Interstate highway between the Southwest and Northwest. All roads literally lead to California, where traffic enters the highly congested I-5. When interstate­s in our region were planned at the mid-20th century, Los Angeles and San Francisco dominated the West’s metropolit­an developmen­t.

Consider that when Major League Baseball expanded outside the Northeast and Midwest, the first two teams to move farther west were the Dodgers and the Giants. Both teams left New York

and jumped to Los Angeles and San Francisco, passing over the sparsely settled Great Plains and Mountain West.

On a national scale, interstate planners saw urban America as an extensive metropolit­an network east of the Mississipp­i and two large-scale, booming metros in California. The challenge in the East was linking major proximate population centers with direct routes (look at any U.S. road atlas and you can see the East as a dense web of Interstate­s).

Over time, the East also built “reliever” interstate­s that drew traffic away from the most congested highways, such as I-95 from Maine to Miami, which runs along the urban corridor from Boston to Washington, D.C. Take for example I-81, which runs from Dandridge in eastern Tennessee (at I-40) to upstate New York at the Canadian border. Interstate 81 mostly parallels I-95 through the eastern U.S.

The West’s interstate pattern shows a much less integrated network than the East. The Southwest operates on a huband-spoke system to this day, with Los Angeles as the hub and Las Vegas and Phoenix as the spokes. That is why we are now building I-11 between Las Vegas and Phoenix. The two regions were too small in the 1950s to justify a direct route. In 2018, the size of these metros makes the connection imperative.

But in recognizin­g the need to connect Las Vegas and Phoenix, we must also acknowledg­e that there is no reliever interstate for I-5 in the West. The Southwest and Northwest currently link by interstate highways through California’s traffic-filled freeways or the increasing­ly congested I-15 along the Wasatch Front (Salt Lake City, Provo, and Ogden) in Utah. But I-11 could be such a reliever road if it allows traffic to flow from Canada to Mexico without ever directly engaging California’s I-5 corridor.

Specifical­ly, I-11 should connect Phoenix and Las Vegas to I-84 at Twin Falls, Idaho, intersecti­ng I-8, I-10, I-40, I-15, and I-80 along the way. Interstate 84 provides a direct route to the Pacific Northwest. It connects to Portland, Seattle and Vancouver — Western Canada’s largest city — via I-5, I-82, and I-90.

Interestin­gly, Eastern Nevada seems to be mostly left out of NDOT’s I-11 conversati­on. Leaders in Elko and Ely have taken notice and are beginning to make the case for an I-11 route through their communitie­s. According to the Elko Daily Free Press, White Pine County Board of Commission­ers Chairman Richard Howe argues that I-11 should run through Eastern Nevada, following U.S. 93 north from Las Vegas. He notes that such a route is less costly than building I-11 to Reno because it would not require the state to purchase private land. Howe also wants the economic stimulus an interstate highway would bring to Eastern Nevada, which has not seen the major investment­s in state-supported economic developmen­t projects made in both Reno and Las Vegas.

Finally, there are the politics of I-11. At the moment, the I-11 Caucus in Washington includes senators and representa­tives from just Nevada and Arizona. That means a total of four U.S. senators and 13 members of the U.S. House of Representa­tives are advocating for I-11. If, as is currently proposed, I-11 connects just Las Vegas and Reno, there is little prospect of widening its existing D.C. coalition. However, adding Washington, Oregon and Idaho to the conversati­on engages six more senators and 13 new representa­tives.

A reliever interstate that connects the Southwest and Northwest and never dumps traffic onto the crowded highways in the Golden State may in turn draw California’s enormous D.C. delegation into the I-11 Caucus. Coalitions are key in policymaki­ng, so the more we do to expand the number of constituen­cies interested in I-11, the better we might be able to leverage federal support. Enhancing this coalition in particular offers the opportunit­y to expand I-11 not only for the interests of Nevadans, but for the interests of the entire American West.

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Robert Lang

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