Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Sisolak gives hope for earlier review of car pool lanes

- By Mick Akers

After initially saying there would be no changes to the recently activated 22-mile car pool-lane system in Las Vegas for three years, the state seems to be changing its tune as the complaints pile up.

Gov. Steve Sisolak said the high occupancy vehicle lanes could be up for revision with the state Board of Transporta­tion in a year and a half, which is half the time originally stated.

“It would have to go through the processes, but the previous

administra­tion worked that deal out with the federal government to get the funding, and that’s something we’re setting for the next 18 months,” Sisolak said Tuesday while attending school lunch at Staton Elementary School.

The federal funding Sisolak alluded to is money that was awarded to the state transporta­tion department for addition of the car pool system as part of the nearly $1 billion Project Neon, which wrapped up this summer. Car pool lanes run on portions of Interstate 15 and U.S. Highway 95 and feature 24/7 regulation­s.

The round-the-clock enforcemen­t, which is at the forefront of motorists’ complaints, was added at the recommenda­tion of the Federal Highway Administra­tion, as there are direct-access HOV ramps on the left side of the freeway, according to the Nevada Department of Transporta­tion.

Despite calls by the Las Vegas City Council to address the 24-hour regulation of the lanes immediatel­y and go back to peak hour, weekday enforcemen­t, Sisolak said it’s not that simple.

“It was part of the agreement that was made with the federal government to get the funding to get (HOV lanes) in here,” he said. “So it’s not just something that you can just eliminate suddenly.”

Despite Sisolak’s statement that the lanes will be reviewed in 18

months, NDOT Director Kristina Swallow said the department is staying on track with its original plan.

“We will conduct a formal review and comprehens­ive assessment of HOV network operations after collecting, collating, and analyzing three years of data,” Swallow said in an email. “Meanwhile, during the interim, the department will continue updating the transporta­tion board on emerging HOV usage and performanc­e measures as early data becomes available.”

City Councilman Stavros Anthony said he’s happy to hear that the lanes could be addressed sooner than originally stated, adding that motorists who continue to air their displeasur­e are being heard.

“The HOV lanes are really making a lot of people mad because they want to be able to use them,” Anthony said. “They’re like me. They hate seeing a lane open with no cars (when there’s traffic congestion), and they want to be able to use it.”

Anthony said he hasn’t seen a change in the usage of the HOV lanes since regulation of them began in June. He said it shows that the lanes aren’t encouragin­g Las Vegas Valley motorists to carpool.

“They’re being used the same today as the day they first opened them. There’s nobody using them,” Anthony said. “Most of the drivers are single drivers, and if they are two per occupancy, they were probably driving as a double occupant anyway. … It’s not changing anybody’s behavior.”

Anthony applauded Sisolak for being prepared to bump up the time frame for reviewing the lanes and said he’s confident changes will occur to the regulation­s as a result.

“Eighteen months is definitely better than three years,” he said. “I’m pretty confident when they do their analysis in 18 months they’ll find out exactly what we know today: The HOV lanes are not causing people to double-up, and they aren’t taking vehicles off the freeway. That is the purpose of (HOV lanes), and it’s not happening. And it never will happen.”

 ?? Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? NDOT says federal officials endorsed 24/7 endorsemen­t of car pool lanes because of left-side access ramps.
Benjamin Hager Las Vegas Review-Journal NDOT says federal officials endorsed 24/7 endorsemen­t of car pool lanes because of left-side access ramps.

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