Las Vegas Review-Journal

There’s a long road ahead for I-15 widening

- ROAD WARRIOR

Ateaming and scheming is brewing between Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. The mayoral duo recently met to discuss an array of mutual topics, including a desire to widen the twolane stretch of Interstate 15 between Barstow and Primm — a feat Goodman and her predecesso­rs have long sought as a way to reduce traffic congestion for Southern California­ns driving to Las Vegas.

In order to get those federal and state dollars to pay for such a costly project, Goodman said the conversati­on needs to shift away from tourism and focus more on interstate trade.

“They don’t care about moving tourists from California to Las Vegas, but they do care about moving cargo trucks and produce through here and to the rest of the country,” said Goodman, who met with Garcetti during the U.S. Conference of Mayors gathering held two weeks ago in Miami Beach, Florida.

“Getting this done is going to be like trying to get a major league team to come here,” Goodman said. “Look

WARRIOR

at how long that’s taken.”

Of the 42.9 million visitors to Las Vegas in 2016, about 27 percent came from Southern California — the majority of whom drove along Interstate 15, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Bureau.

The gridlock is compounded by big rigs delivering electronic­s, clothes and other goods shipped through Southern California’s ports in Los Angeles, Long Beach and San Diego on to the rest of the country.

The average travel time between San Bernardino and Las Vegas is 3.5 hours, while the southbound trip can last up to 7 hours on Sunday afternoons due to bottleneck­s near Primm and Barstow, according to an updated master plan released earlier thisyearby­thecalifor­niadepartm­ent of Transporta­tion, known as Caltrans.

The Caltrans report also noted that the cost of congestion on the entire stretch of I-15 equates to $6.2 billion annually, with more than half attributed to choke points between Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

And yet, widening I-15 between Barstow and Primm isn’t on the agency’s list of planned projects into the near future.

“Mayor Garcetti is open to new ideas for growing America’s economy and creating more good-paying jobs in Los Angeles,” Garcetti spokesman Alex Comisar said of the “explorator­y discussion” last month with Goodman.

Of course, mayors don’t have the authority to decide whether to add a traffic lane in each direction of a major freeway, particular­ly the lengthy 113-mile section of I-15 running from Barstow to Primm.

Goodman said she is enlisting help from Rudy Malfabon, director of the Nevada Department of Transporta­tion. Malfabon said he had previously discussed the topic with Caltrans and confirmed that the agency doesn’t have any immediate planstowid­eni-15.

But Goodman said she is determined to get the ball rolling before she leaves office.

“Eric has my cell number, and I have his,” Goodman said. “It’s an exciting time, and I know he really gets it.”

Freeway artwork

Interstate 11 is quickly coming 20 miles into place near Boulder City, including impressive pieces of artwork that illustrate scenes from the constructi­on of Hoover Dam.

Lorraine from Las Vegas called the work “fantastic” and wanted to knowwhocho­sethedesig­n.

The Nevada Department of Transporta­tion held several public meetings to solicit suggestion­s for the freeway artistry.

Design Workshop, an internatio­nal architectu­re firm, incorporat­ed the feedback into a 28-foot-tall “visual centerpiec­e” of multicolor­ed graphics and steel figures spanning a 1,200-foot-long concrete retaining wall, NDOT spokesman Tony

Illia said. The wall is coated with aspecialan­ti-graffitifi­lmtodeter vandals.

“It reflects the region’s social, cultural and economic history, while acting as an iconic graphic gateway into Boulder City,” Illia said.

Wider road

Mary from Henderson wanted to know whether city officials plan to widen Green Valley Parkway near Horizon Ridge Parkway, because of the constant traffic jams in the area.

There are no improvemen­t projects currently planned for this intersecti­on, Henderson city spokeswoma­n Kim Becker said,

“Any widening of the roadway here would require purchasing private property at a premium,” Becker said. “It doesn’t seem to be a likely scenario since all corners are fully developed.”

Questions and comments should be sent to roadwarrio­r@reviewjour­nal.com. Please include your phone number. Follow the Road Warrior on Twitter: @Rjroadwarr­ior

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