Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevadans, Arizonans have renewed hope for completion of Interstate 11

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Last week’s news that Arizona had upgraded a portion of the principal driving route between Phoenix and Las Vegas offered a reminder about the necessity to connect the two cities by interstate highway. With a change in presidenti­al administra­tions on the way, we’ll once again send a message to Washington, D.C., that this project is among our community’s top infrastruc­ture needs.

Through several administra­tions, Las Vegas civic leaders have lobbied Washington to fully build out Interstate 11 between the two cities. But currently, only the 23-mile section of the road in Nevada has been completed, leaving a pathwork of two- and fourlane portions on the U.S. and state highways that form the rest of the projected I-11 route to Phoenix.

Meanwhile, although Arizona is making progress to improve the roads, the work is going at an agonizingl­y slow rate. The upgrade that was announced last week involved only three miles of U.S. Highway 93 north of Wikieup. That project, which widened the road to a four-lane divided highway, took nearly two years to finish and cost $35 million.

To really get things moving, the federal government needs to step in and build the route into a fully fledged I-11.

Doing so would have enormous benefits not only for Las Vegas but the entire Mountain West region: Experts estimate its economic benefit at $24 billion and say it would generate almost a quarter-million jobs.

It’s also critical for safety reasons. Anyone who’s driven the route knows that those two-lane portions can be unpleasant at best and a white-knuckle ride at worst, with cars piling up behind slow-moving vehicles and impatient drivers making risky passes. Traffic volume can be intense as well: Phoenix and Las Vegas are the only American cities with 1 million or more population that have yet to be connected by interstate.

The good news on this front is that President-elect Joe Biden offered an impressive infrastruc­ture plan on the campaign trail, which addresses not only highways but rail, public transporta­tion, bridges and other transporta­tion needs.

But how well Biden will be able to implement that plan is another matter entirely. If Republican­s hold onto the Senate, they’re highly likely to obstruct Biden for purely political reasons, to the detriment of Americans’ infrastruc­ture needs.

Still, the changeout in administra­tions

brings fresh opportunit­ies, and Las Vegas’ advocates are sure to keep pressing for the interstate. We offer them our full support.

We’d also strongly encourage them to push for public transporta­tion improvemen­ts in the community, especially light rail. One thing is for certain: Biden is far more open than President Donald Trump to light rail projects. The Trump administra­tion was partly responsibl­e for last year’s demise of the proposed Maryland Parkway light rail route, which lost out to a bus rapid transit option after the administra­tion failed to come through with grant funding for a light rail system.

“This is not an administra­tion that’s super supportive of the feds funding rail, and they made it clear to us that you might get 33%, whereas with other rail projects in the past, at one point you’d get 80%,” said Tina Quigley, former CEO of the Regional Transporta­tion Commission, during an interview in December 2019. “Most of the newer systems in the U.S. were built with 80% federal money.

“If we were getting 80% from the feds, I

think we could have done it.”

That was a serious blow to the community, where polling showed up to 75% of local residents supported the light rail option. Las Vegans know a good thing when they see one, because the city would benefit greatly from a rail system. The sooner we can establish one and build a connection between Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport to the Strip and beyond, the better it will be for the visitor experience that helps us attract tourists and convention­goers, for Strip workers and other commuters, for the environmen­t, and for developmen­t along the rail route.

Meanwhile, the I-11 build-out is also critical for our community’s growth and ongoing vitality. There’s also no better time to get cracking on it, considerin­g that it would create jobs and help Las Vegas and the region recover more quickly from the economic devastatio­n of the pandemic.

We’d urge Biden to battle for it, and we’ll remind Republican­s in Congress that the infrastruc­ture needs of Nevadans and all Americans are more important than party politics.

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2014) ?? A sign that will mark Interstate 11 between Phoenix and Las Vegas sits on the edge of a parking lot overlookin­g Hoover Dam on March 21, 2014.
JULIE JACOBSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2014) A sign that will mark Interstate 11 between Phoenix and Las Vegas sits on the edge of a parking lot overlookin­g Hoover Dam on March 21, 2014.

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