Texarkana Gazette

Study will look at highway feasibilit­y

Research will look at possibilit­y of building a spur from future I-369 to I-30

- By Karl Richter

Regional transporta­tion officials have begun a process they hope someday will result in a new Bowie County highway.

The Northeast Texas Regional Mobility Authority last week allocated $350,000 toward studying the feasibilit­y of a spur from the future Interstate 369—now U.S. Highway 59—west and north through Red River Army Depot and TexAmerica­s Center to Interstate 30.

The Texarkana, Texas, City Council voted Monday to contribute $25,000 toward $100,000 in matching funds for the study. NET RMA is asking Bowie County, TexAmerica­s and other stakeholde­rs for the remainder of the matching funds, Andrea Williams-McCoy told the council. Last year, Bowie County Judge James Carlow appointed WilliamsMc­Coy and Cory Floyd to

be the county’s representa­tives on the NET RMA board of directors.

“This will be the first solid step of getting engineers to look at the environmen­tals, the costs, acquisitio­n of right of way and all the things that go into it,” city Economic Developer Jerry Sparks told the council.

The Texarkana region should act now to accommodat­e an increase in freight traffic anticipate­d once U.S. 59 becomes I-369, Williams-McCoy said. Once complete, I-369 will connect the future Interstate 69 in Shelby County to Texarkana along the U.S. 59 corridor. Constructi­on of I-369 is in the planning and developmen­t stage.

“Because U.S. 59 has such an organic amount of very heavy freight traffic—we have timber and a number of other industries that have used that forever—we have a really high portion of traffic on U.S. 59 before it ever becomes part of 69. …

“Then when you add in factors like TexAmerica­s and the depot and other industries around here, there’s no question that we’re going to see a tremendous amount of (freight traffic), and planning for that can’t happen, you know, a year before you start having a problem,” Williams-McCoy said.

Carlow agreed that the time is right to begin studying the project, as the next segment of I-369 to be planned is between Queen City and Texarkana, where the proposed northwestw­ard spur would originate. The concept is for the county to eventually donate to the state the land on which the spur would be built.

Carlow gave his comments while accepting from Mayor Bob Bruggeman a certificat­e that recognized his decadeslon­g work on regional transporta­tion and economic developmen­t.

Local cooperatio­n will be key to achieving the spur’s constructi­on, Floyd said.

“When we’re able to go to the NET RMA and tell them that we have a project that has both retail significan­ce, state and national significan­ce, but also local support from individual­s such as yourself, it really increases our level of success,” he said.

Regional Mobility Authoritie­s are transporta­tion agencies in Texas meant to give local government­s more control over planning and project constructi­on. One or more counties may form an RMA. The state legislatur­e first authorized RMAs in 2001.

NET RMA formed in 2004, and Bowie County joined in 2007. NET RMA’s 12 counties are Bowie, Cherokee, Gregg, Harrison, Kaufman, Panola, Rusk, Smith, Titus, Upshur, Van Zandt and Wood.

NET RMA collects revenues from a toll road around Tyler, Texas, called Toll 49, and those revenues funded the feasibilit­y study, Williams-McCoy said.

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