Authority Celebrates Completion of Corridor H Segment

The Robert C. Byrd Corridor H Highway Authority is celebrating the completion of a segment of the road near the Tucker-Grant county line.

The authority scheduled a ribbon-cutting ceremony Thursday.

The new section runs about 3 miles and is part of an ongoing project to complete Corridor H between Mount Storm and near Davis.

Authority president Robbie Morris told The Inter-Mountain that the section is the first completed portion of Corridor H in Tucker County.

Corridor H is the only section of the Appalachian Corridor system that hasn’t been finished. When it is completed, it will connect Interstate 79 near Weston with the junction of Interstates 81 and 66 in Front Royal, Virginia.

Corridor H Project Yields Water Pollution Fines

The Corridor H highway project has yielded $74,000 in state environmental fines for water pollution violations.

In a consent order signed Wednesday by the West Virginia Department of Transportation, the state Department of Environmental Protection levied fines for pollution in Beaver Creek. The order says the violations stemmed from sections of the Corridor H project near Davis.

The order says the project exceeded its limits on releasing iron into waterways 30 times from mid-2013 through 2014.

In April 2014, a DEP investigation found that a sediment basin on the project had failed and released muddy water and sediment into the creek. DEP noted several instances of sediment and discolored water because of the project.

DEP says it issued a similar order in January 2014.

Corridor H Could Be Finished by 2020

 Local leaders say the state could complete Corridor H by 2020 if it used a public-private partnership to finance the work.

Business, community and economic development officials urged Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin and the Department of Transportation on Tuesday to implement a public-private partnership plan. They issued the call at a roadside news conference near Kerns.

Recent estimates of federal funding allocations indicate Corridor H will be completed by 2036. Corridor H Authority chair Robbie Morris says that’s too far in the future.

Corridor H is the only section of the Appalachian Corridor system that hasn’t been finished. When it is completed, it will connect Interstate 79 near Weston with the junction of Interstates 81 and 66 in Front Royal, Virginia.

Corridor H Segment Expected to Open by Late November

  Another section of Corridor H in West Virginia is expected to open by Thanksgiving.

Corridor H coordinator Tommy Collins tells The Exponent Telegram that the 1.5-mile segment is near the connector to W.Va. Route 42 and W.Va. Route 93 in the Mount Storm area.

Collins says another 4-mile section could open by the end of the year. But he says an early spring opening is more likely due to the weather.

Corridor H Authority president Robbie Morris says construction of the four-lane highway is ahead of schedule.

Corridor H is the only section of the Appalachian Corridor system that hasn’t been finished. When it is completed, it will connect Interstate 79 near Weston with the junction of Interstates 81 and 66 in Front Royal, Virginia.

Public Private Partnerships Could Speed Up Corridor H Construction

An economic impact study presented to lawmakers says the state would see a more than $1 billion increase in its economy if Corridor H was completed by 2020 instead of its current 2036 end date. Supporters of the accelerated plan say the money to complete the federally funded roadway is already available.

“I always get this question, well how are you going to pay for it? Well, you folks were able to give us another tool last year that we can now use to accelerate the completion of that highway,” said Steven Foster, president of the Corridor H Authority. “That is the concept of public private partnerships.”

Foster presented the implications of the study released last month to lawmakers during interim meetings at the Capitol.

Today, the construction of the corridor is 100 percent funded by the federal government at a rate of $40 million a year.

By utilizing the public private partnership model, Foster said the Authority would bid out a contract to design, construct and finance the additional miles of highway needed. With private funds, the state could build 10 miles of highway over the next four years and collect the federal dollars over the next 10 years to pay it back.

“(It’s) like buying a house. Very few people have the opportunity to save up all the money it’s going to take to buy their house. They usually have a mortgage and that’s basically what this does,” Foster told the committee.

“It allows you to go ahead and build the highway and let the contractor finance it and be able to put it in place over 10 years of pay back as opposed to the four years that it’s going to take to build it.”

Foster assured legislators through the model the private entity has no ownership claim to the roadway they finance for the state.

Corridor H will be 75 percent complete by next year.
 

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