NEWS
B Y K E L LY K E N O Y E R
TRANSPORTATION PLAN DRAWS CROWDS
AND CONTROVERSY
Planners worked to address all interests and concerns
n April 17 public hearing on a proposed 20-year
transportation plan for Eugene drew a crowd of
more than 50 citizens concerned about problems
ranging from a dangerous highway interchange
to carbon emissions.
Twenty-four citizens, including environmentalists, con-
cerned seniors and the mayor of Junction City, spoke at a
public hearing in Harris Hall before the combined panel of
Eugene City Council and the Lane County Board of Com-
missioners. Half of the citizens spoke about safety issues at
the Randy Pape Beltline and Delta Highway interchange,
where high traffic and ignored speed limits endanger citi-
zens and lower quality of life. Others brought up carbon
emissions, non-vehicular transit and environmental con-
cerns.
A major goal of the Eugene 2035 Transportation Sys-
tem Plan (TSP) is to reduce traffic fatalities and major inju-
ries to zero as part of Vision Zero, a 2015 resolution passed
by city council that “no loss of life or serious injury on Eu-
gene’s transportation system is acceptable.” The Beltline
project is a major move toward this goal, according to Rob
Inerfeld, city of Eugene’s transportation planning manager.
The TSP proposes an $83 million project that would
smooth traffic flow at that interchange and enhance safety.
Inerfeld says “Beltline has the highest concentration of
crashes in our region. They’re mostly not fatalities, but the
proposed improvements would make Beltline safer.”
At the Monday evening meeting, County Commis-
sioner Pete Sorenson pointed out that Lane County has
the highest death count in the state from car crashes, even
though other counties have higher populations.
Junction City mayor Mark Crenshaw spoke in sup-
port of the planned improvements, pointing out that Delta
Highway serves as a link from the rural community to the
hub that is Eugene. “We’re talking about more than just
citizens of Eugene,” he says.
Eleven Eugene residents living near Delta Highway
spoke out about the difficulties they have with traffic in
the area. Jean Rubel, a resident of Lakeridge Senior Park,
voiced her concern about escaping the area if there were a
natural disaster. “We would be trapped for days,” she said.
Others pointed out difficulties crossing the street safely
and requested bus stops near their homes.
Beltline and its traffic problems weren’t the only issue
discussed at the public hearing. A number of climate ac-
tivists, including several from 350 Eugene, came to voice
their concerns that the plan doesn’t go far enough to limit
emissions and to urge their representatives to do more.
Debra McGee of 350 Eugene said, “Building more roads
encourages more driving. It destroys wetlands, wildlife
habitat and peaceful green spaces for humans. Building
more roads does not reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”
Matt McRae of Our Children’s Trust said, “Lower-
income residents — those who make less than $25,000 a
year — take the bus four times more often and walk twice
as much as residents making more than $55,000. Do you
feel like the needs of these populations are reflected in the
priorities of this Transportation System Plan?”
The city is being pulled in different directions for resi-
dents with different needs, and the transportation plan bud-
gets accordingly. The Beltline project isn’t just for cars, it
includes facilities for bikers and pedestrians as well. The
total budget for the new TSP is $634 million, and only
three of the proposed 264 projects other than rail systems
do not include explicit plans for bicycle, pedestrian and
public transportation options.
The proposed TSP includes plans for a bikeshare pro-
gram in Eugene to be implemented by the end of Sep-
tember, complete with an app that makes it easier to find
A
ROB INERFELD,
T R A N S P O R TAT I O N
PLANNING MANAGER
available bicycles. Two hundred and thirty-nine of the 294
projects are exclusively pedestrian and bicycle projects
with a $72 million budget.
The TSP has the explicit goals of 50 percent reduction
in fossil fuel dependence and tripling the number of trips
by foot, bike or public transit during the next 20 years.
Transportation planning manager Inerfeld says, “The way
this plan addresses that is mostly by focusing on making
walking, biking and public transportation more attractive
forms of transportation and making them really easy choic-
es for people in Eugene.” He adds, “This is a good plan for
aggressively moving in that direction.”
Biking may also become safer with the new TSP, ac-
cording to Inerfeld. “We’d like buffered bike lanes to be
our standard,” he says, referring to bike lanes that are pro-
tected from traffic by a vertical barrier, like a curb, parked
cars, or trees. The only example in Eugene currently is on
Alder street near the UO campus, where parked cars pro-
tect bikers from traffic.
The TSP also includes plans for new bus rapid transit
EmX routes. “We have River Road, Highway 99, Coburg
Road, Martin Luther King boulevard, and Amazon Park-
way,” Inerfeld says. “Those are the locations we’re looking
at as part of the move ahead survey.”
eugeneweekly.com • A pril 20, 2017
13