Las Vegas could become the crossroads of the West with a new Interstate 15 corridor study, a proposed Interstate
11 and planned connections to a high-speed rail network, a transportation expert said on Tuesday.
Tom Skancke, president of The Skancke Co. Ltd., told the Nevada Contractors Association at a lunch meeting that
there are challenges in developing transportation infrastructure, including how to pay for it, but the potential
reward is economic diversification for the region.
“This is probably the most important critical issue to our nation’s long-term economic sustainability,” Skancke
told about 100 association members gathered at the Rio.
Skancke said the Nevada Department of Transportation recently awarded an I-15 corridor study. A similar project
was undertaken for Interstate 95 from Florida to Maine. The purpose of the study is to develop expansion and improvement
strategies for the length of the highway.
The study will include I-15 from San Diego to Salt Lake City. Skancke said Idaho and Montana did not opt to participate.
Skancke said a section of I-15 in Southern California illustrates why communities along the highway need to work
together.
“When the I-15-Interstate 215 intersection in San Bernardino County fails, the whole system fails,” he said.
He said the intersection was designed in 1958 to carry 15,000 vehicle trips a day. Today, the intersection handles
122,000 truck trips alone, serves 65,000 residents of Victorville on their trips to the Los Angeles basin and is
a conduit for about 11 million visitors a year to Southern Nevada.
“It is the most significant intersection in all of the West,” Skancke said. “In the past, we have looked at (the
cities along I-15) as competition. Today, we need to look at them as complementing us as partners.”
Another highway transportation project that would affect Las Vegas’ future is a proposal to upgrade U.S. 93 and
U.S. 95 to interstate highway standards. The proposed I-11 would run from Phoenix to Seattle, and I-15 would become
an important intersection.
The proposal takes on added importance with China’s emergence as the world’s dominant economic power.
China has invested in deep-water ports at Punta Colonet, Baja California, and Lazaro Cardenas, Michoacan, to import
goods to North and Central America. Southern California ports can’t accommodate most of the new supercargo ships,
Skancke said.
A third infrastructure component is high-speed rail.
Skancke was one of the engineers of the Western High Speed Rail Alliance, which includes transportation organizations
in Las Vegas, Phoenix, Denver, Salt Lake City and Reno.
He said the alliance is working as a single entity to develop a high-speed rail network and apply for funding for
the West. Intermountain western states were shut out when the federal government doled out $8 billion in high-speed
rail stimulus funds.
Skancke said the alliance avoided being involved with California’s high-speed system because it didn’t want to
get entangled in the state’s political issues. But the alliance has done more in one year than backers of the Pacific
Northwest’s proposed Cascadia high-speed system between Vancouver, British Columbia, and Eugene, Ore., has done
in 20 years, he said.
While Las Vegas has the potential of becoming a center of transportation in the West, Skancke said, there are huge
obstacles to overcome. The largest may be changing the planning mindset, a major cultural shift.
“Our problem is that we react; we don’t plan,” Skancke said. “We’re really good at crises and wars. We’ve
got those two things down pat. But if we don’t declare war on this transportation crisis, we won’t have anything
to react to. It’s that serious. Someone needs to stand up and say, ‘Here’s the vision for the future of our
country.’”
At the root of the issue is money, and Skancke said the nation needs a long-term stable funding source.
He proposes an increase to the fuel tax, the implementation of congestion management and tolling, and a study on
implementing a vehicle-miles-traveled use fee.
Skancke said increasing the fuel tax by 3 cents a gallon would generate more than $200 billion a year.
“We need about $225 billion a year on the low end just to sustain the current system,” Skancke said.
Experts have talked about congestion management and tolling, but Skancke acknowledged that “it just never gets
there.”
Congestion management and tolling have been proposed as private-sector investments in highway systems.
Congestion management involves charging motorists a fee to use special lanes when traffic is heavy. Tolls generate
revenue from any motorist choosing to use a toll highway.
Vehicle-miles-traveled use fees, or VMTs, are a fix for the inevitable wave of issues that will arise as more motorists
shift to energy-saving electric vehicles.
Skancke believes that state and federal governments need to think ahead about the impact electric vehicles will
have on gasoline-tax revenue.
“Somebody has to champion a VMT,” Skancke said. “Without it, we have no way of sustaining our highway trust fund.”
Skancke said the National Car Rental chain intends to purchase 500 electric vehicles and station 100 of them in
Las Vegas.
“To my knowledge, there are only four places to plug in a car in Las Vegas, and all of them are at CityCenter,”
he said. “If companies like National are going to start plopping these vehicles into cities, the reality is that
we should start capturing that fuel tax.”
(转自Las Vegas Sun )