Tuesday, October 17, 2006

? What action steps should Greenburgh take re: TZ BRidge?

THE QUESTION OF THE DAY: WHAT ACTION STEPS SHOULD GREENBURGH TAKE REGARDING THE PROPOSED TZ BRIDGE?
New York State officials have been studying various options regarding the TZ Bridge. Among the options: replacing the TZ Bridge with another bridge. Establishing East-West rail service connections. Where will the local stations be located? How will this impact traffic/ development? The decision regarding the bridge will impact our community. What role should the town be playing during this review process? Should we hire a consultant...should we organize additional community meetings...what are your thoughts?

9 comments:

  1. Dear Phil: I intend to include in my 2007 budget a request for funding for a consultant who can help the town review the bridge options. We need to be proactive - not wait till it's too late.

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  2. The transportation agencies working on the Tappan Zee corridor project anticipate spending $6 billion to $15 billion to replace the bridge and build new mass transit lines. With that big a budget, there should be significant funding included in the package to allow towns and villages in the corridor to develop master plans and local infrastructure improvements that not only allow them to take full advantage of new mass transit, with new transit-oriented development districts, but also for initiatives like traffic calming and enforcement of parking rules in neighborhoods near rail or bus stations.

    - Jon Orcutt
    Tri-State Transportation Campaign

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  3. LOOMING TZB PROBLEM
    CONCERNED CITZENS OF WESTCHESTER


    What we are trying to remedy:

    (1) The air we breathe is toxic and threatens the health of everyone in the area. This is especially true for children under 7 years of age, adults over 70 and people who are already ill. We have been out-of-compliance with the Federal Clean Air Act for years.

    We are in imminent danger of suffering notoriously high cancer, asthma and lung disease rates as are people living near the Cross Bronx Expressway. We insist that New York State government remedy this situation in the planning for a new Hudson River crossing.

    At present, over 135,000 vehicles cross the TZB daily. By 2020, there will be an expected 20% to 30% increase in volume. A larger bridge will add substantially to the threat to our health.


    (2) Apart from this real threat to our health, emergency repairs and traffic tie-ups on the Tappan Zee Bridge are growing more frequent. A major renovation seems increasingly more critical. We believe that the best TZB option is for renovation, not enlargment, which will cost us $14.5 billion dollars. Our plan is supported by the Riverkeeper organization which labeled the new and expanded bridge option “a boondoggle”.

    A dedicated truck tunnel is far less expensive than a new bridge. It could also carry a mass-transit component. This would eliminate 8 million truck trips per year on the bridge, improve traffic flow and greatly reduce the fouling of the Hudson River. Diesel emissions are not only highly toxic to us, they also contaminate the river environment.


    Submitted by:
    Sherwood Chorost - Concerned Citizens for Responsible Development - Westchester Chapter, and
    George Sherman - President, Concerned Citizens for Responsible Development
    - Rockland Chapter

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  4. Dear Paul,

    IT'S TIME TO FIND A BETTER SOLUTION
    FOR THE PROPOSED HUDSON RIVER CROSSING

    If you saw a group of children playing near a fleet of idling
    Diesel
    trucks which were spewing toxic fumes you would probably anticipate the
    serious health problem they faced and would move them to a safer
    location.
    This would be an intelligent and responsible action.

    If you heard that the State was planning to significantly
    increase
    the already very high traffic flow in our neighborhood without due
    consideration for the health and safety of the people in the community
    it
    would be similarly wise if you were active in pressing for a responsible

    development plan. This is the situation we now face along the I-287
    corridor. And the stakes are about to get much more serious.

    Traffic flow over the Tappan Zee Bridge averages 132,000 vehicles

    daily. About 22,000 trucks per day make up that total. Undeniably,
    trucks
    are an important factor in the vitality of our economy. But we must
    take a
    look at the environmental and health costs of unchecked traffic
    expansion
    and find a way to reduce the negative impacts it produces.

    The New York State Thruway Authority and the NYS Department of
    Transportation are now considering the building of a new and larger
    bridge.
    While there is broad agreement on the need for development of mass
    transit
    across the Hudson River, a tunnel option has been excluded from their
    list
    of alternatives.

    What follows will highlight some of the major issues which need
    to be
    addressed. They are: (1) Financial cost, (2) Environmental
    protection
    (i.e., Hudson River and human health), (3) Traffic safety, (4) Impact
    on
    traffic flow on collateral roads, (5) Construction jobs, (6)
    Minimization of land taking/ dislocation of homes and businesses, and
    (7)
    Timeliness with regard to the current deteriorating status of the TZB.

    (1) COST - The latest official cost estimate for a new bridge and

    associated systems is $14.5 billion (2003 dollars)! Ultimately, the
    taxpayers and commuters will have to handle this staggering financial
    burden. And this particular project is surpassed in priority by two
    other
    ultra-costly traffic construction plans - completion of the 2nd Avenue
    Subway line and extension of the LIRR link to Grand Central Station.

    The story we hear for elimination of a tunnel option along
    I-287 is
    that it would be more costly than a new bridge. By its estimated
    completion
    time in 2016 or beyond, estimated costs for that new bridge could swell
    to
    $20 billion or more. In contrast, authoritative reports from the tunnel

    industry state that the most recently built European tunnels of
    comparable
    length and quality cost in the range of from $300 million to $750
    million,
    less than 1/ 10th of the projected new TZB cost.

    Further, two other major Hudson River crossings have recently
    received political support, i.e., a new passenger rail tunnel from New
    Jersey to midtown NYC and the Cross Harbor Freight Tunnel which has been
    on
    the books since 1930.

    ( 2/ A) ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION / The Hudson River - A recent
    meeting
    about I-287 transportation options with the staff of the respected
    environmental watchdog, Riverkeeper, found that they endorsed the
    "Renovate-No Build" option for the crossing. Their report cited the need
    to
    maintain Hudson River quality where construction of a new and larger
    bridge
    would further damage the river environment. The estimated cost for
    refurbishing the current TZB is $280 million for a new deck plus a great

    deal more for structural repairs which could exceed $1 billion.

    ( 2/ B ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION / Air Quality & Effects on Health
    There are hundreds of scientific studies citing the toxic
    effects
    and health risks from vehicular (especially truck) exhausts. As an
    example,
    a 2001 medical study during the 17-day Summer Olympics in Atlanta Ga.
    conclusively demonstrated that lowering vehicular traffic in that area
    led
    to 28% lower lung disease-producing ozone rates. This study tracked air

    quality levels before and during major roadway changes as well as after
    a
    return to the original highway design. Reduction of downtown traffic
    resulted in 42% lower asthma and non-asthma acute distress rates of
    medical
    visits and hospitalizations during the study and a return to normally
    higher
    disease rates after traffic resumed.!

    Copies of the Atlanta study noted above are available in the
    Warner
    Public Library. The Library will also have on fife a DVD copy of a talk
    by
    Dr. Klaus Jacob, a highly qualified scientist from the Columbia
    University
    Earth Laboratory, who participated in the building of the current TZB in

    1955. In his 2003 talk before GUARD (i.e., Governments United in Action
    for
    Responsible Development) and local residents he presented his
    professional
    opinion on the relative merits of both a bridge and tunnel option. His
    comparisons, were strongly in favor of building a tunnel

    With steadily increasing traffic growth in our region we would
    be
    well advised to find ways to reduce dangerous vehicular exhausts. A
    promising health alternative versus a wider and busier bridge would be
    to
    move the bulk of toxic truck exhausts underground. A dedicated
    rail/truck
    tunnel with freight and commuter rail capability would address critical
    health issues. Underground, the volatile organic compounds (VOC's) and
    associated toxic truck fumes could be filtered and treated before they
    reach
    human lungs. No one wants to risk a repetition here of the dire illness
    rates along congested South Bronx roads. Any I-287 major construction
    project which does not control such unwanted traffic effects fails tests
    of
    social justice and responsibility. Our current air quality rating is
    poor. A
    separate rail/truck tunnel along with the continued use of a refurbished
    TZB
    for cars, local trucks and buses should produce a significant reduction
    in
    area air pollution and protect the Hudson River.

    A lowering of vehicular traffic from current rates can be
    estimated.
    Moving 22,000 trucks daily into a tunnel would reduce that flow to
    about
    110,000 cars a day, a 16% reduction in numbers. Further, estimating
    that an
    average truck takes up more than twice the volume of an average car,
    removing that number of trucks would result in about a 1/ 3rd reduction
    of
    traffic volume leading to much less congestion as well as to much less
    (perhaps 50% less) tonnage on the TZB compared to its current load.
    This
    change should go a long way to extending the active life of a
    refurbished
    bridge and to reducing ongoing maintenance costs.

    Added cost reduction might occur for truck owners. With an option
    for
    freight rail, trucks (and their drivers) could be carried over the
    distance
    with their motors off, thus conserving fuel as well as providing an
    added
    improvement in air quality.

    (3) TRAFFIC SAFETY - It seems reasonable to assume that
    separating
    truck and car traffic over a span of I-287 can only operate to reduce
    the
    frequency of car-truck accidents. Due to very unequal weight
    comparisons,
    such mishaps are usually quite serious for car drivers.

    (4) TRAFFIC FLOW ON COLLATERAL ROADS - Expanding traffic flow and

    extensive surface construction in the East-West corridor (I-287 and the
    TZB)
    will change the flow on collateral North-South roads, Route 9 in
    particular.
    A recent traffic study for Tarrytown showed that, already strained and
    overloaded during peak periods, major intersections on Route 9 were
    rated
    "F", the poorest traffic flow grade. With a combined influx of more
    traffic
    from planned huge development at the former GM site in Sleepy Hollow, a
    developing Tarrytown waterfront and a planned new and wider TZB, we
    could be
    faced with a vehicular load far too massive to be handled by our
    existing
    North-South roads. Without regional foresight and planning, major
    travel
    delays may become a regular occurrence for area drivers.

    (5) CONSTRUCTION JOBS - An important factor in the selection of
    a
    Hudson River crossing is the effect on construction jobs. Bridge
    laborers
    would be assured of steady, continuing maintenance work for as long as a

    Tappan Zee Bridge is in operation.

    (6) LAND TAKING - This is an issue which significantly affected
    residents of Tarrytown and the Nyacks in 1955 when the TZB was
    originally
    built. It is equally critical today with the threat of land being
    seized
    under Eminent Domain litigation. Advised by a consulting engineer to
    the
    Thruway Authority that a tunnel option was rejected, in part, because
    (a)
    much land would have to be taken for the building of turn-around roads
    back
    to Tarrytown and that (b) much of the land in question was inappropriate
    due
    to wetland conditions. With the retention of a refurbished TZB those
    obstacles would be eliminated.

    A strong statement several years ago by Andy Spano, Westchester
    County Administrator, that he would not go along with any change "in the

    footprint" of the bridge does not address tentative State plans for a
    new
    railroad station at the foot of a new Tappan Zee Bridge nor for a major
    northerly turn along the Hudson River for an expanded bridge .

    (7) TIMELINESS - The present TZB proposals envision a timeline

    for approval and construction of a new bridge which would extend out for
    at
    least ten years. We are told that even if the new decking is started
    promptly the current bridge does not have another ten years of service
    under
    present and increasing loading.

    Major European tunnels are being completed at rates of 100 feet
    per
    day, or 350 days for the 35 thousand feet (nearly 7 miles) from West
    Nyack
    to Elmsford. Completing at least the truck bypass tunnel before
    spending up
    to $1 billion on bridge repairs can be done in the small window of time
    available. Waiting will just lead to possible complete failure and,
    certainly, interminable delays over many years if construction is done
    piecemeal and in the midst of ongoing traffic.

    Why does the NY Thruway Authority remain set on eliminating a
    tunnel
    option in light of the above? We have gone to Albany to meet with
    administrative leaders at the Dept.of Transportation for answers.
    Hopefully,
    cost, environmental, engineering, protection of River Towns, traffic
    flow
    factors and human health advantages of the tunnel option will win the
    day.

    Sherwood Chorost, President,
    Westchester Branch, Concerned Citizens for Responsible Development

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  5. More on Thruway -- we have to press state to get toll Yonkers toll eliminated -- this toll encourages more traffic to take local streets --

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  6. I agree with blogger that the tolls should be removed and am lobbying state officials to remove tolls. I also plan to include, in my 2007 budget, $30,000 to hire a consultant to help the town review and analyze the TZ bridge options. We must protect the interests of Greenburgh and its villages if and when the state decides to take action on the TZ bridge

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  7. Eliminating the I-87 toll booth at the Greenburgh/Yonkers line is something tangible and very worthwhile for the Town to work on. I am one of many culprits who exit at Stew Leonard to avoid the toll, just out of principle, although it would be more logical and efficient for me to exit at Ardsley.

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  8. Dano,

    You got that right, I am embarrassed to say I do not even know where the ardsley exit is.

    This should have been a demand re ridge hill

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  9. Dear Edgemont voter -- that was one of your hated anons who suggested the toll be looked at -- go look above

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