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Old Posted Sep 14, 2007, 5:51 PM
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jimthemanincda jimthemanincda is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Coeur d'Alene, ID
Posts: 571
---According to the Idaho Department of Labor, two of every three homes were built in the Boise and Coeur d’Alene areas in 2006.

That means that 66% of the new homes in the state were built in areas that currently have 47.6% state's population. This further shows the explosive growth in the Boise and Coeur d'Alene areas.


699,147 (population of Boise & Cd'A metros in 2006)
1,466,465 (state of Idaho population 2006)
47.6% (percent of Idaho living in Boise & Cd'A metros 2006)

---Don't get me wrong, I like Bozeman, MT. I've been there several times. It is growing rapidly, has a great university (Montana State), and great scenery. But, Bozeman seems to have a superiority complex.

The seasonal magazine, Outside Bozeman, has been comparing Bozeman to cities around the country during the past few years. During this issue, it was Bozeman vs. Coeur d'Alene.
Bozeman won. Imagine that, Bozeman winning a city vs. city contest in a Bozeman magazine... Interestingly enough, Bozeman has been rated "better" than every other city the magazine has compared it to, including: Coeur d'Alene; Ithaca, NY; Boulder, CO; Missoula, MT; Flagstaff, AZ; and Burlington, VT. Everyone should check out the article. Watch out, your city might be next

Here's the link: http://www.outsidebozeman.com/magazi...&articleID=871

---Planning heightens for Huetter bypass
Jurisdictions along preferred route asked to protect corridor

(I didn't edit or leave items out as I normally do because I think this is an interesting and very informative article)

By Mike McLean



A Kootenai County transportation planning organization’s recent decision to recommend a route for a proposed expressway that would divert traffic off of the highly used stretch of U.S. 95 north of Interstate 90 has triggered land-use planning issues for several North Idaho jurisdictions.

It also has raised the eyebrows of some and the speculative instincts of others as people look ahead to how the massive project could affect them.

Last month, the Kootenai Metropolitan Planning Organ­ization, a federally mandated transportation planning group known as the KMPO, recommended a route for the proposed high-speed roadway, following about a decade of study that initially included nine possible alternatives.

The route the KMPO chose would have its southern terminus at I-90, just east of the Huetter rest area, and generally would follow Huetter Road north to about Lancaster Avenue, where it would veer northeast and follow a railroad right of way to intersect with U.S. 95 at about state Route 53. The expressway would enable vehicles to bypass the busy, roughly 8-mile stretch of U.S. 95 through northern Coeur d’Alene and the Hayden area.

Now, jurisdictions such as the cities of Coeur d’Alene, Post Falls, Rathdrum, and Hayden, as well as Kootenai County, the Idaho Transportation Department, and the Post Falls Highway District, will be expected to incorporate the proposed route in their land-use planning processes.

KMPO spokeswoman Stacy Lehman describes the Huetter route recommendation as “a step to say, ‘Let’s not let people build’” on land needed for the project.

Lehman says some people who own property in the proposed corridor already have called the KMPO to ask if they should build a garage on their land, she says. “They’ve probably got 10 to 15 years to use it, but it probably wouldn’t be a good idea to build a house there.”

The KMPO is made up of representatives of the four highway districts in the county, as well as the cities of Coeur d’Alene, Post Falls, Hayden, and Rathdrum, and the Coeur d’Alene Tribe.

As envisioned, the Huetter bypass would reroute a section of U.S. 95 with a four-lane express way that eventually could be expanded to six lanes. It would have freeway-like interchanges located at I-90 and U.S. 95, and at about one-mile intervals between, including at Poleline, Prairie, Hayden, Wyoming, and Lancaster avenues, says Christine Fueston, a planner with Ruen-Yaeger & Associates, a Coeur d’Alene engineering firm hired by the KMPO to study the Huetter route and other proposed alternatives.

The route would follow Huetter Road for about six miles before veering right to follow the Union Pacific Railroad line that runs diagonally across the Rathdrum Prairie. The Huetter bypass would intersect with U.S. 95 just south of the current SR 53 junction in the Garwood area.

The route would encroach on nearly 400 parcels, or more than 2,500 acres.

Fueston says UP might decide to move its tracks north, along the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway tracks as part of the “bridging the valley” project, which is aimed at reducing the number of at-grade railroad-highway intersections between Spokane and Athol, Idaho. If that happens, the expressway would follow the former railroad right of way, she says. If the tracks aren’t moved, the Huetter route would run parallel to the tracks on a course about 300 feet north of the tracks.

As envisioned, Huetter Road would be realigned as a frontage road on the west side of the expressway.

That type of project could have impacts both on the land along the corridor on which it has been proposed and the current U.S. 95 corridor, observers say.

Monte Risvold, a longtime commercial real estate executive in North Idaho, says it’s difficult to predict how land would be developed along the proposed corridor, though he says land use there certainly would be affected.

“Naturally, it would be commercial, but development appeal would depend on whether it’s accessible,” Risvold says, noting that access points are proposed to be no closer than a mile of one another.

“Frontage is only as good as the ability to get to it,” he says. “If it’s inconvenient or difficult, people will go to the path of least resistance.”

As for the impacts the proposed expressway might have on U.S. 95 north of I-90, Risvold says they likely would be positive, at least for some businesses along that busy, 8-mile commercial stretch.

“Traffic congestion (along U.S. 95), especially in the summer, already is a detriment, and it’s getting worse,” he says. “People are taking other routes, such as Government Way to the east or Ramsey Road to the west, to avoid traffic.”

The intersection of U.S. 95 and Appleway Avenue, just north of I-90, is considered the busiest intersection in North Idaho, with daily traffic counts of up to 36,000 vehicles, Risvold says.

Gary Schneidmiller, owner of Coldwell Banker Schneidmiller Realty, of Coeur d’Alene, says the route envisioned probably won’t be a business route if it has limited access, but could be a catalyst for residential development on remaining farmland on the Prairie.

“It makes it more accessible to Interstate 90 and Spokane in terms of timing,” he says. You want a good transportation system, and you want to be close to it.”

Schneidmiller was raised in a farming family with large land holdings on the Rathdrum Prairie. He also owns a real estate office at U.S. 95 and Hanley Avenue, in the north end of Coeur d’Alene.

He says an alternate route west of town shouldn’t hurt business traffic on U.S. 95 in Coeur d’Alene.

“I think there will be plenty of traffic along U.S. 95, and it will continue to grow,” says Schneidmiller.

Much of the traffic that currently travels U.S. 95 isn’t business traffic.

“A lot of people there are not trying to find businesses,” he says. “They are trying to move to or from places farther north.”

Fueston says one of the engineering firm’s next tasks will be to estimate costs. A preliminary assessment conducted by Ruen-Yaeger put the value of right of way corridor at $377 million. Fueston says the estimate includes right of way for several alignment possibilities, and once the final alignment is chosen, the actual right of way acquisition costs likely would be less.

At this point, the proposed project has no timeline, although Fueston says it’s envisioned that the route will be able to carry 38,000 vehicles a day in 2030.

Idaho Transportation Department spokes­woman Barbara Babic says most funds for the proposed Huetter route would probably come from federal highway monies. “It may be a joint state and local project,” she says. “No decisions have been made, but it will be mostly federal money.”

Separately, the Transportation Depart­ment plans to upgrade U.S. 95 from Garwood north to Sagle as a four-lane, divided freeway with interchange access similar to I-90, Babic says. Construction on that project is to begin next year, pending final environmental approval.

While the 30-mile U.S. 95 upgrade is estimated to cost about $342 million, only $83 million is funded through 2009.

“Beyond that we don’t have any funds identified,” she says.

Meanwhile, Glenn Miles, KMPO executive director, says each jurisdiction along the Huetter bypass route will be asked to protect the proposed corridor.

“The recommendation will go to each jurisdiction and ask that they include provisions in their comprehensive land-use plans to protect (the route) from encroachment in the future,” Miles says.

The KMPO updates its 30-year metropolitan transportation plan every four years, and proposed projects must be included in the plan to be eligible for federal funding.

While the KMPO has no authority over the individual jurisdictions, each jurisdiction has a member on the KMPO board. “If the board acted collectively, I would presume individual jurisdictions will act similarly,” Miles says.

The board’s vote on the route recommendation, however, was 6 to 3 in favor, indicating that there is some opposition to the plan.

One of those “no” votes was cast by Clay Larkin, mayor of Post Falls.

Larkin says the KMPO recommendation would put too many limits on land use for the sake of a project that has no identified funding.

“We’re talking about a project that’s 20 years out, when the Idaho Transportation Department is $2 billion in arrears for planned projects,” he says.

Larkin says the proposed U.S. 95 alignment puts most of the burden on property owners on the west side of Huetter Road, rather than on the east side of Huetter, where the land is within the city limits of Coeur d’Alene and Hayden.

He says he doubts that Post Falls City Council will embrace the KMPO right of way recommendation.

“My guess is it will have tough sledding with us,” he says.

Also, Larkin describes the proposed Huetter route as “only half a bypass” because it doesn’t extend south of I-90, and wouldn’t be used by motorists coming from south of Coeur d’Alene.

“Who would travel up U.S. 95 to Coeur d’Alene, then drive four miles to the west to take a bypass, when that would probably take just as long as it would to drive through Coeur d’Alene?” he says.

Transportation resources would be put to better use on improvements to the current U.S. 95, in Coeur d’Alene, and state Route 41, in Post Falls, and on a new interchange at I-90 and Greensferry Road, in Post Falls, he says.

Jonathan Coe, president and general manager of the Coeur d’Alene Chamber of Commerce, says the chamber supports the proposed bypass as a high-speed alternative to U.S. 95 in Coeur d’Alene.

“It’s clear U.S. 95 is at or near capacity and will become overtaxed,” Coe says. “The key is to start with right-of-way acquisition as quickly as possible. The longer they wait, the more dislocation will be associated with it.”

http://www.spokanejournal.com/spokan...ticle&sub=3301
__________________
Coeur d'Alene, ID Visitor's Bureau-http://www.coeurdalene.org/
Coeur d'Alene, ID population....56,733
Coeur d'Alene, ID MSA .......185,010
Spokane, WA-Cd'A, ID CSA....785,302
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