Public Opposition Grows Despite Vote
The City of Golden is encouraged by the growing number of people who are opposed to building a toll road in the northwest corridor.
Despite this strong opposition, the Denver Regional Council of Governments (DRCOG) decided to include the toll road proposal by the Jefferson Parkway Public Highway Authority (JPPHA) in its regional transportation plan. The City of Golden is disappointed by this decision but will continue to fight this toll road plan, which would expose everyone who drives Highway 93 to more traffic congestion and greater safety risks.
The toll road proposal still faces many hurdles. This “toll road to nowhere” does not connect the beltway around the metro area. Instead, it would dump an additional 38% more traffic onto Highway 93 and require hundreds of millions of dollars in surrounding road improvements, which the JPPHA does not plan to fund.
In addition, the proposal accepted by the DRCOG board is flawed and goes against the standards its members are required to follow. Under federal law, the DRCOG has an obligation to prepare a regional transportation plan which includes projects that meet two important standards: fiscal constraint (must prove there are sufficient funds to make a project happen) and air quality. The DRCOG’s decision does not meet this critical legal requirement.
The JPPHA’s proposal claims vastly higher traffic numbers for calculating whether it meets the fiscal standards than it shows for purposes of calculating air quality. The traffic numbers used for the fiscal test are three to nine times higher than the traffic numbers used to support the air quality claims. This allows the JPPHA to show that there will be enough toll revenue while still complying with environmental regulations. But the numbers do not add up and the JPPHA and DRCOG cannot have it both ways.
The City’s position is strengthened by the growing number of people who realize the implications of a toll road and oppose it. Of the 350 public comments submitted to DRCOG, 219 opposed the Jefferson Parkway, 130 supported it, and one was neutral. That translates into 63 percent of comments against the toll road and only 37 percent in favor of it.
That feedback reflects the same public sentiment that led to the resounding defeat of a ballot measure to fund a toll road in 1989.
“The proposed toll road doesn’t connect anything,” said Golden Public Works Director Dan Hartman. “In fact, by the JPPHA’s own analysis, it makes congestion and safety on Highway 93 even worse than it already is.”
The City of Golden and its Council will work with our neighbors to decide the next logical step. “Golden can support a reasonable solution that ensures the protection of our neighborhoods and our community and benefits everyone,” said Golden Mayor Jacob Smith. “The current JPPHA proposal doesn’t do that.”
Boulder County, the City of Boulder, the Town of Superior and the City of Golden have proposed making much-needed improvements to Highway 93 and U.S. 6 between C-470 and Boulder, as an alternative to the Jefferson Parkway. For more information on the alternatives, visit fix93.org.