Stretches along Highway 104 deemed financially feasible for twinning - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Stretches along Highway 104 deemed financially feasible for twinning

As public meetings are set to begin on using tolls to help twin highways, two more of the eight proposed sections have been deemed financially feasible.

Public meetings on twinning 304 km of roads begin Tuesday in New Glasgow

A public survey last May found the median toll rate people were willing to pay was six cents per kilometre. (CBC)

A new report commissioned by the Transportation Departmentsays it's financially feasible to twintwo portions of highway in northern Nova Scotia with the help of tolls.

Consulting firm CBCL Ltd.previously said the toll fees to upgrade the two sections of Highway 104 between Sutherland's River and Antigonish, and Taylors Road to Auld's Covewould be too steep.

However, the firm saysit has since received additional information on traffic volume and more refined cost estimates, and the projects now fall within what drivers have indicated they're willing to pay.

The provincial government wants to hear from the public about a feasibility study for twinning eight parts of Nova Scotia's 100-series highways. (Department of Transportation and Infrastructure Renewal)

The details were released to the media Monday and will be presented tocommunities around Nova Scotia in the coming six weeksas part of a series of public meetings. The first meeting is set for Tuesday in New Glasgow.

Much of the information releasedis the same as was released last summer.

'We knew the numbers were there'

A public survey last May found the median toll rate people were willing to pay was six cents per kilometre. The funding formula to pay the roadwork off over 30 years would see 50 per cent coming from tolls and the province and Ottawa splitting the other half.

The report said drivers would paybetween $2.27 and $3.78 in toll fees for the 37.8-kilometres stretch fromSutherland'sRiver toAntigonish. It would cost driversbetween $2.37 and $3.95 for the 39.5-kilometre stretch from Taylors Road to Auld's Cove.

Overall, the projects are expected to cost$285 million and $279 million, respectively.

One of the leading advocates to twin the Highway 104 portions, Barneys River volunteer fire chief Joe MacDonald, called the update fantastic news.

"We knew the numbers were there," he said.

"Every day travelling on the highway, you're seeing more and more traffic on the highway and more and more transport trucks moving freight, which is inevitable because of the declining of railway."

Projects influenced by available funding

The presentation to the public will emphasizewhat Transportation Minister Geoff MacLellan has said since the twinning study was announced: if people want the work done sooner, they must be willing to pay.

The province spends almost $400 million a year on its highways, about half of which is for construction.

By contrast, the work on the 304 kilometres of highway being considered in the twinning study would cost approximately $2.2 billion.

The province's executive director of infrastructure programs, Bruce Fitzner, said the amount of time it takes to do a new project is significantly influencedby the amount of funding available in a given year.

He pointed to arecently completed twinning project near Antigonish, where it took 20 years to twin 16 kilometres, as an example.

Bruce Fitzner is the province's executive director of infrastructure programs. (CBC)

By contrast, it took about two years to complete the 45-kilometre Cobequid Pass.

Fitzner estimated it would take about 10 years to complete all the roads identified in the study if the government approved everything, although it would also require additional approval from the Treasury Board on account of the cost.

Fitzner expected his department would have final data and public feedback complete sometime this year to present to the provincial government to make a decision on which projects, if any, go ahead.