1994-06-16
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GLENS FALLS TRANSPORTATION COUNCIL
ROUTE 9/254 CORRIDOR STUDY
JUNE 16, 1994
INDEX
Discussion of Route 9/254 Corridor Study
1.
THESE ARE NOT OFFICIALLY ADOPTED MINUTES AND ARE SUBJECT TO BOARD
AND STAFF REVISIONS. REVISIONS WILL APPEAR ON THE FOLLOWING MONTHS
MINUTES (IF ANY) AND WILL STATE SUCH APPROVAL OF SAID MINUTES.
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GLENS FALLS TRANSPORTATION COUNCIL
ROUTE 9/254 CORRIDOR STUDY
JUNE 16,. 1994
7:00 P.M.
TOWN SUPERVISOR-FRED CHAMPAGNE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR-JAMES MARTIN
G.F. TRANSPORTATION COUNCIL-JOANNA M. BRUNSO, STAFF DIRECTOR
DISCUSSION OF ROUTE 9/254 CORRIDOR STUDY
MR. CHAMPAGNE-My name is Fred Champagne. I serve as the Queensbury
Town Supervisor, and, again, welcome to our meeting this evening,
where we're going to further discuss the Route 254/Route 9 Study.
I just want to introduce here, my part, really, is to introduce Mr.
Jim Martin, who is our Community Development Director, and I'm sure
Jim will have considerable to say, relative to the local look at
the intersection and the Study, and also with us this evening is
Joanna Brunso. Joanna is with the Glens Falls Transportation
Council. They've been studying this now for the past year, and
tonight will share with you some of the findings that we found as
a result of that study. So, with that, I'll turn the meeting over
to these folks, and we'll get started. Thank you very much.
MS. BRUNSO-I recognize some faces, and some of you are new to the
room. As Fred Champagne said, I'm the Staff Director for the Glens
Falls Transportation Council. This is a, defined in Transportation
Law, as the Metropolitan Planning Organization, and every urban
area over 50,000 has to have a Metropolitan Planning Organization.
Now, the Metropolitan Planning Organization is made up of elected
officials, elected to other offices, such as Victor Grant, who is
the Chairman of the Board of Supervisors for Warren County, Harry
Booth, who is the Chairman of t~e Board for Washington County. We
have the Mayor of the Ci ty of Gl ens Fall s. The Mayor of the
Village of South Glens Falls, the Supervisor of the Town of
Queensbury, and several other people. They have to okay, they have
to approve, every year, a listing of highway and transit and other
infrastructure projects, and unless they approve of those things,
the Federal Government will not pass money through the Department
of Transportation to the Transit Authority or to the people who
work on the roads. Now, obviously, they have a lot of things to
cover, and they need to have staff that provides them with data,
and this they get from usually their technical representatives in
the Counties, such as the DPW's Chairmans, the Department of Public
W 0 r k 's C h air ma n s, t he ViII age H i g h way Super vis 0 r s , and the Town
Planners, such as Jim Martin, but they in turn need more additional
data, and that's why they have a staff, and I'm the Director of
that staff. Linda Stevens, over here, joined our group just a year
ago. As a matter of fact, she came on board when we had the
introductory meeting on this 9 and 254 Corridor Study. The reason
we have to have this is that when we go about justifying a project
on the highways, on the bridges, on the transit system, we have to
compare our project to every other project in Region One, and
Region One is Essex County, Washington, Warren, Saratoga
Rensselaer, Schenectady, Albany, and Greene County. So, we have to
find data that will say, okay, this is a good project, and it
stacks up just as well as a project on Route 9 in Latham or
Loudonville or 9W in the Town of Bethlehem, or one of the other
projects. So this is why we do the Corridor Studies. Now Glens
Falls began with five different Corridor Studies, one of which was
a Corridor Study of Route 254, which comprises Aviation Road and
Quaker Road. It was apparent from that Study that the intersection
of 9 and 254 was in trouble, and we needed a much more detailed
study in order to figure out what needs to be done to preserve that
intersection from totally failing. That's how we began last year.
We began with a scheme that some of you have seen, and I'd like to
go over. The Corridor Study was really quite encompassing. We
decided to look at zoning. We decided to look at traffic. We
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decided to look at various ways of land planning. We decided to
look at access management. We decided to look at everything we
could do to preserve the carrying capacity of that intersection,
because in 20 years, regardless of any access management plans, any
land road plans, that intersection will fail, and it'll just take
you forever to get through that intersection. So that's why we
began the Study. The area is generally within the area defined as
the Northway, Sweet Road to the north, Country Club Road on the
east, the City line on the south, and the project area includes
about 660 acres of land. Okay. Here we have Exit 19, and here's
the intersection of 254 and Route 9. It just became easier to look
at this as a great circle of land, and we call this Quadrant One,
this Quadrant Two, this Quadrant Three, notice, this is the
Quadrant with Aviation Mall. This is the Quadrant with the
Queensbury Plaza. We have Quadrant Four with the Northway Plaza,
then the Cemetery behind here. This is Quadrant One. It has the
Greenway North housing development. We have Robert Gardens over
here, and this is Sweet Road, and this is Weeks Road. As I said,
we were looking at all kinds of land use within the area, and
trying to say, now that we're living in an area that's really
growing, what is appropriate for the area? Should anything be
changed, or should we just keep everything the way it is? The
intersection of Routes 9 and 254 carry 3,600 vehicles during the
p.m. peak, and 45,000 vehicles per day. Route 9 and Quaker Road
each carry more than 22,000 vehicles per day, and there are
remarkable shifts in variation of the traffic, depending upon
whether it's August, whether it's a shopping season, such as
Christmas or Easter. In any event, this is a highly travelled
intersection. The purpose of this plan was to develop a
comprehensive transportation plan, and we're going to look at
mechanisms to reduce congestion, integration of other means of
transportation. We're going to look at land use planning. We're
going to look at managing access points along certain highways, and
improving traffic control efficiency. The intersection of 9 and
254 operates at Level of Service D. Now, Level of Service is a
very hard term to get hold of, but it kind of operates exactly like
the ma r k sin s c h 0 0 I . I f you can got h r 0 ugh ani n t e r s e c t ion, you
can go along the corridor of highway at the speed at which it was
designed, and wi th as many cars as it was designed for, then it
operates at Level of Service A. If you begin to get a slight
amount of congestion, it operates at Level of Service B, and so on
to Level of Service D, which is about the maximum that DOT will
allow an intersection or a section of highway to deteriorate to, if
they can help it in any way. Routes 9 and 254 now operates at
Level of Service D. In five years, it will go to E. If a major
store like Wal Mart comes in, it will go to F, and F being a
failing, and anything after that is just gridlock, and that's what
we're trying to eliminate in the area. The overall analysis of
this shows that the alternative corridors around 9 and 254 can have
the potential to reduce traffic by significant numbers. It is
projected that if the three alternatives were to be constructed,
traffic at the intersection could be reduced by approximately 21
percent. So lets go look at some of those alternatives. This is
Route 9. This is Sweet Road, and this is the existing Weeks Road.
Now, I have gotten letters in my office from people telling me that
it's almost impossible to get out onto Weeks Road here, and to turn
north, and they want the Town to do something about it. They'd
really like to have a signal there. The Department of
Transportation doesn't like the thought of having a signal here and
a signal there, and so the concept here is to align Sweet Road with
a new little connector that goes just north of this car wash, and
realign Weeks Road, and then we'd have a signal up here at this
point. These are concepts. We're very interested in what YQQ have
to say about all these concepts. Weeks Road then becomes a cul-de-
sac, because it, in turn, serves the car wash, and the Chinese
restaurant that's located right here. The area that we're talking
about is this area right in here. The road, the improvement and
the construction that would do the most to relieve the traffic at
Routes 9 and 254, which are over here. This is Route 9 coming
here. This is 254 coming up to meet at this traffic signal, is a
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two to thr ee I ane road go i ng from the entrance to the Gr eenway
North, here. This is the old Greenway North Road. This is Old
Aviation Road which now, you used to be able to go through
McDonalds over here, but you can't do that anymore. So, what we
propose is a 900 foot road which will go from the signal, we have
Friendlys on the other side, Greenway North here, coming over here,
and meeting the signal on Route 9. This will have a
bicycle/pedestrian lane on it, and a new intersection will be
built, coming in here to Old Aviation Road, to serve this area, the
Gr eenway Nor th up her e. Along her e, we have shown a propos ed
service road. Right now, this area here is all zoned residential.
Jim's going to talk about the Town perspective on this, but the
proposal is that access to this area will be off of this proposed
service road when it gets built. This road up here, the Department
of Transportation has set aside funding for this, if it is a desire
of the Town of Queensbury to build this road. We call that the
Greenway North connector. The next suggestion that was made by our
consultant is a road known as the Foster Avenue Extension, and it
is this road. Here we have Aviation Road. This is the driveway
into Aviation Road, and the proposal is to continue down the hill,
on the other side, and come through, in some way, the area that is,
this area back in here is not part of the cross country ski trails,
and it would then come around and meet Foster Avenue. Here we have
254, the driveway into Aviation Mall, it's connection, I believe
this is Fays Drugs. So the Grand Union would be down here
somewhere, and Burger King is up here, and this is Foster Avenue in
here. All right. In Quadrant Three, our proposal is not so much
any construction in this area, except we'd like to improve
LaFayette Street, and put a bikeway along it. I notice that
there's a pond over here. This gets a lot of recreational traffic.
The whole focus of this is to make pedestrian traffic and bicycle
traffic and recreation travel for children easier and safer, and to
encourage people to actually use those modes of traffic. Quadrant
Four is a dream. One of the things that all Metropolitan Planning
Organizations across the United States, that's all areas of 50,000
or more, are required to do is to develop, some time later this
year, a 20 year plan, and one of the things we ask our consultant
to do is to come up with ideas that could be implemented 20, 25, or
30 years from now, and this was his suggestion, to actually, at
some time in the future, build a road behind the cemetery and
eventually come up and meet Sweet Road, and then come out at Route
9 at the light. Essentially, what you're having here now is a way
to bypass the intersection of Route 9 and 254 on streets that will
take you to the many commercial activities in this area, and it is
the hope of many good planners that when you actually condense
commercial activity in one area, that you improve circulation, you
improve shopp ing oppor tuni ties, you improve the des i rabi I i ty of
this area, and still make traffic flowing through the area, and not
making it an area that discourages people from using the commercial
and recreational opportunities that exist in the area.
MR. MARTIN-Okay. I'm Jim Martin. I'm Director of the Planning
Department here in the Town, and it was illY input into this to try
and speak to the Town interests in this plan, and I like, as a
Community Planner, someone who has to live in this community and
work here every day, I want to make sure that this is something
that can be in keeping wi th the character of the communi ty, and
what is, in the ..l...Qn&. term, in its best interest, and I think
transportation planning in this area of the Town is probably the
most pressing concern at this time. This is a very crucial area of
the Town. We derive a lot of sales tax revenue out of this Town,
and it serves, really, as our corrnnercial center, and so, therefore,
it should be in a position where it can remain viable, but it's
somewhat of a challenge, also, because we have some real concerns
in here that we want to make sure that are addressed, and within
the study area, principally one is the Greenway North neighborhood
area. As anybody who's been in Town for a while will know, that
this really was here first, and the Northway came along and really
changed the whole character of this area forever. When the
Northway came through, and the realignment of Aviation Road
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occurred, there wasn't time, until this area, this intersection
exploded with conunercial development, and since that time, in
keeping with development patterns that you see in most areas of the
Country, development is occurring, obviously, along our major
routes, and this area was locked up, so to speak. So, to maintain
this as a viable neighborhood area, which I think is worthy to do,
in light of this commercial development that's_ occurred, and our
traffic problem, is a challenge, and great efforts were made, with
the design of these improvements, to try and maintain this as a
viable neighborhood area, in the context in which it has to exist,
and I'll point to the Greenway North connector design, and there's
some elements I think that should be brought out in that, that are
very key. You have Old Aviation Road here, and the Greenway North.
This area here is a specifically designed in buffer area, and if
you read the details of the plan, call for this to remain as a
naturally vegetated area, and also to beef up that vegetation with
new plantings to totally screen and shield this neighborhood area
from this traffic. So I think that's a key design feature. The
other area that's a tough area is right here on Birch Lane. There
are some well established, long time residents of the Town, there,
and they, quite frankly, like their lifestyle. As you can see,
there's a pool here, and I don't think anything should be done to
force them out of there. However, and if anybody's been to these
meetings before, you've heard me say, they're really in a bind, in
that, if they want to, some day, get a return out of their
property, as residential property, they're not going to get the
value out of that, that they might elsewhere in a true residential
neighborhood area, because of their proximity to the traffic and
the commercial development. So, therefore, I think, as an option,
they should have available to them the option of commercial zoning
in this area, and then should that commercial zoning occur, then as
that development occurs, this road can be installed with a
commercial development, not just to slap this road down in the
center of a neighborhood area. So, this is planning, but I think
it's planning with some logic, and some rationale, and, quite
frankly, some care for the people who are going to be directly
effected by development as it occurs. So that's a key feature I
wanted to point out, in how this road was set in here, and the
design of it. The other thing that we wanted to make sure of that
came out of this plan is, I really didn't want to be associated
with a plan that wasn't realistic, and could be applied in the real
world, and the other thing I wanted to make sure of is that we
leave our, we have a product here, an end product, and have our
Planning Board in a position where they can now, instead of
reacting to developers as they come into this area, in reacting to
their traffic studies, they're in a position, now, to have some
knowledge of the area and the various improvements which might be
appropriate, as development occurs, and what I think is key in this
plan, especially, and I hope people take time to read it, is the
access management plan. Access Management, according to the Study,
can have an effect of reducing capacity by 30 percent. So just by
eliminating some curb cuts, like in this one graphic here, you'll
see McDonalds has three curb cuts for a restaurant of approximately
4,000 square feet. I think that's excessive. So, we're beginning
to see, of late, second generation development already occurring
within this Study area. Case in point would be the Olive Garden
building onto the end of Queensbury Plaza, Wal Mart tearing down
the Ames Plaza to build a new store. The Carvel building being
torn down for a new Taco Bell, and I think we're going to see more
and more of this, and as these developments come back in for a
second look, so to speak, our Planning Board should be in a
position to deal with these things in a knowledgeable way, and I
hope that that's what this Study will give them, because that was
the intent. So, we're trying to be proactive here, and take a very
difficult situation and turn it around and put the Town in a
position where we can say, okay development, as you come into this
area, which is our commercial core, it's a very viable, very
attractive retail center. Here's what you need to do if you expect
to develop here. This is our access management. This is what
we're expecting. So from this point forward, you now know the
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rules of the game, and I think that's important to have in place as
we attempt to deal with this development in this area. Now, in
terms of the Quadrant Two, the Foster Avenue Extension here, that's
another one that has to be set in there with some care, because
there is a residential neighborhood area here through zoning. It's
an MR-5 designation, and even though it's commercially zoned,
Foster Avenue, to a large extent, remains residential. So I know
you see some things here that show roads going through structures
and that type of thing, but again, from illY standpoint, I'd like to
see those things put in place as it can occur, with some attention
and care for the existing situation and the existing owners. I'm
not looking to throw people out of their houses, but I just want
the Town to be in a position, should the developer come along and
have purchased that property, say in that area, and take advantage
of that commercial zoning, we now have an improvement that needs to
be put in place to deal with the resulting traffic that's going to
occur from that. So, we try and reverse the situation here where,
right now, up until this point, the Town has been in the position
where we're reacting to developers. They're dictating the game to
us through their traffic studies, because I had somebody tell me
once, that traffic engineering is less of a science. It's more of
an art, and a traffic engineer is like a hired gun. He'll tell you
what you want to know, but I think now we're in a position, with
this Study being done, that the Planning Board, who will all get
copies of this, can now be in a position to be knowledgeable about
the situation in this area, and know where to go with this
information. Another thing I wanted to mention is, we had some
alternatives that were looked at, that were asked for. Some were
scrapped, and some are shown here tonight. One was a connecting
road coming from the south up into Aviation Road at this point.
Some preliminary pencil drawings were done of that, and it was
scrapped due to its potential impact on Crandall Park coming up
through what is now really a conservation area. The other things
that were looked at, specifically requested, were alternative
designs for the intersection itself, rather than getting into these
construction of new roads. What we have here is a rendering of an
elevated highway, and then this here is a rendering of a clover
leaf design for the intersection. The hashed areas, indicate the
neces sary ar eas needed for pr oper ty to s er vice thes e types 0 f
development, and as you can see, especially with the clover leaf
design, you get into some major takings, to the point, like in this
case, the Mall becomes frontage property. So, that was done, and
I think some preliminary cost estimates were even derived out of
the DOT Staff, and Joanna may be able to speak to those. I think
it was in the neighborhood of several million dollars.
MS. BRUNSO-Well, our recent experience with elevated structures,
that's what they call a bridge, an elevated structure, is that most
of them are costing in the neighborhood of eight million dollars.
So just for this bridge alone, we end up with eight million
dollars, and the ramps, and this is not a very viable plan, because
this has been drawn too tight. The Federal Government will not
allow you to build a clover leaf that won't allow you to go at
least 35 miles an hour, preferable 45 miles an hour. So that, in
turn, would spread out the area that would necessarily be taken for
an intersection like this. Once you look at how this impacts all
the properties around the intersections of 9 and 254, you realize
that it would be a very expensive design or alternative, and really
has just outside the limits of anything that we could or should see
at this intersection, at this area. This is a diamond point
intersection. What happens is that you're coming off, away from
Aviation Mall. You come over here. There'll be a signal there, a
signal there, a signal there, and a signal there. That doesn't
work as well, but it also, it takes a lot of property. It
certainly would alleviate some of the traffic problems in the area,
but it would be, it would really change the character of the Town
of Queensbury. It's not a realistic alternative. We have an awful
lot of data. There's our report over there. That's one report.
You have four volumes. We just got it at 6:30 tonight. We've had
pieces of it all along, and so we feel that we're knowledgeable
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enough to answer some of your questions.
KEN NOBLE
MR. NOBLE-I'm Ken Noble. Where's the traffic coming from that's
going to make this intersection grow? What's the Study say?
MS. BRUNSO-It's the growth in traffic in the Town of Queensbury,
due to the developments along
Carvel bui Iding, now you're
Blockbuster Video, and a Bank,
starts in the Town.
Route 9, the increase, instead of a
going to have a Taco Bell and a
and you have over 2,000 new housing
MR. NOBLE-West, not east.
MS. BRUNSO-East. You have an awful lot of new developments.
MR. NOBLE-But
coming from?
Queensbury?
intersection?
you don't know, the traffic, I
Is it coming from the Northway?
Where is the traffic coming
mean, where is it
Is it coming from
from, tot hat
MS. BRUNSO-Well, a lot of it is coming from the Northway. A lot of
it is coming from west of the Northway. There are a lot of new
housing developments. As I believe, there are over 2200 building
lots that are approved that haven't been built on. Coming to the
north, you have a very attractive shopping area known as the
Million Dollar Half Mile. Cars come in there from everywhere, and
a lot come from Canada. When Wal Mart goes in on Route 9, and when
K-Mart, the Super K-Mart is opened, over on the corner of 254 and
Dix Avenue, you're going to see an increase of traffic there that
we have a good estimate of the traffic increases, due to the Wal
Mart, but the K-Mart is beyond the, the traffic study of that
doesn't carryover as far as the intersection of 9 and 254, and yet
we know that there will be an impact.
MR. MARTIN-I think, to further address that question, I don't know
that the Study is in a great position to deal with the origin of
that traffic. I think the Transportation Council is trying to get
itself in a position to better deal with that question. Right now,
in the upcoming year, the Council is funded an origin and
destination study within the entire area, to try and get a handle
on, where is traffic coming in to the tri-county region, so to
speak.
MR. NOBLE-What's the expansion of the bridge at Exit 19 going to do
to that traffic, the flow of traffic?
MS. BRUNSO-The expansion of the bridge, in and of itself, won't
generate more traffic.
MR. NOBLE-It will generate less traffic, right?
MS. BRUNSO-Well, it won't generate, the object of Aviation Road
over the Northway is to reduce congestion at that point.
MR. NOBLE-How do you know, if that gets done, it's goi ng to
alleviate the problem at the intersection? My point is, there's an
awful lot of money being spent on this project, no matter what you
do. How do you know our tax payer dollars have been used, whether
they're State or Town dollars that have been spent to do these
processes, and you don't know how much the increase in traffic is
going to be, and you don't know what increasing the land and the
bridge is going to do to that traffic flow. Okay. Now it's going
from a small to a bigger. That's going to make a bottleneck,
obviously. If it goes from a bigger to a smaller, or to the same,
you don't know if that's going to handle the traffic in a better
means.
MR. MARTIN-If anything, the Study does know the growth rate. The
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growth rate in the area has been two percent, and if that
cont i nues, which I expect it wi 11, given the growth that we see
now, even under construction, the Mall expansion, Mount Royal, the
recent revitalization, so to speak, of the Queensbury Plaza, I
think you're going to see that continue, if not exceed it.
MR. NOBLE-How many tenants does the Mount Royal have now?
MR. MARTIN-I don't know. You'd have to ask the developer, but with
the building in place, you only have to assume at some point in the
future it's going to be occupied. The other thing about the bridge
is I think the effect of the bridge, if anything, is going to have
a negative impact on the intersection. It's only going to get
traffic through that much easier, and now down through to the old
stand bottleneck that we have there now. Traffic is going to move
through there easier and get there quicker.
MR. NOBLE-But the Study doesn't prove that.
MR. MARTIN-Well, we can't assess the impact of that bridge without
it being in place yet.
MR. NOBLE-Right. That's what I'm saying.
MR. MARTIN-I think, if anything, it's only going to have a negative
impact.
MR. NOBLE-The Study, that's what we're basing all this stuff on.
MS. BRUNSO-No.
MR. MARTIN-No. We're basing it on a two percent growth rate that
as it continues, is going to show failure at that intersection
within five years.
MS. BRUNSO-Right now, the most attractive place for commercial
activity to settle is along Route 9, and along Route 254, but
that's only going to increase in the future, and one of the things
that we'd like to do is to bring this in a tight area around 9 and
254 to the extent possible, to make it a very attractive place for
people to shop. That increases the tax base, but it also increases
the congestion in the area.
MR. NOBLE-How about an exit between 20 and 19?
MS. BRUNSO-Well, it was suggested to me today.
MR. NOBLE-But that wasn't part of the Study, though?
MS. BRUNSO-Well, one of the things we're going to do, after we get
our long range plan written, is we're going to be looking for
another exit, because no matter what we do here, it is going to get
more congested. I saw an article recently that indicated that
Queensbury's the third fastest growing area, certainly in the
overall Capital District, and probably in upstate New York. Do you
want to put up a sign and tell the people to go away?
MR. NOBLE-That's not my point.
MS. BRUNSO-No, I understand.
MR. NOBLE-I don't want to spend unnecessary money.
MS. BRUNSO-Yes, well, I think we have to try to grapple with real
problems before they exist, problems we can see coming, and it
certainly takes a long time to get a highway built.
DANIEL OLSEN
MR. OLSEN-Daniel Olsen.
happen to live in that Greenway North,
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Carlton Drive Subdivision. I'm a resident, not a business person.
If you started construction tomorrow morning, or had the go ahead
tomorrow, when would things start to go? How many years, five or
ten years before anything can be done?
MS. BRUNSO-No. We're looking at more like four.
MR. OLSEN-If you had the go ahead from the Town, the Federal, State
Governments, starting right tonight, when do you think construction
would start?
MS. BRUNSO-1998, probably. If everything in place, it would take
that long, because we would have to do, we can't do this without a
lot of various studies. One is a noise impact study. Another is
an environmental analysis.
MR. OLSEN-Have you built into your plan the growth of traffic
that's going to happen between now and the time (lost word)?
MS. BRUNSO-Yes, we have.
MR. OLSEN-As a planner, with a K-Mart store going in on Quaker
Road, and I sat at a couple of meetings here, K-Mart, when they
made pr es enta t ions, and they expec t ed 25 to 30 per cen t 0 f the
business out of Warren County and the Town of Queensbury. They
expected the balance of their business out of Washington County and
Vermont. Do you think those people are going to move on into
Queensbury, when they get done with K-Mart? Do you think there's
going to be a shift in growth, with construction, and traffic going
another way on Quaker Road, take it away from this intersection?
MS. BRUNSO-Yes. Have you ever seen, Wal Mart has a sale. The next
thing you know, Caldor has a sale. The next thing you know, K-Mart
has a sale, and people are going between the shops looking for the
best value. I've done that myself, although I hate to admit it.
MR. OLSEN-But as a resident, my neighbors that live on that street
with me, on Carlton Drive, if we have to get out of that street,
especially if you want to take a left and go east on Aviation Road,
many times, including myself, you have to go west, across that
br idge and the Northway, and go to Queensbury School and turn
around and come back down. You cannot get across that road, and
there's lots of seniors that live in that Subdivision. I think
you've got some ideas there that look pretty positive. Thank you.
NICK CAIMANO
MR. CAIMANO-Nick Caimano. I live west of the Northway. Now, the
idea is to relieve the congestion at Route 9 and 254. That's the
idea, right? With this, the traffic coming from Glens Falls and
turning on to Aviation Road, the traffic coming from Quaker Road,
the traffic is already on Route 9, coming south and turning west on
Aviation Road. None of that is going to be effected by this. The
only thing you've done is shift whatever traffic wants to go beyond
Kenny's place onto a new road, and we've spent a lot of money, and
I heard what you said about those two alternatives, and I certainly
believe you on that lower one. In the winter time, those clover
leafs would be impossible, but I don't know about the other one,
because that kind, maybe not that one, but that kind of thing is
what we're looking for. We're looking to move the traffic through
the intersection of 9 and 254. We're not looking to displace it
through Greenway North. We're not looking to displace it over to
Mr. Rudnick's place. I think sometimes we lose track of what we're
trying to do, and what we're trying to do is take an ever
increasing volume of traffic, at one light, and move it better.
One of the things that the upper portion of that map on the right
does is that if you're going north on Route 9, you don't have to
stop. You can keep right on going, it looks like right up to
Noble's. You don't have to stop. The only people that have to
stop are the people who choose to go left or right on Aviation or
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Quaker Road. When you start misplacing and displacing
neighborhoods, just to move a portion, a fraction of that traffic,
and don't forget, one of the things that's going to increase the
traffic at 254 and 9 is K-Mart on the other end of Town, because
people who don't live, who have to come by Northway to get to K-
Mart, are going to get off at Exit 19, and go out 254 to K-Mart.
There's going to be some amount of traffic that does that. So I
guess I don't want you to lose track of what we're trying to do,
and while it's nice to have bike paths, and it's nice to have foot
paths, and it's nice to have all those things, what we're trying to
do is move an ever increasing number of cars through the
intersection of 254 and 9, that's what we're trying to do.
MS. BRUNSO-I think we also have to be cognizant of the fact that
one of the reasons why that intersection is coming close to the
failure is that people want to turn at that intersection, and it is
the turning movements that are making this fail, and we can't build
that intersection large enough to be able to accommodate all those
turning movements. So we'd have to look for some alternatives.
MR. CAIMANO-Maybe the other exit that we've talked about, as Mr.
Noble has said, maybe that's what you have to look for. Maybe the
answer isn't here. Maybe 19a has to be the answer.
MR. NOBLE-N i neteen A was planned many year sago. Why don't they
use it as it was planned? Has it been forgotten?
MS. BRUNSO-I think it has been.
I've never heard of 19a.
MEMBER OF PUBLIC
MEMBER OF PUBLIC-I'm not from Queensbury. I'm from Warrensburg,
and I've noticed these things in the paper quite a few months ago.
I figure that either the traffic planners in this State, Department
of Transportation, or any of those related to it are stuck in the
mud. I mean by that, they're working the process of put more
traffic lights in, try to divert a little bit of traffic, and
really get nowhere. Now, many years ago, in the late 50's, early
60's, I lived down in New Jersey. I commuted to Lake George. My
parents had a business there, most weekends in the summer. In the
mid 50's, down in New Jersey, they installed a type of proverbial
called, jug handles, no turns at major intersections. You either
turn right, slightly before, a few of them were after the
intersection, go into a side road, made your left or right turns,
went through the traffic light on a left turn. You eliminate left
turns, you increase the traffic in a traffic intersection
tremendously. At first thought you say, well, how are you going to
do this at 254 and Route 9. Well, this is a unique intersection.
This has got the old intersection right there, make them one way.
Immediately, you've eliminated half the left turns through oncoming
traffic, then you need to make ways that people can U-Turn. Now
another feature they have down in New Jersey, where anybody has
been down there, on four lane roads, most of them that have been
re-built, cement mall down the middle. You don't make left turns
in the middle of blocks. It's a little annoying to go to the next
U-turn, turn around and come back. I travelled repeatedly on Route
17 by Suffern. That time, it was a four lane road, ovals, traffic
lights. It's now equivalent to a six lane super highway, with
stores, houses, gas stations, you name it, on the sides, where
there's heavy concentrations. There's even an extra lane you can
slow down and pull off in, and I don't know why the traffic
planners in New York State are stuck in the mud, add more traffic
lights, try to twist around and get things going that way. Now,
the Northway intersection, they're proposing widening it, the
bridge. That'll just make this intersection worse. You improve
this intersection, all the rest of them around will get worse.
It's not just one improvement, it needs a whole bunch of them. The
Nor t h way, you co u I dad d two mo r e ex its and en t ran c e s , i n illY
opinion, on the northwest side of the intersection, making a little
bit better clover leaf. The east side of the Northway is too
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congested. I don't know whether you could make an entrance by the
Howard Johnson's, but if not, people would then have to turn north
if they were coming east on Aviation Road, would have to go around
this oval and then take the right exit, or the few local residents
would probably go up to Exit 20. It's debatable what would happen,
but I've written up some of my ideas on a little paper that I can
hand out to people. If there's a copy machine, people want more,
they can have it, but eliminating all turns at the intersection is
the key to getting traffic to flow better, and this, I feel, needs
to be done where several along Quaker Road are shut off, the little
ones like Glen Brook, Glenwood, Millbrook, stop them from being
cross traffic, because every traffic light you hit slows things
down, and if people don't believe me, well, I can name a few roads
down in Jersey you can go down and see, if you care to drive it.
There's one that I was annoyed at back in the early 60's, with
traffic lights going through it, usually 10 o'clock at night, which
is light traffic, but yet it was still stop/go, stop/go, stop/go,
and that was old Route 1, south of the Garden State Parkway, to
where Route 130 takes off, about 10 miles. I've been over it a
couple of times lately, there's not bridges there, but I had no
qualms about going through that road at a halfway decent pace,
stopping every once in a while. So, I don't know what they've done
to improve traffic, but I think the planners in this State ought to
go down there and investigate what's going on in Jersey that's been
put in for 40 years, and I haven't seen them take it out. So,
apparently, it's working. If you want more information, I'll
gladly tell you. Thank you.
LIZ VALENTE
MRS. VALENTE-I'm Liz Valente. I live on Sweet Road. I'm really
happy to hear you' resay ing that you' r e concer ned abou t the
ne i ghbor hoods, Jim. My mai n concern is Swee t and Country Club
Road, and I just wanted to ask you, when you align Weeks with Sweet
Road, with the light, which I can see the sensibility in that, are
you projecting that there will be more cars running down Sweet Road
than we presently have already?
MR. MARTIN-I don't believe so. The main impact of that improvement
will be for people exiting the Roberts Garden apartments. Right
now, the left hand turn into the road that exists there now, right
here, and getting out of there, even for a riRht hand turn on some
days, is very difficult, and I think that'll be the main effect of
that. I don't think you'll see much more through traff ic down
Sweet Road. I think it'll be mostly an impact through an
improvement of these people getting out of that intersection.
MRS. VALENTE-All right. Well, my concern, obviously, is the fact
that right now, I hate to say it, but it seems like you're trying
tog e t, not ma y b e i n t his sit u a t ion, but its e ems I i key 0 u ' r e
trying to get people away from the main roads and the arteries
where I, as a citizen, would like to see them stay, because, quite
frankly, every neighborhood, it seems, in Glens Falls and
Queensbury, we're plagued by people cutting through, taking short
cuts, trying to divert themselves from this area which, personally,
I take. I don't find any problem with it. I don't see why they
feel they have to come ripping down Country Club and hang a left on
Sweet and up to Route 9, just to avoid that intersection. You have
a right lane, a right turn there that flows very nicely with the
stop sign that heads you north on Route 9.
MR. MARTIN-Well, what's the name of the road that connects Glenwood
and Country Club?
MRS. VALENTE-Woodvale?
MR. MARTIN-Woodvale.
MRS. VALENTE-Woodvale is a problem, too, because of the way it's
skewed.
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MR. MARTIN-Yes. It has been discussed in the discussions about
actually implementing this new section here, doing that in concert
with closing down Woodvale, because that, I think that would have
a far greater impact on Y.QJlL concern over through traffic because
what's happening is people are coming all the way from Quaker, up
Bay, over Glenwood, down Woodvale, up Country Club, and over Sweet
Road, to get to points north.
MRS. VALENTE-Right, but it seems like you want to divert them off
this main corridor, which I don't see why you would want to,
because what I'm trying to say to you is the neighborhoods are
getting bombarded. You know what happened in Glens Falls. It was
just a couple of years ago a little girl got killed in an accident,
was it on Fort Amherst or Garrison, and then everybody runs and
throws stop signs up, because people are cutting through the
neighborhoods all the time, and I'm always concerned with that.
You know I'rn always up there screaming about everything that
happens on Sweet and Country Club Roads, and of course, two years
ago, I w 0 u I d a 1 sol i k e to say toy 0 u t hat i t ma k e s a b sol ute I y no
sense, and this is my gripe with the Town of Queensbury, as well as
Warren County. I won't get into New York State, because we have a
bicycle path that presently crosses Sweet Road. We have a bicycle
path on the Country Club Road. Two years ago, I wrote to my
Councilwoman, and she, of course, passed it on, because they said
Country Club was, I was addressing Country Club at the time,
Country Club about the speed limit. We have a 45 mile an hour
speed limit on the Country Club Road, and I'm concerned about,
again, all these detouring through. You are courting disaster, I
will say it again, if somebody does not sign and slow down the
people on the Country Club Road and on the Sweet Road, which
naturally dives down toward the Country Club Road and towards that
bicycle path. Today I went on Round Pond Road, and there was more
signage around that curb for golf carts and pedestrians to cross,
and mean time, on the Country Club Road, we are inviting people,
come, bring your children, ride our beautiful bicycle path, and
you're allowing people to go 50 miles an hour, and the response
that I get from DOT, or Warren County, excuse me, was, lowering the
speed limit does not deter speeding, which I think is so full,
because if that was the case, then why at a school do you have
flashing lights and 25 miles or 15 miles an. hour? Everyone knows
you go maybe for 10 miles higher than the speed limit, you know
what I'm saying? And I would really like to know that if you're
going to propose making any of these changes and diverting people
through neighborhoods, that if you have to do that, and these
peop I e have been I i v i ng ther e, and thes e ar e the i r homes, you
should be trying to at least slow these people down, because it is
really grossly unfair that we have to put up with these speed
demons, I don't know where the fire is, but this is what's been
happening. Okay, and please, Mr. Champagne, also Sweet Road, you
should have more signage. You have a little bicycle there, and I
see children stopping and people are coming down, 45 miles an hour,
hitting that bicycle path. Come to my house. I'll supply the
lemonade and the lawn chairs, and I'll give you an education one
afternoon. Thank you.
MR. MARTIN-Thank you, Liz.
RUDY PAULSON
MR. PAULSON- I'm Rudy Pau 1 son. I own Rober ts Garden Apar tments.
Joanna, you said that you had some letters from residents that say
they can't get out on Route 9. 1 don't have any letters, but I do
have letters from residents that are telling me they're going to
move if Weeks Road is realigned, particularly in that one building,
Jim, right next to.
MR. MARTIN-Yes, this one right here.
MR. PAULSON-Right there.
feet of that building.
You're moving that right-of-way within 30
What ~ concerned about is when Wal Mart
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comes in. 1'm concerned about people getting out onto Weeks Road,
but when Wal Mart comes in, how much traffic from Wal Mart is going
to dump out onto Weeks Road and then up to the red light, and also,
I know Wal Mart's system. They take deliveries at night. Tractor
trailers will be coming in there all night long, through that new
al i gned road. I can see the inter s ec t i on of Sweet and Weeks
getting aligned, but if you could put that Quadrant Map back up
there again, where the proposed loop coming around Country Club
Road, or whatever it is, in back of the cemetery?
MR. MARTIN-This one here?
MR. PAULSON-Yes, and then coming into Sweet Road, and then up to
Weeks. I talked to you once before in your office that if that
road is going to be proposed, maybe you could swing that over to
Weeks Road, as it exists right now, and put the intersection right
there, and leave Weeks Road alone. How far are you with this,
anyway, as far as getting approval, starting construction?
MR. MARTIN-Okay. The Weeks Road connection is shown here. This is
one that has really progressed probably a little further than
anything else here. We've gone out and surveyed the property
necessary, needed for this, and we've identified how much would be
needed from each individual property owner, I think as Mr.
Paulson's aware, and we've also done further detailed study on the
traffic here at this intersection with an assumption that Wal
Mart's in place, using their trip generation figures and all that.
We have submitted all that information to DOT Traffic and Safety
down on Region One and we are expecting a response back from them
anytime now, as to what they think of either one signal here or,
apparently, there is some signal system that is available,
signalization, that will allow a signal to be placed where it was
originally called for, right here in front of the Queen Diner, and
a second one here, that would be coordinated in some manner.
They'll, essentially, act as one signal.
MR. PAULSON-The last time I was in your office, you told me that
that is not what you wanted, two signals that close together.
MR. MARTIN-Well, I wasn't aware of this system that they're
proposing. This is something that DOT, I guess, has used several
times in the Capital District, and they've found that it works
pretty well.
MR. PAULSON-And then I also asked you, on the realignment of Weeks
Road, if you could swing it further south, and move it away from
the buildings.
MR. MARTIN-Yes. See, this is just the conceptual rendering we have
from the consul tant. Anything we can do to make the actual
application of these improvements better for the property owner,
we'll most certainly do that. If we can swing this further away
like this, and have it dip more, away from this building, that can
certainly be looked at.
MR. PAULSON-Is Wal Mart going to be able to access onto Weeks Road,
or do they have to go out through Route 9?
MR. MARTIN-Even under the current plan, I think they were calling
for a driveway through the rear of the building, right in through
here, and they would go out Weeks Road, under the current plan,
that's with Weeks Road in it's current configuration.
MR. PAULSON-Well, that's where we're concerned, at night, with the
delivery schedules.
MR. MARTIN-Right. Now it certainly could be required of them to,
I don't think they could do anything about, with their tractor
trailers late at night, coming down and then going back into their
parking lot, exiting out through their parking lot. That could
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certainly be required of them.
MR. PAULSON-All right, but this isn't done yet?
going to talk to us?
I mean, you're
MR. MARTIN-No, not by any stretch of the imagination.
MR. PAULSON-Okay. Thanks.
ABE RUDNICK
MR. RUDNICK-My name is Abe Rudnick, and I understand my attorney
sent you a letter?
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
MR. RUDNICK-Now, may I propose, I want you to make this public.
MR. MARTIN-I don't have it here with me.
MR. RUDNICK-I've got a copy of the letter.
MR. MARTIN-Sure. Do you want to read it into the record?
MR. RUDNICK-Yes, I'll give it to you.
MR. MARTIN-All right. We can do that. This is a letter dated June
8th, to myself, "Dear Mr. Martin and Ms. Brunso: This firm
represents Abraham Rudnick and Queensbury Gardens, Inc. ("Rudnick
Interests"), which owns a 40 acre tract located at the end of
Foster Avenue in the Town of Queensbury ("the property"). Over the
years the property has been the site of executive garden apartments
and is zoned accordingly. Today, the surrounding properties are
entirely zoned high density cormnercial. We suspect that this
commercial development led the Town to request that we consider
making a portion of our property available to build a road to
alleviate existing traffic at the intersection of Route 9 and
Aviation and Quaker Roads. After further discussions with the
Town, we would request that you make the following offer before the
publIc hearing on the Corridor Study: That, the Rudnick Interests,
will offer to provide the Town, a right-of-way in perpetuity
("proposed road") over our property connecting Aviation Road at the
east entrance (at traffic light) to Aviation Mall to the terminus
of Rudley Drive which will complete the connection to Foster Avenue
and Glen Street (see attached map) under the following terms and
conditions: (1) That the Town pay us $ 1.00 for the land used for
the intended right-of-way and that the Town build a road to
accormnodate the expected traffic; (2) That because of the changed
use of the property, that the Town rezones the property to the
highest cormnercial zone and permit reuse of the existing apartments
under said new zone; (4) That the town provide ingress and egress
at all times during construction of the proposed road to residents
of Queensbury Gardens apartments; (5) That the Town provide
adequate curb cuts for cross streets to the proposed road to
accommodate new development on the property. This offer will
remain open to the Town of Queensbury until July 15th, 1994. LAW
OFFICES OF MARVIN L. RUDNICK Marvin L. Rudnick, Esq." And that
was copied to Fred Champagne and Abraham Rudnick.
MR. RUDNICK-Thank you very much.
MR. PAULSON-Jim, did you say it was impractical to go behind the
Mall, and make a connection up to Route 9?
MS. BRUNSO-Do you mean along the Northway?
MR. PAULSON-Well, I was thinking of from the Northway, you could
go off into Aviation if you wanted to, continue the road right onto
Route 9 south, or 9 and 254.
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MS. BRUNSO-We 11, I don 't th i nk you can go through ther e, becaus e
those are the ski trails, and you have Crandall Park down there.
MR. PAULSON-Is it that close?
MS. BRUNSO-Yes, it's that close.
MR. MARTIN-It adjoins the Mall property.
MR. PAULSON-I didn't realize that.
MR. MARTIN-Yes.
JIM MATHIS
MR. MATHIS-My name is Jim Mathis. If you would be implementing
these, is it your intent to have these in a sequential order?
mean, is there one going to be first, second, or third, the way
you've been presenting them, or which is the primary one that you
are driving to accomplish first, of these three plans?
MR. MARTIN-I would say, of all that I s been proposed, from the
Town's perspective, from looking to what seems to have the most
benefit for what we can afford to do as a Town, would be this Weeks
Road realignment. That's what the Town is looking at first. The
time frame on that is a little fuzzy, still, depending on how
negotiations go with the property owners, and how well it comes out
with DOT with the signal. So that will probably be the first thing
out of this Study that is done, and, again, this is conceptual.
There are many things in this that could change, like the cul-de-
sac. It could be that Weeks Road is left open, and connects right
into the new proposed road there. There's many practical
applications that may change these concepts a little bit. I would
say next after that, if done as it stands today, would be the
Greenway North connector funded by the State, but the earliest that
could be available, given the availability of funding and the steps
that have to be taken to secure that funding, we're probably five
or six years away, at best, and anything beyond that is really a
matter of planning, in planning, and would be, I think, contingent
upon the development that occurs to pay for it.
MR. MATHIS-In terms of implementation, this is a public hearing
over the plan. What is the next step to make it reality? Does it
need to go before the Town Board to have them approve it, or would
it happen without any other jurisdictional approvals?
MS. BRUNSO-It needs to go before the Town Board. The Greenway
North connector is conceived at this point to be built with Federal
funds. It would be built with surface transportation small urban
money. It's probably, unless you know all the gradations of
highway financing, that probably doesn't mean a lot, but there is,
eighty percent of that money will be Federally funded. Twenty
percent would have to come from the local municipality. So, that
is something that would have to be approved by the Town Board,
before we'd go ahead. Likewise, the service roads that have been
mentioned, such as the Foster Avenue Extension, it's not envisioned
that they would be built with Federal money at all. So that would
be a question for the Town to accept, and to allow to happen.
MR. MATHIS--But the Town has not yet approved even the Weeks Road
project. Is that correct?
MS. BRUNSO-I don't know about the Weeks Road project. I'm going to
turn this over to Jim, because he knows the ins and outs in the
Town.
MR. MARTIN-The Town has budgeted and set aside money for that Weeks
Road connection. It's currently in discussion right now, as to how
that can occur, you know, what are the costs associated with the
property acquisition? What are the costs associated with design?
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What are the costs associated with construction? That's all being
looked at right now. Depending on how the negotiations proceed
with the property owners will determine whether that is done or
not, and how soon.
MEMBER OF THE PUBLIC-You said earlier that Wal Mart was going to
speed up the process of this intersection failing. Has any
discussion been made with them to help out with the Weeks Road?
MR. MARTIN-I, quite frankly, asked the Director of Eastern Real
Estate for Wal Mart if he would pay for that road, or a portion of
it, and he bluntly said no, quickly said no, but at least we asked.
Had the Planning Staff and the Planning Board known then what they
know now, in review of that Site Plan, it certainly would have been
Staff's recommendation to have that done part and parcel with Site
Plan approval, but the timing was off, and it just simply was not
in place at the time that Site Plan was approved, or it would have
been something from the Department's standpoint we would have
pushed for.
AL LANFEAR
MR. LANFEAR-My name is Al Lanfear, and I live on Birch Lane. Would
you explain to me the intersection where your detour comes out on
254, what that island is in there?
MR. MARTIN-This here?
MR. LANFEAR-That's correct.
MR. MARTIN-This was a design element put in by the consultant that
he was, they were thinking that a right hand turn in and right hand
out only would be an appropriate way to treat that intersection.
MR. LANFEAR-Now what have you accomplished for Greenway North when
you do that?
MR. MARTIN-This really is not meant to accomplish anything for
Greenway North. This is meant to act as a way to access to the
rear, rather than greeting curb cuts along the road here, or
further curb cuts along the road here, hopefully eliminate some, to
allow rear access into these properties, should they develop, and
then the need for this road would become evident,
MR. LANFEAR-I'm going to tell you now, don't need any rear end
access, not of that nature, and I don't see what you're
accomplishing by putting an island down there, for anybody else, if
all you can do is go uphill, or come in from when you're going
uphill.
MR. MARTIN-This will a full access intersection here, and this
would be the one.
MR. LANFEAR-What's the width of that right-of-way?
MR. MARTIN-That is 50 feet.
MR. LANFEAR-This is between the two outside lines?
.
MR . MAR TIN - Yes, yes, bet wee nth e two hat c h e d I i n est her e . Yes.
The road pavement there is shown approximately, I would say 25 to
30 feet, somewhere in there.
MR. LANFEAR-Two lanes?
MR. MARTIN-Yes, two lanes.
with two lanes of traffic.
This is three lanes, a center lane,
MR. LANFEAR-Well, I
businesses in there,
don't see your point in
and several residences,
destroying several
for the benefit of
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people on top of the hill who have their own problem.
making me a problem to benefit them.
You're
MR. MARTIN-Well, if you don't want this, then this road doesn't
happen. I said that earlier.
MR. LANFEAR-Well, as far as I'm concerned, you can de I ete tha t
section there, right at the minute.
MR. MARTIN-That's fine.
MR. LANFEAR-Good. Thanks.
FRED TROELSTRA
MR. TROELSTRA-My name is Fred Troelstra, one of the partners at the
Silo. Jim, I stepped in late. I don't know if you had discussed
the impacts of the Route 254 and 1-87 revisions that are going to
be occurring.
MR. MARTIN-The widening of Exit 19 interchange?
MR. TROELSTRA-Correct.
MR. MARTIN-That is a separate project, away from this Study.
That's being done directly and completely by the State.
MR. TROELSTRA-Yes, what's the timing, though? If this is in
conjunction with that, I think we're going to create such a chaotic
sense there that nobody will want to get off there.
MS. BRUNSO-Well, there was a lot of requests that, indeed, could we
do Exi t 19 and the Greenway North connector at the same time.
Actually, the answer is, no, they're two separate projects. They
both need their own authorization. Exit 19 is in the works. It is
expected that the planning work will be done by the fall of this
year, that the designs will be available by the spring of next
year, and that the contract wi II be let in the fall of 1997.
That's current planning. What will happen is Federal requirements
are that the bridge has to be raised two and a half feet. That's
part of our defense strategy to allow the missiles to be able to go
underneath the bridge, and any time you reconstruct a bridge, you
have to raise it two and a half feet, unless it already is at that
height. What they will do then is build half of it, move the
traffic over onto the one half, build the other half, and then open
the whole bridge.
MR. TROELSTRA-I realize all that, but still, what is the timing,
then, on this particular project? Is it going to be in conjunction
with that?
MS. BRUNSO-It will be after that.
MR. TROELSTRA-It will be after that.
MS. BRUNSO-Yes.
MR. MARTIN-The bridge probably actually will begin construction
about four years from now. We should have, meaning the public and
the Town at large, should have some view as to what the design of
that bridge is next spring.
MR. TROELSTRA-Okay. Realizing, of course, that that's going to be
a major impact on traffic at that particular proximity, and I
envision people being channeled to Exit 20, and Exit 18, of course,
and any of the other corridors that go over 1-87. A separate
question. Has the Carlton/June Drive connection over to the new
Wal Mart been nixed? I think, hadn't that come up at one time?
MS. BRUNSO-Yes, it did come up.
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MR. MARTIN-There it is shown there. This is Weeks Road here. This
is Roberts Garden South. Here's the back of Ames Plaza. Here's
June Drive here. This has also received mixed reviews from the
neighborhood at large, so to speak, and, I shouldn't say mixed.
Most of them have been negative, against it. The concern is that
it's going to create through traffic and another alternate means to
get through to, over to points west, or to the Mall, or what have
you. That may very well happen. It would be illY suggestion that if
this were to really be pursued, certainly it needs further study.
My only concern for this neighborhood is that right now we
essentially have one really useful way to get in and out of that
neighborhood, and in the event of an emergency situation, I don't
know that that's the best situation, and this would alleviate that,
but beyond that, that very well may happen that this would become
a two way through, cut through type of a situation and negatively
impact the neighborhood, and, therefore, I'd be opposed to it, but
there is that one concern about the emergency access. It would
help to alleviate, and that's really where that stands. It's in
the report, but I don't know that it's a real hot item, so to
speak.
MR. TROELSTRA-Okay. Thank you.
MS. BRUNSO-I think that the one thing you can say about this report
is that it's a plan for the future, if the Town of Queensbury wants
to adopt it, and if you have a plan, not all of it has to be built,
not any of it has to be bui 1 t. I t was done wi th the best of
intentions of trying to move the traffic through the area, and try
to provide a greater capacity in the area for the traffic that is
growing here. One of the things that we notice when we try to do
any improvements to the highways is that there are residences and
businesses along the highway that were built without any thought of
their ever being any growth in traffic or capacity or width of the
road, and here you are with a growing neighborhood, a requirement
for additional capacity on the highways, and existing buildings
that will all be impacted by the growth, the congestion, and the
improvements.
MR. MARTIN-Anyone else? Anyone else at all? We'll be around
afterwards if anybody wants to informally talk or take a closer
look. My office is always open if someone wants to come in. I
make any materials available I have. If there's no one else, thank
you very much for coming.
Meeting was ended.
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