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Yorkville Patch
Aug. 26, 2012
Prairie
Parkway No More After Federal Government Withdraws Approval
By Erin Sauder
Prairie Parkway opponents plan to celebrate the end of the project at the
11th Annual ‘Stop the Beltway’ Picnic at 4 p.m. Sunday at Marvel Davis
Farm in Big Rock.
State Rep. Kay Hatcher said the the federal government’s Aug. 22 decision
to withdraw its approval of the Prairie Parkway could mean one less tool
to respond to the area's growing need for alternative transportation
solutions.
“The Parkway was designed to be limited access, lighten everyday traffic
congestion and extend the life of our local highways by siphoning off the
heaviest truck traffic,” she said. “There is no question that Route 47
needs work. Maintenance or expansion, however, is not the same as a new
roadway.”
But after more than a decade battling the proposed Prairie Parkway, some
area citizens breathing a sigh of relief.
The 37-mile-long highway project, proposed in 2001, would have
connected I-80 and I-88 in Kane, Kendall, and Grundy counties. In 2005,
then-House Speaker Dennis Hastert earmarked $207 million in federal tax
dollars for the project. About $70 million in federal and state funds has
been spent on the Prairie Parkway so far for need and environmental
studies, engineering, and purchase of about 250 acres of land along the
proposed route. No actual construction has taken place.
Since the federal government’s action eliminates federal funding for the
project, the Illinois Department of Transportation will now shift federal
funds previously allocated to the Prairie Parkway to improvements to
Illinois 47 and US 34, officials said.
Two area environmental groups, Citizens Against the Sprawlway (CATS) and
Friends of the Fox River, filed suit against the Federal Highway
Administration, contending that the project review was inadequate.
Attorneys from the Environmental Law and Policy Center, a Chicago public
interest group, represented the groups.
“After an 11-year fight, we have finally scuttled this highway which would
have destroyed thousands of acres of prime farmland, threatened the Fox
River and its tributaries, and forever changed the area’s small community
way of life,” said Jan Strasma, chairman of Citizens Against the
Sprawlway.
Howard A. Learner, executive director of the Environmental Law &
Policy Center, lauded Gov. Quinn’s senior team “for focusing on resolving
this long-standing problem and working with us and the Federal Highway
Administration on a smart solution."
“This is a better and affordable transportation solution that will improve
local roadways, create needed jobs, preserve community values and protect
sensitive environmental areas,” he said.
Gary Swick, president of Friends of the Fox River, also heralded the
federal government’s decision.
“We are pleased that the project will no longer pose a threat to the water
quality of the Fox River, and appreciative to all the partners who have
worked for this decision,” he said.
Proponents of the Prairie Parkway plan to celebrate the end of the project
at the 11th Annual ‘Stop the Beltway’ Picnic which begins at 4 pm Sunday
at the Marvel Davis farm, 47W066 Jericho Road, near Big Rock, about five
miles west of Illinois 47.
Yorkville Mayor Gary Golinski said due to the state of the current
economy, the Prairie Parkway is hard to justify right now.
“My hope is that they use the allocated funds to benefit the existing
north/south corridors that already exist through Yorkville,” he said.
“There's no reason that Route 47 shouldn't be four lanes all the way from
I-88 to I-80. If the federal and state government can't get that done,
then they should grant some of that money to the local municipalities so
we can take care of some of our local roadways."