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North-South inter-connector route proposed for Quesnel

Plans for a Highway 97 north-south interconnector was on display Wednesday afternoon as the City of Quesnel and the Ministry of Transportation and Highways held an open house at the Seniors Centre.

It has been a long time coming but there is now one preferred route up for public review.

Shawn Clough, Project Manager with the Ministry of Transportation, says the key to what they’re doing is the replacement of the two bridges over the Quesnel River and the BC Rail.

“You cross the BCR…both of those new bridges are proposed to be upstream, so to the right,” he explains.

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“As you come into North Quesnel, what you’re going to do is swing right and you’re actually going to go along the top of the hill between the train tracks and the community all the way along past the Catholic church and enter where the Super Save gas station is on Two Mile Flat.”

Clough mentions two other routes, bypasses that would go through Cariboo Pulp and tie into Two Mile Flat or to the Highway to Barkerville, but both were more expensive as they would require another bridge and more road and both would not get the truck traffic off Front Street which is what they have heard loud and clear from the public.

The cost of the proposed interconnector is around $275 million, 125 to 150 of which is for two new bridges.

It would also involve some geotechnical work.

“In the event we move forward, we have to do a tremendous amount of on-the-ground investigation. We’ve got to get in there with drill rigs, pop some holes in the ground, and have our geotechnical scientists really tell us what we need to do for the stability of the road,” says Clough.

“In the event we get approval for that project, we are foreseeing walls. We’re going to have a wall on the property side, then the highway and a wall down to where the railway is.”

Under this plan, if it gets public support and government funding, the Ministry of Highways would then devolve Front Street, Carson Avenue, and Legion Drive back to the municipality.

Several other potential traffic projects to improve safety along Highway 97 in South Quesnel were also on display.

“We’ve also got access improvements to South Quesnel as an option. There are a lot of uncontrolled access points to the Highway, we go from four-lane to two-lane and back to four, so we’ve got some options there that we’re presenting to the public,” Clough says.

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“For Two Mile Flat, we’ve got a couple of options. If you’ve driven it you know that there is truck traffic coming and going and turning in and out of a whole bunch of different access points, so we’ve got one way where we’re trying to encourage the access to the businesses through a back road system, which is off the Highway. The other is we take the highway corridor and change into more of an urban environment compared to the rural environment it currently is, have two lanes of traffic up and down and then really consolidate and minimize the access points.”

One project that will go ahead this year is on Front Street.

“We are going to be coming in and changing the traffic pattern on Front Street. We’re going to have a lane for northbound traffic and a lane for southbound traffic and the whole middle lane is going to turn into left turn slots that go one way or another. So now you’re not going to have to be behind a huge cue of traffic as someone is trying to turn into the hospital so that work is going to happen this fiscal. We’re also going to move the light from Reid to Mclean.”

He estimates the cost of that project to be in the three to five million dollar range.

All information can be found here.

– with files from George Henderson, My Cariboo now

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