![]() |
|
|
FHWA 09-08
Friday, May 02, 2008
Contact: Nancy Singer
Tel.: (202) 366-0660
Nation's Top Highway Official Says New SR 167 HOT Lanes in Washington State Will
Cut Congestion
WASHINGTON, DC – Washington state’s first first-ever high occupancy toll (HOT)
lanes on SR 167 will give drivers more choices and cut congestion in the Seattle
area, Acting Federal Highway Administrator Jim Ray announced today.
“Traffic jams don’t need to be a fact of life,” Ray said. “For a small price,
HOT lanes give drivers more options to get home to their families and to work on
time.”
Today, SR 167 experiences significant congestion during both the morning and
evening peak periods. The road carries approximately 120,000 vehicles a day and
runs parallel to I-5 between Tacoma and Seattle.
The four-year pilot project on lanes between Renton and Auburn in King County
will allow solo drivers to pay a toll to use the HOV lanes when there is space
available beginning May 3. At the same time, space will free up in the general
purpose lanes for all drivers, keeping transit and carpools reliable. The price
of the toll will rise and fall according to traffic levels. Electronic tolling
will allow drivers to pay the toll without stopping.
Ray added that the U.S. Department of Transportation’s plan to tackle traffic
congestion and freight bottlenecks promotes HOT lanes as one of the innovative
measures to improve mobility for people and commerce. "We are focused on reining
in congestion because it is one of the single largest threats to our economic
prosperity and quality of life."
The Federal Highway Administration provided $5.13 million for the
project.