Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: WEDNESDAY, November 22, 1995 TAG: 9511220093 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: A-3 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
August 1986: Roanoke Mayor Noel Taylor proclaims that his city is Virginia Tech's community, even though 37 miles separate the two. The Greater Blacksburg Chamber of Commerce creates a task force to study the economic impact of a road linking Roanoke and Blacksburg.
April 1989: The Montgomery County Board of Supervisors votes to support a direct link between Blacksburg and Roanoke. Blacksburg and Christiansburg town councils pass similar resolutions.
March 1989: A committee of Tech, Roanoke and New River Valley leaders forms to push for the road.
1990: The "Blacksburg-Roanoke Road" is included in the state's six-year transportation plan. The road is described as an "electronically monitored highway of the future." Cost is estimated at $155 million.
November 1991: Congress includes $5.9 million for the road in its transportation bill.
February 1992: The Commonwealth Transportation Board unanimously approves the so-called Alternative 6 route for the smart road, the one still under consideration today.
February 1992: Blacksburg Town Council approves a resolution supporting the smart road. Other localities follow suit.
May 1993: The final environmental impact statement on the smart road is approved by the Federal Highway Administration.
October 1993: Tech's Center for Transportation Research receives $3 million from the Federal Highway Administration to help fund smart road research.
January/February 1994: Gov. George Allen proposes a deal with General Motors: The state will spend $10 million to build the first two miles of the smart road if Tech can be part of a General Motors consortium angling for a $150 million federal grant.
October 1994: The General Motors-led consortium, of which Virginia Tech is an associate partner, wins a federal $150 million grant to develop smart technology.
October 1995: The Virginia Department of Transportation holds a public hearing on the proposed final design of the smart highway.
November 1995: An environmental group files a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Roanoke challenging environmental planning for the highway. The Montgomery County Board of Supervisors holds a public hearing that draws more than 140 people on the state's proposed condemnation of 140 acres in a county agricultural-preservation zone. That hearing was followed by Monday's 4-3 vote against the road.
by CNB