- East-West Highway (New England)
The East-West Highway is a long-proposed east-west highway corridor in
northern New England , intended to link remote northern communities inMaine ,New Hampshire andVermont with markets in theMaritimes ,Québec and upperNew York State.Well-worn
Yankee truisms like "You can't get there from here " have their basis in the difficulties east-west travel poses in much of northern New England. Natural barriers like the White Mountains and significant distances to population centers insouthern New England have left the region underdeveloped economically. (At present,Interstate 90 inMassachusetts is the northernmost east-westfreeway in New England.)Proposals for an east-west highway date back to the 1940s.
In the early 1970s, all three northern New England states and New York proposed two new
Interstate Highway corridors: one fromAlbany, New York , toPortsmouth, New Hampshire , and another fromGlens Falls, New York , toCalais, Maine . The southerly corridor incorporated the route of the currentNew Hampshire Route 101 expressway, while the northerly corridor (designated asInterstate 92 ) tracedU.S. Route 4 throughVermont andNew Hampshire . TheFederal Highway Administration ultimately did not approve the plan.Current backers of the highway propose an east-west axis through northern and central
Maine .One portion of the new highway would run from
Interstate 395 inBrewer, Maine , to theCanada-United States border near Calais, with a direct link toNew Brunswick Route 1 - a major transportation corridor serving theMaritimes .A second would travel northwest from Interstate 95 near
Waterville, Maine , to theCanada-United States border at Coburn Gore, with a connection to a proposed extension ofQuebec Autoroute 10 towardMontreal .A third would travel due west from Interstate 95 near Waterville, following the
U.S. Route 2 corridor through Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and upper New York state.Maine Senator
Olympia Snowe said in 2004 that the region is disadvantaged by the fact that it was the only region in theUnited States for which a federal High Priority Corridor was not designated in the 1991Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act .cite web |url= http://snowe.senate.gov/wsu06-25-04.htm |title= East-West Highway Will Connect Mainers to All Points In-Between & Beyond |author= SenatorOlympia Snowe |work= Weekly Senate Update |date=25 June 2004 |quote= Regionalism has been on the upswing since the establishment of the 1991 Intermodal Surface Transportation Equity Act (ISTEA), which created 43 transportation corridors that are designated as federal "High Priority Corridors." But what is worrying is that while every has a designated High Priority Corridor (HPC), New England does not. This leaves our region tremendously disadvantaged in competing economically given the tremendous volume of trade that is shipped through our ports and across our border withCanada . What is clear is thatNew England requires an HPC that includes portions ofNew York ,Vermont ,New Hampshire andMaine . ]References
External links
*
Maine Department of Transportation [http://www.maine.gov/mdot/major-planning-studies/east-west-hwy/execsum.php 1999 East-West highway corridor study executive summary]
*Maine Department of Transportation [http://www.maine.gov/mdot/major-planning-studies/east-west-hwy/homepage.php webpage on the highway proposal]
* [http://www.bostonroads.com/roads/I-92/ Steve Anderson's BostonRoads.com: Unbuilt Interstate 92 in New England]
* [http://www.jobs-safety.org/index.html Maine Citizens for Increased Jobs and Safety]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.