Category: Public Private Partnerships
SH 130, Texas' first foreign-owned tollway, has quickly become hog alley. It doesn't take a highway engineer to figure out this road and its posted speed limit of 85 MPH is UNSAFE and will cause a whole lot of damage to vehicles and possibly fatalities.On Texas 130, road hogs are the feral kind
By Vianna Davila
Express-News
Updated 4:50 p.m., Friday, October 26, 2012
The opening of the Texas 130 toll road extension went off without a hitch Wednesday, with no major collisions to speak of.
But when night fell, the wildlife came out.
Vehicles and animals collided at least three times somewhere along the 41-mile road that connects southern Austin to Seguin and boasts an 85-mph speed limit — the fastest in the country.
Two hogs were hit, and one vehicle struck a deer.
No drivers were injured. The animals may not have been so lucky, though their exact fates are unknown.
On Thursday afternoon, the first vehicle rollover occurred, not far from Interstate 10.
Read more here.
________________________________________________________________________________
Wild hogs make impression on driver, car
By Vianna Davila
Express-News
Updated 1:48 a.m., Saturday, October 27, 2012
Victor Espana probably won't forget his first drive on the Texas 130 toll road, but not because of its much-talked-about 85-mph speed limit.
He's more likely to remember the two feral hogs he slammed into with his mom's Chrysler 300 as he sped along the road in the middle of the night.
The collision, which didn't injure Espana but left the two hogs DOA, means his first trip on the country's fastest road might be his last.
“I'll be scared to use it again,” said Espana, 19.
Collisions with feral hogs and other wild animals are common in the rural part of Central Texas.
While vehicles can hit animals on any road, Texas 130 is a brand new, wide, divided highway, connecting south Austin to Seguin, and all the small towns and hamlets in between.
For the first time, vehicles can travel at high speeds in an area where there used to be just smaller state highways and county farm-to-market roads.
Read more here.
_________________________________________________________________________
Toll road to get wildlife warning signs
By Vianna Davila
Express-News
Updated 11:41 p.m., Tuesday, October 30, 2012
The private company operating the Texas 130 toll road extension will install permanent signs along the 41-mile corridor warning drivers about wildlife in the area.
Since the toll road opened to traffic Oct. 24, at least three incidents have occurred in which vehicles collided with animals.
The SH 130 Concession Co. announced the sign plan Tuesday morning on its Facebook page. The signs will go up as soon as they can be made, said spokesman Chris Lippincott.
Until the permanent signs are installed, the company has put up two mobile dynamic message signs advising drivers to watch for wildlife. The temporary signs say “wildlife crossing,” the spokesman said.
Read more here.
Latest News
- Putting lipstick on the P3 pig - 'availability payments'
- Loop 1604 could be handed to private toll operator for 50 years
- TX lawmakers vote to sell-off 20 roads to private entities
- Highway Trust Fund needs to be cut 92%?
- VA Residents protest toll lanes on I-395
- Reasons to be wary of public private partnerships
- Legislators pass law to use property tax to build TOLL roads
- Trans Texas Corridor update: Hwy 59 gets I-69 designation
Like Us on Facebook!
Latest Press Releases
- Texas for Sale: Texas roads may be handed to private, foreign toll operators
- Texans ask for leadership to enact NEW vision for road policy
- Grassroots applaud Perry's call to end diversions, reject Rainy Day raid
- Texans call for boycott of Cintra's SH 130 tollway
- Judge rules foreign company can take Texas land using eminent domain
- Victory for open government, but not complete transparency
- Farmer challenges use of eminent domain for Keystone pipeline
- Anti-toll groups celebrate Campbell, Cruz victories
Like TURF
Follow TURF
