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Wauna traffic light project slowly progresses
By Irene Torres
KP News
Planning continues behind the
scenes for development in the Lake Kathryn Village
Shopping Center. Movement seems slow, as so many
agencies are involved.
Dale Severson, who heads the
Washington State Department of Transportation Olympic
Region Development Services, told the KP News, “We have
been working with the proponent of the Lake Kathryn
Village Shopping Center, a Mr. Joe Rhea, since about
2000 and more recently we were contacted by his design
consultant, Bob Jewell, of PacLand here in Olympia.”
Severson explained, “The Lake
Kathryn Village Shopping Center was originally SEPA
(State Environmental Policy Act) conditioned back in the
1980s. I believe it was to install a traffic signal at
their center’s private road entrance (92nd Avenue) when
they reached a certain square footage. That total was
basically a level that would be reached if they
installed a grocery store.”
At that time, rumors swelled about
some major grocery outlet, such as Safeway, moving onto
the Key Peninsula. Around 2000, it looked like that
threshold was about to be met, and the developer hired a
design consultant to prepare “channelization and traffic
signal plans for that signal at 92nd,” Severson said.
“We then took a close look at that
requirement and decided all parties (developer, WSDOT,
and traveling public) would be better served if that
traffic signal could instead be installed at the
existing public road T-intersection at 94th Avenue NW by
having them make a new south leg to serve the center and
adjacent vacant lot to the west of the center
(Please click here for a
.pdf file of the Plan of Approval.) (74 KB)
Property manager Joe Rhea spoke to
the KP News on behalf of Don Zimmerman, majority owner
of the Lake Kathryn property. “We acquired more property
to develop — now about 40 acres — and later discovered
that 7 acres of it were designated as wetlands. We can’t
develop wetlands,” Rhea said.
The developer designs, engineers,
and builds the project, usually paying the entire cost,
with the exception in this case of a $55,000
contribution in “goods and services” by the WSDOT toward
the project. The state must approve all design plans and
oversees the construction, which is constructed by the
developer’s contractor.
“WSDOT will 100 percent own and
operate the completed signal that is on WSDOT
right-of-way after completion and acceptance of the
project,” Severson said.
A new traffic signal may be needed
“if an engineering study shows that traffic signal
warrants are met and it is the right thing to do.”
Signal warrants are usually based on the amount of
traffic volumes at an intersection, but can also include
pedestrian and accident warrants.
Severson said, “If this was to be a
100 percent WSDOT funded signal, it would have to
prioritize high enough to be one of the two or three
signals this region typically funds and builds within a
typical biennium. In this case, the intersection does
meet signal warrants, but does not prioritize very
high.”
With the concurrence of the
property owner, the state is “nearly finished reviewing
the traffic signal engineering plans.”
“It normally only takes a year or
less to work through our WSDOT design review process,
but because the schedule is developer-driven, it is only
now nearing completion of the design phase,” he said.
PacLand representatives declined to
contribute to this story. Rhea said, “We want to make it
grow. We have done a lot of work, developing statistics
and doing the engineering, but we are stifled. We have
been working with (Rep.) Derek Kilmer, who is on the
state Transportation Committee, and with (Pierce County
Councilman) Terry Lee to get the state to contribute
funds that will go a long way toward the safety of
Highway 302. As the (second Tacoma Narrows) Bridge is
completed, people are expecting a lot of growth, all the
way to Poulsbo. Safety along 302 is a big issue.”
Kilmer told the KP News, “I support
the idea of a traffic light there. Currently it’s not in
the budget, but it’s something I’ve been working for.
There is a grant program for these sorts of
intersections, and I’ve been working with the county to
try to get them to apply for a grant (it’s a bit of a
peculiar intersection because it’s a county road coming
up to a state highway).”
Rhea said that any increase in
businesses would require the installation of a traffic
light, “which will hinge on being able to borrow half a
million to a million or more dollars for a light and
roadway changes.”
While Rhea, Zimmerman and their
engineering consultant are reluctant to disclose their
negotiations, they reportedly may happen during next
construction season in 2007. Progress — when the signal
and associated channelization are to be built — is
controlled by the developers and their ability to raise
the funds needed to complete the project.
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