TRANSPORTATION

  Road project revives hope to link Maine’s north, south. »Read More    
 
  Campaign to increase weight limits on I-95 moves forward. »Read More    
 
  US Army Corps of Engineers letter regarding the North-South Highway connecting the St. John Valley to I-95. »View Letter    
 
  Governor John E. Baldacci has instructed the MaineDOT to advance an Aroostook County transportation project so that construction can begin in 2010. He's also announced the listing of transportation investments in Aroostook for 2009.
»Read More
   
       
 
  Senate bill raises truck weight limit in Maine (December 13, 2009)    
  PORTLAND, Maine — A federal bill that would allow trucks weighing more than 80,000 pounds to travel Interstate 95 north of Augusta is one step closer to becoming law.
Sen. Susan Collins says the Senate on Sunday approved the 2010 transportation appropriations bill, with a provision that creates a one-year pilot project to exempt Maine's federal highways from the 80,000-pound federal truck weight limit.
Trucks over 80,000 pounds now have to exit I-95 at Augusta and travel on secondary roads through towns and cities, raising concerns about safety and wear and tear on state roads. The bill also includes a provision that would allow heavier trucks on federal highways in Vermont for a one-year period.
The bill will now be sent to the president for his signature.
   
       
 
 

Aroostook delegation pushes for I-95 extension
By Kevin Miller
Bangor Daily News Staff
04/10/09

AUGUSTA, Maine — Aroostook County legislators are asking that federal stimulus dollars be used to jump start the long-stalled expansion of Interstate 95 into northern Maine.

Earlier this week, the Legislature’s Transportation Committee voted unanimously in support of a bill directing the Maine Department of Transportation to request federal economic recovery money for extending I-95 beyond Houlton.

The full Legislature is expected to vote on the resolve in the coming weeks.

Bill sponsor Sen. Troy Jackson, D-Allagash, said northern Maine residents have been waiting for more than 50 years for the promised expansion. Jackson and Rep. Charles Kenneth Theriault, D-Madawaska, argue that an interstate is critical to local farmers and truckers and that a new highway into Canada would help create a significant number of jobs in the region.

“The federal government and President Obama are looking for ways to help the economy, to put people back to work and businesses on the right track,” Jackson said in a statement. “Completing I-95 is a sure thing and something that should have been done decades ago.”

Maine is slated to receive more than $130 million from the first federal stimulus package. All of that money is earmarked for projects that were ready or nearly ready for construction.


   
 
 
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