Handful weigh in on Echo Summit bridge plans
By Jessie Marchesseau
MEYERS – Seven miles west of South Lake Tahoe on Highway 50, the Echo Summit bridge is cracking, rusting and flaking apart. Caltrans has been working on a replacement/rehabilitation plan for the bridge since 2012.
A community open house at the California Conservation Corps office in Meyers on Thursday was designed to present the current project alternatives and take public comment.
Dozens of chairs sat empty during the presentation as only about a half dozen people were in attendance, including El Dorado County Supervisor Sue Novasel. Novasel said it was decided after Caltrans did a similar presentation on the project in South Lake Tahoe back in February that one should be conducted in Meyers since the community will be directly affected by any work on the highway. (The media was sent a press release about the May 21 event one day earlier.)
Project manager Clark Peri discussed the need for the project, showing photographs of the deteriorating bridge with its rusting steel supports and spalling concrete. Built in 1939, the bridge is in what engineers consider advanced stages of deterioration, though is not in danger of actually collapsing anytime soon.
Caltrans has come up with six alternatives for the bridge project. The alternatives vary in scope, duration and type of road closure:
Alternative 1A
- Replace with 26-foot wide bridge
- Total 120-150 days in one construction season
- 60-90 days under full closure and 10-30 days under one-way traffic control
Alternative 1B
- Replace with 26-foot wide bridge
- Total 100-130 days in two construction seasons
- 20-50 days under full closure and 50-70 days under one-way traffic control
Alternative 2A
- Replace with 30.75-foot wide bridge
- Total 200-230 days in two construction seasons
- Under one-way traffic control (8-hour work shifts)
Alternative 2B
- Replace with 30.75 foot wide bridge
- Total 160-190 days in two construction seasons
- Under one-way traffic control (10-hour work shifts)
Alternative 3
- Rehabilitate existing bridge
- Total 150-180 days in two construction seasons
- 20-50 days under full closure and 90-120 days under one-way traffic control
Alternative 4
- Do nothing.
If the road were closed completely, vehicles would be detoured to highways 88 and 89 during that time. This is what happened when the highway was fully closed during the wall project in 2011, but it was only for a couple of weeks.
Novasel recalled the mudslide on Highway 50 in the 1990s when the road was closed for so long that businesses in Meyers were going out of business.
“We’ve seen how devastating it can be when it’s closed,” she said.
This is why she wants to start the conversation about this project early, get plenty of public input and plan well in advance. Right now the project is still in the environmental document and project report phase. Construction is not slated to begin until 2019.
During the comment portion of the meeting, attendees expressed a number of concerns. One resident who commutes to Sacramento for work was told commuter passes during road closures may be possible, though not guaranteed. When NDOT had Kingsbury Grade closed summer passes were issued on a limited basis.
Peri assured one attendee that his suggestion to build an alternate road through Echo Pass instead of detouring cars to Highway 88 would be discussed.
Another community member expressed his concerns about the area surrounding the highway not being geologically sound; he requested it be thoroughly studied before millions of dollars are invested into a bridge that would be completely demolished in the event of an earthquake. Again, Peri assured those in attendance there would be a thorough geological study completed, fault lines looked at and the findings taken into account before any project designs are decided upon. This is standard for all such projects, he said.
Caltrans expects to have the environmental studies completed by this fall and anticipates another public meeting at that time. The highway officials hope to have a draft of the environmental impact report ready for public feedback by January of next year.
“The team takes all the comments they’ve collected along the way, along with their own studies, into consideration before they make the final decision,” Steve Nelson, public information officer for Caltrans, said.
To submit a comment on the project, email Suzanne Melim at Suzanne.melim@dot.ca.gov.
You can’t expect many people to show up when you give them one day of notice.
I say option 2B. Rehabilitating the old bridge is only band-aiding the problem. It will still have to be fixed. Doing nothing doesn’t really work either. Hopefully we get some decent snow years before they start the project in 2019.
The project has been in planning for 3 years, you act like this is the first time anyone has heard anything and that this is the only chance to be heard. Write an email instead of a comment.
It is time to build “the often talked about tunnel from Twin Bridges to the bottom of Meyers”.
Then fix the bridge in question, so cars can still get to Sierra, etc.
Cal Trans needs to get a time and cost estimate on a tunnel and get that started in 2019. It is time for “the tunnel”.
Tunnels are the norm all over Europe. The tunnel building technology is pretty good these days.
Why can’t one way traffic use Johnson Pass Road to go around the affected section of Echo Pass. It may be too curvy for 18 wheelers but the rest of traffic could get through fine. Maybe do a little work on that road in advance of the bridge work.
Sunbeam – My sentiments exactly.
Jessie- proofread your work. ‘California Conversation Corps’???
when will the 8 or 10 hour work days be done? If at night then there should be very little problem with this, esp there is lane control.
I’ll take responsibility for the word being spelled wrong.
It’s been fixed. Thank you.
Kathryn Reed, publisher
Admin, Thanks.
As Sunbeam Kurt wrote, work needs to be done on Johnson Pass Road, but it could be used as a bypass. A lot of us used it when we worked at Sierra Ski Ranch, years ago, as a short cut.
The problem with Johnson Pass Road is:
a. It can only be used for one direction
b. It’s dangerous as it is, and putting all the traffic from 50 on that little road would make it really treacherous.
c. The people who live up there don’t want all of highway 50 driving through their front yard. That’s why last time echo summit closed, only Tahoe residents with a permit were allowed to use it.
Why don’t they use Mormon Emigrant Trail? It takes an extra 45 mins, but it’s a perfectly good road.
Les Wright: You’re right about the tunnel, but I think it would cost a fortune, and it would probably take them ten years just to get started. I also heard that there are issues with tunneling under Echo Lake.
Tunnels of this magnitude are terribly expensive. And very time consuming. The one guy who was worrying about the geology for the road would go nuts worrying about the far larger problems with tunneling that distance, with water control,required air circulation access etc.
Yeah, I know they tunneled under the English Channel, and look at how long it took and how much it cost.
The real problem is having to get input from dozens of people whose one concern is that they personally will not be inconvenienced..The entire system sucks.
We apologize on the short notice of the meeting. We’ll do a better job of getting the word out early when we come back to the community to present the draft envioronmental document.
Headline should read “Due to only one day’s notice, only a handful…”
Option 2B