
WSDOT again warns it may close local access to U.S. 195 without Latah Valley improvements
Mar. 17—Long-simmering tension between the city of Spokane and the state Department of Transportation over the strained road network of the Latah Valley may be boiling over amid sharp disagreement about how to manage an upcoming 1,000-home development.
The development in question is the Victory Heights project by Redmond-based Blue Fern Management just south of Thorpe Road and west of U.S. Highway 195. That company has been in the news recently for its controversial acquisition of a property surrounded on two sides by the Victory Heights development, where it intends to eventually build another 1,000 homes in the Latah Park development.
The comparably sized Victory Heights development is significantly closer to breaking ground. There is currently a moratorium on development in the Latah/Hangman and Grandview/Thorpe neighborhoods, the second in three years, which were requested by WSDOT and put in place while the city came up with plans for fixing the area's longstanding problems. However, the Victory Heights project already was in the development pipeline when the moratorium was put in place, and not affected.
While both parties agree that many key roads and intersections would fail without expansive infrastructure improvements, they disagree on the appropriate path forward. Both sides accuse the other of misrepresenting the situation and not doing enough to prepare the Latah Valley for its explosive growth.
The state agency has appealed the city's agreement with Blue Fern and the issue will be argued before the city hearing examiner in April. The hearing examiner will also hold a hearing Wednesday on mostly technical aspects of the plat. Regardless of the examiner's conclusion, WSDOT will have the final say on what to do with the highways it manages.
Officials from WSDOT argue the city has reneged on agreements to share costs with the developer to sufficiently and safely manage traffic in the area when the Victory Heights homes begin to be built and occupied, which the agency warns could cause systemwide failure in Latah Valley. If the city moves forward without addressing these issues to the agency's satisfaction, WSDOT has said it may make good on its threat to close off local access to U.S. 195 from Thorpe Road to prevent unsafe conditions elsewhere, especially where U.S. 195 merges onto Interstate 90.
"They've completely changed course," said Ryan Overton, a spokesman for WSDOT. "We had agreements with them for mitigation. We thought we were on track."
City officials, meanwhile, argue their agreement with Blue Fern will be sufficient to prevent key roads, including Thorpe and the highways, from receiving failing grades. Where fixes to major, expensive problems have not been immediately identified in their plan, officials say it is unfair to put decades of neglect on the backs of a single development.
"We think (WSDOT is) laying at the feet of this one development the whole regional transportation issues that have been developing for decades," said Spokane Mayor Lisa Brown. "We want safety, we want infrastructure, we want the corridor to work, and we have ideas about how to get there."
The city is working on plans to spread the costs of eventual solutions more evenly across the area's development and note Victory Heights will be built in phases through 2035, giving them some breathing room for more difficult fixes.
But WSDOT believes problems have gone on long enough.
The region's issues by no means start with Victory Heights. WSDOT has been warning it may close off local access to U.S. 195 since at least 2020. The agency pointed to unmanaged growth since the 1990s, when WSDOT allowed the city to extend sewer infrastructure in the department's right of way, successfully spurring growth in the Latah Valley. The agency also has warned since at least 1995 that local infrastructure needed to be addressed to manage growth, pointing to the Thorpe Road tunnels under the BNSF railroad and Fish Lake Trail as a likely failure point.
Thirty years later, that warning could come true if something isn't done.
"The current tunnel conditions show the existing system cannot accommodate the forecasted growth from background pipeline developments, regardless of additional traffic from the Victory Heights development," wrote Kirkland-based consultant Transpo Group in a report prepared for Blue Fern.
In a Dec. 12 draft memo by Inga Note, a city senior traffic planning engineer, wrote that the tunnels would fail to meet legal standards if they weren't widened. Because the city did not have the funding available to widen the tunnels, "the development...cannot proceed forward in its current form," Note wrote.
City Planning Director Spencer Gardner noted that this draft memo was not representative of the city's final position, as new strategies and conclusions were considered in the interim. The city is, in fact, requiring the issues at the tunnels be resolved during development, as well as issues at the intersection of Thorpe and U.S. 195.
"The form of that requirement looks a little different than what WSDOT wanted, and this is also true of the Thorpe intersection at U.S. 195," Gardner said. "We modified things, because with all of the challenges with infrastructure there, and with the developer committing to a significant amount of infrastructure investment, we decided to collaborate with the developer as the development takes shape."
The city has built-in points during development where the effectiveness of those strategies will be re-evaluated and development can be paused prior to any road in the system failing, Gardner added. Further studies and conversations with stakeholders will determine what exactly should be done.
Overton stressed that the City Council already approved a Spokane Regional Transportation Council study on U.S. 195 and Interstate 90 in 2022.
"We can't continue to plan, there is nothing more to study," Overton said in an email. "It is purely time for action."
Another major point of disagreement: whether Inland Empire Way needs to be reconnected to U.S. 195 during construction of the Victory Heights project, which would relieve some of the pressure off that highway and I-90 from traffic headed to downtown Spokane. WSDOT believes it is a necessary solution and should be a condition for Victory Heights' approval; city officials argue this infrastructure improvement will be studied but cannot be put on the back of this development.
"It didn't seem fair to the project," Gardner said. "This Inland Empire Way connection is 1.5 miles away from the project, and the further you get, the harder it is to tie a specific improvement to the impact of a project."
Both sides also sent The Spokesman-Review several examples of the work their own agency had done to improve conditions in the corridor and argued that the other party needed to take more responsibility.
Editor's note: This story has been updated to accurately reflect the purpose of Wednesday's hearing examiner meeting. The hearing examiner will oversee an appeal of the development agreement, including WSDOT's concerns, in April.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
SOLVE FSHD and Modalis Announce Strategic Collaboration to Develop an Innovative CRISPR-Based Epigenome Editing Treatment for Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy
VANCOUVER, British Columbia & TOKYO & WALTHAM, Mass., June 08, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--SOLVE FSHD, a venture philanthropy organization dedicated to accelerating treatments for facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD), and Modalis Therapeutics Corporation (TSE 4883; "Modalis"), a CRISPR-based epigenome editing therapeutics company focused on rare genetic diseases, today announced a strategic collaboration to develop an innovative therapy for FSHD, a debilitating muscular disorder affecting approximately 1 million individuals worldwide. The novel therapy leverages Modalis's proprietary CRISPR-GNDM® (Guide Nucleotide-Directed Modulation) technology, which can dynamically modulate gene expression without introducing double-strand DNA breaks. SOLVE FSHD will provide strategic funding to support the development of Modalis's MDL-103 program. MDL-103 is an innovative therapeutic solution that continuously suppresses the expression of the DUX4 gene, the toxic disease-causing gene for FSHD, which becomes abnormally activated due to epigenetic changes in the D4Z4 repeat region on chromosome 4. MDL-103 is designed to have durable activity over long periods of time under the control of a strong, muscle-specific promoter, and is delivered to the muscles of patients using a muscle-tropic AAV delivery system. Modalis's CRISPR-GNDM® technology has the potential to transform the treatment of FSHD by epigenetically silencing the expression of DUX4. "SOLVE FSHD is pleased to partner with Modalis and to add them to our diverse portfolio of collaborators that are advancing potential therapies for FSHD," stated Eva Chin, Executive Director of SOLVE FSHD. "SOLVE FSHD identified Modalis as a company committed to finding a cure for this debilitating condition. We were impressed by their unique approach to targeting the epigenetic cause of FSHD, using a platform technology that has shown promise in other neuromuscular diseases. We believe that the support from SOLVE FSHD will allow Modalis to accelerate the advancement of MDL-103 into clinical trials." "We are delighted to be working in partnership with SOLVE FSHD and greatly appreciate the invaluable support for the development of MDL-103," said Haru Morita, CEO of Modalis. "This strategic collaboration is a strong validation of Modalis's CRISPR-GNDM® technology and our MDL-103 program. As a pioneer in this technology, we have demonstrated promising long-term drug efficacy in mouse models, shown durable target engagement and safety in non-human primates, and exhibited excellent biodistribution in neuromuscular disorders. We believe that MDL-103, which incorporates CRISPR-GNDM® technology with a muscle tropic AAV delivery system, has significant potential as a breakthrough treatment for FSHD." About SOLVE FSHD SOLVE FSHD is a venture philanthropic organization established to catalyze innovation and accelerate key research in finding a cure for FSHD. Established by renowned Canadian entrepreneur and philanthropist, Chip Wilson, the Wilson family has committed $100 million to kick-start funding into projects that support the organizations' mission to solve FSHD by 2027. The goal of SOLVE FSHD is to find a solution that can slow down or stop muscle degeneration, increase muscle regeneration and strength, and improve the quality of life for those living with FSHD, visit About Modalis Therapeutics Corporation Modalis was founded in 2016 and conducts research and development activities in Massachusetts, USA. Modalis is a pioneering leader in the field of epigenetic medicine. Modalis develops therapeutics for patients suffering from serious genetic disorders such as neuromuscular diseases, CNS diseases, and cardiomyopathies. Modalis's proprietary CRISPR-GNDM® technology is capable of specifically up or down modulating the expression of disease-relevant genes without introducing double-strand DNA breaks. For more information, visit View source version on Contacts SOLVE FSHDAlexandra Grant, House of Wilsonalexandrag@ Modalis Therapeutics CorporationCorporate Planning Departmentmedia@ Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Evri to hire thousands more couriers after deal with DHL
Evri is set to expand its courier network with a recruitment drive for 5,000 new couriers, as the company looks to compete in the business letter market. The Yorkshire-based parcel firm recently announced a collaboration with DHL's UK ecommerce division, creating one of the UK's largest delivery networks. The addition of these new roles will bring Evri's total number of self-employed couriers to 33,000. These positions will be available across the UK, with a focus on areas such as Plymouth, Bury, Hastings, Dover, and Scarborough. Approximately 1,000 of the new jobs will be permanent, while the remainder will be flexible roles designed to accommodate the increased demand during the summer and other peak delivery periods. Couriers who commit to working five or more days a week, including Saturday and Sunday, are also given the chance to opt in to its revamped 'Evri Plus' scheme, which includes paid holiday and automatic enrolment into a pension scheme. Evri, which was previously part of the Hermes parcel group, was bought by US private equity firm Apollo for around £2.7 billion last year. It announced plans last month to merge with rival DHL's UK ecommerce business to create a combined company set to deliver more than one billion parcels and one billion letters each year. The deal means Evri will enter the UK business letter market for the first time, bolstering its competition to Royal Mail. Evri has spent £32 million on improving its customer service offering and has seen an improvement in its ratings over recent years, but has said there is 'more to do' to improve with customers continuing to report delivery issues. Chief executive Martijn de Lange said: 'We know that service, reliability and quality are critical factors for our clients and consumers, and so by expanding our self-employed network further, we remain focused on delivering in each of those areas.' Couriers typically earn about £20.90 an hour on average, according to Evri. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Evri to hire 5,000 more couriers after agreeing DHL tie-up
Evri is planning to hire 5,000 couriers in a fresh recruitment drive as the parcel giant takes on rivals after entering the business letter market. The Yorkshire-based firm recently announced it was joining forces with DHL's UK ecommerce arm to form one of the country's biggest delivery firms. It said the new roles would bring its total self-employed courier network to 33,000, its highest number. The roles will be available throughout the UK, with a focus on regions including Plymouth, Bury, Hastings, Dover and Scarborough. About 1,000 of the new jobs will be permanent, while the rest are set to be flexible positions to cater to the typically busy summer months and other peak periods for deliveries. Couriers who commit to working five or more days a week, including Saturday and Sunday, are also given the chance to opt in to its revamped 'Evri Plus' scheme, which includes paid holiday and automatic enrolment into a pension scheme. Evri, which was previously part of the Hermes parcel group, was bought by US private equity firm Apollo for around £2.7 billion last year. It announced plans last month to merge with rival DHL's UK ecommerce business to create a combined company set to deliver more than one billion parcels and one billion letters each year. The deal means Evri will enter the UK business letter market for the first time, bolstering its competition to Royal Mail. Evri has spent £32 million on improving its customer service offering and has seen an improvement in its ratings over recent years, but has said there is 'more to do' to improve with customers continuing to report delivery issues. Chief executive Martijn de Lange said: 'We know that service, reliability and quality are critical factors for our clients and consumers, and so by expanding our self-employed network further, we remain focused on delivering in each of those areas.' Couriers typically earn about £20.90 an hour on average, according to Evri.