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Funding a challenge for some Adams Co. projects
Funding a challenge for some Adams Co. projects

Yahoo

time20-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Funding a challenge for some Adams Co. projects

Mar. 20—RITZVILLE — The second phase of a project to upgrade Schoonover Road that Adams County officials thought had received federal funding may not be getting it after all. A rules revision that allowed four bridges over the East Low Canal to qualify for complete federal funding also may have been eliminated. Adams County Engineer Scott Yaeger said federal funding is still allocated for two bridges across the canal and the first phase of the Schoonover Road project, between Rosenoff Road and Rehn Road. Commissioner Dan Blankenship said county officials worked on securing funding for about 18 months and thought they had it. "Back to the drawing board and start over," Blankenship said. "It's a little disappointing." Yaeger said funding for the second phase of Schoonover Road, about $2 million, was on a list of projects requested by former Representative Cathy McMorris-Rodgers. "This extension project made it on the appropriations project list but all projects on that list were not funded," Yaeger wrote in response to an email from the Columbia Basin Herald. The first phase of the Schoonover Road project is scheduled to start in late June and be completed by October. The total cost is about $3.13 million. Blankenship said the request was included in appropriations packages that were awaiting a final vote by Congress, but Congressional leaders didn't vote on the bill. They opted to pass a continuing resolution instead. "Any new requests that were in those appropriations bills disappeared like they never happened," Blankenship said. That also meant the end of a request from Washington Senator Patty Murray to change the requirements for a program that would've paid for work on the four bridges, he said. Extending the bridges is the first step to widening the canal. That would allow the conversion of farms in the Odessa area to surface water for irrigation; currently, those farms use groundwater. The goal is to reduce water use from the aquifer that supplies water to the Columbia Basin, according to earlier interviews with officials from the Columbia Basin Development League. Murray had requested the change so that the four remaining bridges would qualify for a different funding source. That program would not have required any matching money from Adams County. "That all disappeared as well," Blankenship said. All the bridges that require widening are northeast of Othello, and funding was secured for two of them. Sackman Road will be the first one upgraded. Cost is about $4.8 million, and work will start after the irrigation season ends in October. Design is complete for the new bridge, which will span the canal without piers in the water. It will be supported by abutments anchored to shore instead. The abutments and the bridge deck will be precast and assembled onsite. The bridge deck is made of precast panels that will be installed separately and joined with concrete and a tie system.

Bridge and two Adams Co. roads scheduled for work in 2025
Bridge and two Adams Co. roads scheduled for work in 2025

Yahoo

time26-02-2025

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

Bridge and two Adams Co. roads scheduled for work in 2025

Feb. 26—RITZVILLE — Sections of two Adams County roads were closed on an emergency basis following wet and windy weather. Others are subject to closure as spring approaches. The section of Longmeier Road between Franz and Lee roads was closed, along with Lauer Road from Franz to Harder roads. Public Works Director Todd O'Brien told Adams County Commissioners Tuesday that some roads will not be passable while the ground is thawing but not dry. A map of road closures is available on the public works website. Bigger projects are planned once the weather warms up enough for construction. Adams County Engineer Scott Yaeger said one project started last fall and is still ongoing. Construction — or in this case, reconstruction — began in October 2024 on a section of Lind-Hatton Road. Yaeger said in an earlier interview that the section under construction is about five miles north of State Route 26 between South Damon Road and Phillips Road to the BNSF railroad crossing. The section of road under construction was closed over the winter. The work did stop over the winter; it's scheduled to start in March 2025, with the entire project taking through June 2026, Yaeger wrote in response to an email from the Columbia Basin Herald. The cost for that section of the rebuild is about $3.12 million. Major work is planned on Schoonover Road about eight miles west of Ritzville. Among other places, it links Ritzville and Odessa. The first phase is scheduled to start in late June and be completed by October. "This is a reconstruction that is widening (the road), with a new subbase and surfacing with asphalt, drainage facilities and safety rail where needed," Yaeger said. The project cost is about $3.13 million. Adams County officials will start work in late October on the bridge at Sackman Road near Othello. It's part of a much larger project to rebuild bridges in Adams County to allow widening of the East Low Canal. Yaeger said the work will start once the canal is drained for the winter and should be completed by spring 2026. Cost is about $4.8 million. The new bridge will span the canal without piers in the water, instead being supported by abutments, called girders, anchored to the shore. The abutment and the bridge deck will be precast and assembled onsite. The bridge deck is made of precast panels which will be installed separately and then joined with concrete and a tie system. Rebuilding bridges along the canal is part of the Odessa Groundwater Replacement Project, which involves Adams and Grant counties, the Columbia Basin Development League, other organizations and federal and state agencies. Sara Higgins, CBDL president, said in an earlier interview that the goal is to end the reliance on groundwater wells for irrigation in the Odessa region of the Columbia Basin Project. Irrigators in that section have been using groundwater wells since the 1960s when the development of the overall project stopped, which has put pressure on the underlying aquifer. The project involves widening two bridges in Grant County and six in Adams County. The remaining five bridges in Adams County are along the canal northwest of Othello on Providence Road, Booker Road, Herman Road, Foley Road and Cunningham Road.

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