Skip to contentU.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration
FHWA HomeFeedback
Planning FHWA > HEP > Planning > Econ Dev
 
Contents
Next >

Executive Summary

The southwestern corner of New York State has long suffered from high unemployment and low income, and a lack of good regional highway access. To address the region's economic needs and accessibility limitations, New York State authorized development of the Southern Tier Expressway, and the Appalachian Regional Commission designated it as Corridor "T" of the Appalachian Development Highway System. The route was initially served by a 2-lane road, but the western portion (185 miles) was upgraded to a four lane, limited access expressway over the 1980's and 1990's. The upgrade was completed in 1999 at which time the highway was formally designated as Interstate 86.

This study examines the nature of initial economic development impacts associated with completion of the four lane expressway and designation of the new Interstate highway. It applies a methodology developed in the Federal Highway Administration report: Using Empirical Information to Measure the Economic Impact of Highway Investments, Vol. 2: Guidelines for Data Collection and Analysis. This report is a joint effort of the Southern Tier West Regional Planning and Development Board and contractors funded by FHWA-- Economic Development Research Group, Inc. and Cambridge Systematics, Inc. This study only shows preliminary, initial impacts. It will take up to ten years of economic data to observe the extent of any net long-term increases in employment and income that are attributable to completion of this highway project.

Notwithstanding the previous sentence, key findings were that:

 
Contents
Next >

FHWA Home | HEP Home | Feedback
FHWA