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Information on SAFETEA-LU Section 1927

14th Amendment Highway Corridor and 3rd Infantry Division Highway Corridor (a.k.a. "I-14" and "I-3")

Completion of Recent, Congressionally Designated, Mostly Rural, Interstates

Neither the 14th Amendment Highway Corridor nor the 3rd Infantry Division Highway Corridor is a federally designated future Interstate.

Notwithstanding this, some perspective on the prospects for construction of these two highways may be obtained by examining the construction history of recently designated future Interstates that are mostly rural. Each of these future interstates was designated by Congress from among the Congressional designated high priority National Highway System (NHS) corridors as identified in section 1105 (c) of the 1991 Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (a.k.a., ISTEA) as amended. The table below gives some information on this subject.

Future I-designation and (High Priority Corridor Number) per Congress Year of Designation as future Interstate Approximate mileage of corridor Mileage Designated as Interstate as of September 30, 2005 Significant Context
Future I-69 (18, 20) 1995 ~1500 0 Most expected to be on new location; mileage greater if I-69 central and I-69 east are included
Future I-73/74 (5) 1995 ~600 25 Some connections are mileage on existing I-81 and I-77; about 160 miles is for I-74 alone; the 25 miles completed includes both I-74 alone and I-73/74 joint alignment.
Future I-86 (36) 1998 ~350 190 Almost all of this is on existing NY 17 which was a 4 lane divided highway when designated as a future Interstate.
Future I-99 (9) 1998 ~200 53 Some of this is on existing US 15 and US 220 and some on new alignment.

To provide Feedback, Suggestions or Comments for this page contact Stefan Natzke at stefan.natzke@dot.gov or 202-366-5010.


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