For the past two years, the El Paso County Transportation Department has been updating its Major Transportation Corridors Plan for 2040, which is a long-range plan for transportation needs in the unincorporated area of El Paso County.County Engineer Andre Brackin updated the board of county commissioners on the planís status in April.Brackin said the 2040 MTCP is final, with one exception: deciding how to calculate transportation impact fees for developers ñ to be determined after a series of meetings this summer.ìWe did a good job with energizing the public, getting people out to town hall meetings and getting their ideas and their input into this plan,î Brackin said.The public’s highest priority is road maintenance, he said. As a result, the 2040 MTCP eliminates new lanes and projects that were on the 2030 MTCP, reducing the countyís maintenance burden and freeing up money for safety improvements such as upgrades to rural roads.Over all, Chavez said the 2040 MTCP forecasts $150 million less in road construction costs than the 2030 MTCP.The MTCP is divided into three phases: short-term, mid-term and long-range.In the Falcon, Peyton and Black Forest areas, the short-term phase, from 2011 to 2020:
- capacity improvements for Highway 24, between Garrett Road and Old Meridian Road and Constitution Avenue and Highway 94
- paving for Walker Road, Hopper Road, Log Road and Sweet Road, between Peyton Highway and Ellicott Highway
- rural road upgrades for Davis Road, Blaney Road, Falcon Highway and Judge Orr Road, between Highway 24 and Peyton Highway; Shoup Road and segments of Vollmer Road and Hodgen Road
- paving for Eastonville Road, north of Stapleton Drive; Latigo Boulevard, between Eastonville Road and Elbert Road; and Murphy Road, between Peyton Highway and Ellicott Highway
- capacity improvement for Meridian Road, between Londonderry Road and Rex Road
- construction of road segments that will eventually connect Stapleton Drive to Black Forest Road
- rural road upgrades for Burgess Road and portions of Vollmer Road, Curtis Road, Murphy Road, Garrett Road and Ellicott Highway
- capacity improvements for Highway 24, between Ellicott Highway and Calhan Highway
- capacity improvements on Highway 94, between Corral Valley Road and Slocum Road
- completion of the connection of Stapleton Drive to Black Forest Road
- realignment of Peyton Highway, where it crosses Falcon Highway
- paving for portions of Big Springs Road, Soap Weed Road, Jones Road and Ramah Highway
- rural road upgrades for Slocum Road and segments of Black Forest Road, Walker Road, Falcon Highway and Peyton Highway
- developers, estimated at $256 million
- Colorado Department of Transportation, which is responsible for $217 million; funding shortfalls might require highway improvement funds from developers
- the county, ranging from $17 million to $102 million, depending on developers