Forwarded by Jane Clark at [log in to unmask] Des Moines Sunday Register October 3, 1999 EDDYVILLE BYPASS LOOP SNARLED UNTIL SUMMER The work has been postponed repeatedly since two naturalists found rare orchid and turtles in the road's path. By William Petroski For the third straight year, the Iowa Department of Transportation is putting construction of a highway bypass loop around Eddyville on the back burner because of environmental issues. The Eddyville project is a key link in the planned four-lane Burlington-to-Des Moines expressway. The bypass originally was scheduled for construction in 1997, but work has been postponed repeatedly since two amateur naturalists found rare orchids and turtles on a sand prairie in the road's path. DOT officials had hoped to clear all legal hurdles in time for construction to begin this fall. However, Larry Jackson, the state's chief engineer in southeast Iowa, confirmed that work will be delayed until next summer because environmental permits are pending with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. Mark Masteller, the DOT's chief landscape architect in Ames, said the project has been approved by the Federal Highway Adminstration. However, clearances are still needed from the Corps of Engineers and Iowa Department of Transportation regarding potential impacts of the entire project upon wetlands and waters. [This is probably supposed to be Iowa Department of Natural Resources. jrc] A public information meeting is expected to be held in Eddyville on those issues, probably in November. Jackson said one of the environmental issues involves the DOT's plans to obtain about 4 million cubic meters of dirt that will be used as fill to raise the level of the proposed bypass route. The dirt would be taken from two sites -- one just east of the Eddyville high school and another about two miles east of town. Another issue involves the DOT's plans to lessen the impact of the bypass project. As part of that process, the state agency is acquiring land in Monroe County that will be converted to a wetland, Masteller said. The state also plans to permanently protect some land in the Eddyville area that was previously acquired for the highway project but which has since been declared environmentally sensitive, he said. Issues regarding rare and protected species along the highway -- such as pale green orchids, Blanding's turtles and ornate box turtles -- have been addressed, Masteller said. He noted that the proposed highway route has been revised by the Iowa Transportation Commission, adding, "I think it is all free and clear." By late this fall, a major stretch of the southeast Iowa expressway -- from Des Moines to Ottumwa -- will be open to four-lane traffic, except for the Eddyville bypass loop. The remainder of the corridor -- from Ottumwa to Burlington - is to be completed by 2004. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]