Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout07-11-22 Public Comment - J. Butynski - Opposition to the FAC projectFrom:Jake Butynski To:Agenda Subject:Opposition to the FAC project Date:Monday, July 11, 2022 10:22:57 AM CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. I appreciate your time to read this email in its entirety. Apologies for the length. It is only intended to be constructive. I am writing to voice my opposition to the city’s Fowler Ave Connection (FAC) road project. As a local resident who uses the greenspace corridor daily, I find the proposition to extend Fowler Ave from Oak Street to Babcock Street by building a paved road system through what is largely a greenspace corridor damaging, unnecessary and focused on aggressive city growth over the well-being of existing residents and environment of the area. I do not live close enough to have direct impact from the project to my neighborhood. I am a practicing engineer trained to be both as unbiased as possible and critical of tradeoffs and realize that these decisions are complex and difficult. I have lived in the area for multiple years. In my years driving, biking and walking between Huffine/ Main street, local neighborhoods and Oak street on a daily basis I have never felt the need for this connection (by car) nor observed any congestion due to the lack of it. I have, however, observed how beneficial it has been as an undisturbed walking and bike corridor for many citizens. With the Ferguson connection mere blocks west of Fowler it appears that the FAC project is aimed solely at destroying some of Bozeman's last remaining ecologically connected spaces in favor of rampant development. I have not seen sufficient evidence nor documentation to justify this connection and yet the detrimental effects, cost and opposition from Bozeman residents are strong and clear. Has a clear traffic assessment and simulation been performed for this connector and are the simulation results publicly available? There seems to be risk of the shorter, direct corridor redirecting currently dispersed traffic and opening a risk of what is called Braess's paradox, a known scenario where a change in concentration of traffic on a shorter route actually increases congestion due to typical driver behavior. I imagine the engineers involved are familiar. The Oak Street-to-Babcock Street greenspace corridor is a subsection of Bozeman’s 122-year- old (circa 1900) Section Line Ditch Corridor (SLDC), which over 20 years ago was found to be ecologically important to native Montana plants (e.g., cottonwood trees) and wildlife (e.g., migratory birds). The ecological importance of the SLDC was documented in a 2001 study titled Habitat and Wetland Assessment: Section Line Ditch Corridor, Bozeman, MT (https://weblink.bozeman.net/WebLink/DocView.aspx? id=262180&dbid=0&repo=BOZEMAN). The study was published by a Bozeman- based environmental consulting firm, with a cover letter written by a Bozeman-based ecology professor. Moreover, the study was commissioned by Bozeman residents in response to the city’s early plans to build a road through the SLDC. 20 years later residents are still opposed to this project. The city should be focused on mitigating the impact of development through traffic reduction provisions that encourage the use of public transit and working to create more, and safer, bike lanes. This is something I, as a Bozeman resident, would strongly support. If this cost could be channeled towards improving Bozeman's bicycle path network I feel we could all see the benefit in a more profound way. Please consider the impact this project will have on the well-being of Bozeman's diminishing natural environment and current and future residents. From an FAC-opposed Valley Dr. resident, Jake Butynski Happy to share my number below if there is interest of future discussion or any way I can support the decision process. I would also be happy to share any input if valuable as a engineer, product manager and urban cycling advocate with the whole of my career in the bicycle industry internationally. 480-278-0551