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The Post & Mail, Columbia City, IN. Tuesday, July 5, 2005 11

Historic Colorado mining towns facing modern woe: traffic

[[image - scenic photo of mountain town]]
[[photo credit]] AP photo by Ed Andrieski [[/photo credit]]

[[caption]] Traffic makes its way on Interstate 70, at Idaho Springs, Colo., Feb 11. As many as 50,000 cars a day travel on I-70 to-and-from Denver and mountain resorts like Vail and Aspen. A proposal to widen the highway through a narrow corridor that is home to Idaho Springs, Georgetown and Silver Plume has stirred up business owners and residents in these mountain communities. [[/caption]]

BY ROBERT WELLER
Associated Press

IDAHO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — From Rick Garnett's house, perched high above this once-grimy mining town, the unceasing stream of headlights heading back to Denver looks like diamonds falling down a hillside.

"The noise is so loud from the highway that when they open the windows of City Hall on hot days they cannot hear themselves talking," said Garnett, who took a visitor to his mountainside home to escape the noise below.

As many as 50,000 cars a day travel along Interstate 70 between Denver and mountain resorts like Vail and Aspen, hurrying past towns eager to cash in on the past by touting their history to tourists.

But problems along the interstate, the main portal from the Denver area into the Rockies, have grown along with Colorado's population and its trademark ski industry, valued at $4.5 billion annually.

Even without bad weather or accidents, the traffic, steep grades, tight curves — the highway's elevation rises from 5,200 feet to 11,000 — and outmoded intersections can make I-70 stop-and-go.

The Colorado Department of Transportation predicts that without additional lanes the 100-mile drive from Denver to Vail will take nearly double the time to about four hours. Everyone agrees that something must be done, and soon.

That's where the arguments begin.

Opponents say the transportation agency has already made up its mind to widen I-70 from two lanes in each direction to three through the narrow corridor that is home to Idaho Springs, Georgetown, Silver Plume and other historic former mining communities. State officials insist no decision has been made.

"The historic views from the interstate give visitors a sense of place. If they widen the highway it will block views and people will only stop if their cars break down," said Cassandra Shenk, spokeswoman for tiny Silver Plume, population 200.

"They have no vision. Their widened highway will be out of date by the time it is finished," added Idaho Springs restaurateur Chip Bair.

Like many others in the corridor between Denver and the ski resorts, Bair favors a high-speed monorail snaking its way into the mountains: "It could be a tourist attraction that would help pay for itself."

The problem with a monorail is the $6 billion to $7 billion estimated cost, according to transportation agency official Cecilia Joy. She also said no monorail has been built on such a steep grade. 

Local governments and businesses worry that years of road construction on a highway that is effectively main street for many towns would bankrupt businesses by keeping tourists away, swallowing up valuable land and harming historic mining areas.

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