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News / Clark County News

Washougal pursues $50.6M federal transportation grant

City wants to build underpass at rail crossing at 32nd St.

By Doug Flanagan, Camas-Washougal Post-Record
Published: October 11, 2022, 6:03am
3 Photos
Traffic proceeds north on 32nd Street in Washougal. The city is seeking a grant for $50 million from the U.S. Department of Transportation to offset costs associated with the planned reconstruction of 32nd Street from Main Street and B Street to F Place.
Traffic proceeds north on 32nd Street in Washougal. The city is seeking a grant for $50 million from the U.S. Department of Transportation to offset costs associated with the planned reconstruction of 32nd Street from Main Street and B Street to F Place. (Doug Flanagan/Post-Record) Photo Gallery

The city of Washougal is requesting $50 million from a federal grant program to help fund its proposed 32nd Street underpass project.

The Washougal City Council approved a resolution on Sept. 26 authorizing Washougal City Manager David Scott to apply for $50.6 million from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s new Railroad Crossing Elimination Grant Program, which provides funding for highway-rail or pathway-rail grade crossing improvement projects that focus on improving the safety and mobility of people and goods.

Washougal would use the money to design and construct an underpass at the railroad crossing on 32nd Street, from Main and B streets to F Place.

Scott said the Railroad Crossing Elimination program is “geared specifically toward projects” like Washougal’s planned 32nd Street underpass.

The city recently received a $5 million grant from the Washington State Department of Transportation and $300,000 from Washington’s 2021-23 transportation budget to help fund the underpass project.

City officials have already pledged to use up to $4.82 million of local funds for the project, which will provide improved access to the Port of Camas-Washougal and the city’s town center, a grade-separated railroad crossing at 32nd Street, new connector streets and road improvements within the port’s industrial park.

“Having spent the better part of my career doing public works projects in and around, and under and over railroads, when I first learned of this project about five or six years ago, I thought, ‘Oh, that will never happen,’ because getting funding for such a project is so difficult,” Councilwoman Janice Killion said during the council’s Sept. 26 meeting. “I know we don’t have (the grant) yet, but I’m so exceptionally excited to hear about this.”

The city plans to install a roundabout at 32nd and Main streets; a signal at 32nd Street and Evergreen Way; a nonstopping right turn from northbound 32nd Street east on Evergreen Way; and a sidewalk and multi-use path.

The underpass will ensure “the free-flow of traffic off of (state Highway 14) by eliminating the delays at the rail crossing” and provide for a third BNSF Railway track, according to the city’s website, which states the project is in the “early design stages.”

“Because (this project is) one of the higher priorities that you’ve tasked us with, we are pursuing it very diligently,” Scott told council members during the meeting.

City officials have said the 32nd Street underpass project will “significantly further the health, safety, and welfare of the citizens of Washougal and the community by improving connectivity and mobility through a more accessible multimodal transportation system, and firmly commits to the expenditure of local funds necessary to complete the project.”

“I’ve heard a lot of people say that it’s insignificant, that it wouldn’t make any difference, (and ask) why would we spend that much money on an underpass,” Councilwoman Molly Coston said during the meeting. “Those are people that live on the west side of town that don’t utilize that crossing every single day multiple times like I do. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been blocked at Highway 14 getting ready to turn north at 2:30 p.m. because of a train, or 3 p.m., or 7 p.m., or 11 a.m.”

“I just see this as something that we can give to our community for the next 50 years or 60 years. As we continue to develop some of our northeast region, which has a lot of land inside the urban growth boundary,” Coston said. “I think it’s essential that we have a much better crossing than we have. I think it’s essential for economic development.”

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