Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release:
June 14, 2005
Senators Fight to Save Pole Road
Two state senators are working together to ensure a Department
of Transportation plan to reconstruct the I-240 and I-35 interchanges
in two years doesn’t result in eliminating access to a road taken
by nearly half of Crossroads Mall’s customers. Sen. Debbe Leftwich,
D-OKC, and Sen. Jim Reynolds, R-OKC, said the proposal could take a terrible
toll on businesses and their employees.
“Last week ODOT held a public hearing, which Sen. Reynolds and I
attended. Their plan for rebuilding those interchanges near Crossroads
Mall would eliminate access to and from the mall by Pole Road. This would
be more than just an inconvenience to metro citizens who shop at Crossroads—it
could be devastating to the businesses, hotels, movie theatres and restaurants
in and near the mall,” Leftwich said.
Those attending the public hearing were told that the plan would eliminate
access to Pole Road because of a federal rule mandating a minimum distance
between entrance and exit ramps. An alternate plan was presented that
would simply move the exit to Pole Road to the east in order to meet that
requirement.
If the ODOT plan is adopted, customers on I-240 would be forced to take
the Eastern Avenue exit, which would take them approximately one mile
out of their way. The lawmakers worry the inconvenience could deter some
patrons from going to Crossroads Mall.
“This is a mall that employees well over 1,300 people during the
year and 1,800 at Christmas. They produced $10 million in sales tax revenue
last year and $826,000 in property taxes,” Reynolds said. “Making
it harder for people to access the mall will not only hurt businesses
and their employees but it could adversely affect state revenues. It’s
going to mean less money for the services that are vitally important to
our citizens, such as funding for our public schools.”
Completed in 1974, Crossroads Mall was the largest major indoor mall of
its type in Oklahoma City. The lawmakers said more than 4.2 million shoppers
visited Crossroads Mall last year and that nearly half of them used the
Pole Road exit to get there.
“The stores have already had to endure the I-35 widening project
that took nearly two decades to complete,” Reynolds said. “After
all that closing Pole Road might be more than some of those businesses
can take.”
Leftwich and Reynolds called on metro residents to write to ODOT and voice
their objections to the plan which would not only close the Pole Road
exit ramp from the interstate, but would also eliminate the 1-240 entrance
ramp on the south side of the mall.
Written comments should be sent to Mr. Joe Khatib, Environmental Coordinator,
Oklahoma Department of Transportation, 200 Northeast 21st Street, Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma, 73139. Written comments must be received no later than
June 23, 2005.
“We want people in South Oklahoma City and throughout the metro
to join us in our fight to save Pole Road. This isn’t just about
inconveniencing millions of customers. This could have a devastating financial
impact. At a time when we’re trying to boost our economy, closing
access to Pole Road would be the wrong thing to do,” Leftwich said.
For more information contact:
Senate Communications Office - (405) 521-5774
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