FY 2011 Appropriations Requests F-M

HOMELAND SECURITY

National Emergency Response and Rescue Training Center (NERRTC)/National Domestic Preparedness Consortium; College Station, Texas; ($35,000,000)

Requested by the Texas Engineering Extension Service

  • NERRTC, one of the four members of the National Domestic Preparedness Consortium, provides federally approved emergency responder training. Federal funding is used to pay for courses as directed by the Department of Homeland Security. NERRTC integrates the Texas Engineering Extension Service’s world-class training facilities with experienced, professional instructors and trainers to provide the nation’s emergency responders with a “one-stop” shop for training, technical assistance and exercises. NERRTC works with over 40,000 emergency responders annually and delivers training and services in all 50 states, five U.S. territories, and the District of Columbia.  Since its inception, NERRTC has delivered over 1,700 courses and exercises to 115,000 responders from over 5,000 jurisdictions.

Patient Emergency Relocation System; Houston, Texas; ($750,000)

Requested by Texas Medical Center

  • This system will facilitate patient transfers, including moving patients during emergency conditions, such as natural disasters and acts of terrorism. Funding will be used to construct an elevated patient emergency relocation network to support the expansion of the patient and pedestrian transportation system at Texas Medical Center.

LABOR, HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, AND EDUCATION

Academic Success Center; Houston, Texas; Houston, Texas; ($250,000)

Requested by Houston Baptist University

  • The Academic Success Center at Houston Baptist University (HBU) offers free peer-based academic mentorship, and provides students with information about general study skills, as well as subject-specific supplemental instruction in writing, English language and math. The Academic Success Center has a proven track record of helping students achieve their academic goals. Funds will be used to support the center and allow for the purchase of equipment for a computer lab and software for tracking student achievement.

Breast Cancer Center Expansion and Renovation; Arlington, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital Southwest Fort Worth

  • Texas Health Southwest is the only breast cancer center in rapidly growing southwest Tarrant County.  The Breast Cancer Center serves approximately 60-70 patients per day, 16,000 women annually, but lacks the room to grow to meet a rapidly growing demand.  This project will help expand the Breast Cancer Center and add needed treatment facilities. 

CHRISTUS Jasper Memorial Hospital Emergency Department; Jasper, Texas; ($300,000)
Requested by CHRISTUS Jasper Memorial Hospital

  • Built in 1968, CHRISTUS Jasper Memorial Hospital (CJMH) serves approximately half a million Texans in the southeast region of the state.  It is the only Level IV trauma center between Beaumont and Lufkin and is the only birth center within 60 miles.  Due to its aging infrastructure, the CJMH Emergency Room has significant code compliance, electrical, mechanical and plumbing service problems.  This project would renovate and expand CHRISTUS Japer Memorial Hospital’s (CJMH) Emergency Department in order for it to meet safety and care standards and to continue providing critical access to care in the southeast Texas region.   

Comprehensive Children’s Cancer Care; McAllen, Texas; ($750,000)
Requested by Texas Children’s Hospital

  • The Vannie E. Cook Jr. Children’s Cancer and Hematology Clinic, located in McAllen, Texas, is the region’s first community-based, state-of-the-art facility dedicated to providing comprehensive care to local children with cancer and blood diseases.  This project will help fund life-saving care, including chemotherapy, to an underserved, low-income patient population.  Nearly 5,000 patients have received treatment since the Clinic opened, and over the next year, this project will help the Clinic serve the expected 15 percent growth in oncology patients, regardless of their ability to pay. 

Diabetes Health and Wellness Institute; Dallas, Texas ($500,000)
Requested by Baylor Health Care System and the City of Dallas

  • Texas leads the nation with the prevalence of diabetes.  The Diabetes Health and Wellness Institute at the Juanita J. Craft Recreation Center is a public/private partnership between the City of Dallas and the Baylor Health Care System using a one-of-a-kind chronic care model to promote positive lifestyle changes.  Funding will help community-based diabetes care and management for the high-risk Hispanic and African American communities of south Dallas.

Extended Studies Initiative; Burleson, Texas; ($400,000)
Requested by Texas Wesleyan University

  • The Extended Studies Initiative will build on a partnership between the city of Burleson, Texas Wesleyan University (TWU) and Hill College to provide higher education opportunities to residents of Burleson, Texas.  Funds will be used to provide distance- and online-education for high school graduates and adult students.  The program will also serve as a model for future collaborations between public and private institutions of higher education in extending opportunities for postsecondary education to residents in communities that lack access to institutions of higher education. The city of Burleson facilitates access to this TWU-Hill College program through scholarships awarded by the Burleson Opportunity Fund.

High Field Magnetic Resonance Imaging Equipment; Houston, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by the University of Texas Health Science Center Houston

  • Currently, southeast Texas lacks the latest in medical imaging technology, a 7 Tesla MRI.  These funds will help purchase a 7 Tesla MRI, which will equip a diverse group of academic medical centers in providing higher quality treatment.  This technology will promote research in Multiple Sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, stroke, cardiovascular diseases, neurodeveleopmental disorders and learning disabilities in children, psychiatric disorders, including drug abuse, nanomedicine, and mild traumatic brain injury. 

Keeping America Competitive: Consortium for STEM; Tyler, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by The University of Texas at Tyler

  • The "Keeping America Competitive: Consortium for STEM Preparation for Engineering" project at the University of Texas-Tyler focuses on reforming science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education to keep Texas competitive in producing scientists and engineers. Funds will be used to prepare educators to teach advanced STEM (AP) coursework in secondary schools and for curriculum development and evaluation.

Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Expansion; Dallas, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by Children’s Medical Center Dallas

  • Children’s Medical Center Dallas provides high-quality, specialized care to children from across the north central Texas region as well as from referring areas across Texas and its contiguous states.   Children’s 19-bed Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) currently serves critically ill newborns, but the current number of beds is inadequate to meet the increased patient demand.  This project will help fund life-saving medical equipment and supplies to continue the critical expansion of the Children’s NICU. 

Nursing Education Initiative; San Antonio, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by Our Lady of the Lake University

  • There is a Texas-wide shortage of nurses and nurse educators, professionals who are critical to the health care delivery system.  This project will help Our Lady of the Lake University establish nursing education programs for the San Antonio area, including a baccalaureate nursing program (RN-BSN) and a Master’s degree (RN-MSN) program.  Funding will be used for developing curriculum and equipping the campus for specialized nursing training. 

Primary Care Site Enhancements; Atlanta, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by Atlanta Memorial Hospital

  • Atlanta Memorial, serving northeast Texas, is one of the primary-care providers to the community’s 40,000 residents and contributes approximately $30 million to the local economy.  The 40-year old hospital’s outdated care delivery sites and nurse stations need modernizing in order to meet current care delivery standards.  These funds will help finish Atlanta Memorial patient room renovations, install new communication systems, and bring the 40-year old facility up to code.  This project will increase access to primary care services in the northeast Texas region.

Technology Program Expansion; Marshall, Texas; ($600,000)
Requested by Texas State Technical College (TSTC) Marshall

  • The City of Marshall and Texas State Technical College (TSTC) Marshall will use the funds to purchase equipment needed to expand capacity in high-demand programs at Texas State Technical College Marshall, including the Industrial Maintenance Technology, the Diesel Equipment Technology, the Lineman and the Welding programs.  These programs provide adult students with critical job training in high-demand career fields.  Funding would help TSTC reduce the waiting lists for admission and increase the available pool of skilled labor in these high-need areas.

Texas Mobile Labs: STEM in Motion; East Texas; ($2,000,000)
Requested by The University of Texas at Tyler, Texas A&M University-Commerce, Texas A&M University-Texarkana, Texas College, Jarvis Christian College

  • Students in rural schools often lack access to science laboratories and equipment.  In addition, rural schools are challenged to recruit and retain qualified science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) teachers.  For this reason, five institutions of higher education in East Texas (UT Tyler, TAMU-Commerce, and TAMU-Texarkana and Texas College and Jarvis Christian College) will work in a consortium to provide five Mobile STEM Labs to serve close to 40 counties and over 100 school districts in East Texas.  These funds will help teachers prepare students for college by providing access to STEM equipment, engineering equipment, and labs.

Thriving Minds After-School; Dallas, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by Big Thought

  • An important component of improving student achievement is providing students with access to quality afterschool programs.  This funding would support the expansion of the Thriving Minds Afterschool (TMAS) program to 190 campuses in the Dallas metropolitan area.  The TMAS program links afterschool learning with in-school curriculum for elementary and middle school students.  The program is focused on ensuring students remain in school and increase academic achievement.

Training for Chronically Homeless Veterans; San Antonio, Texas; ($250,000)
Requested by Haven for Hope of Bexar County

  • According to the Veterans Administration, one-third of adult homeless men and nearly one-quarter of all homeless adults have served in the military.  Haven for Hope will use the requested funds to provide specialized counseling and transition management to chronically homeless veterans in order to promote self-sufficiency. Haven for Hope is a direct service provider for the homeless and provides job training geared to the needs of the homeless in the central, south central and south eastern regions of Texas.

Wind Turbine Technician Training; San Antonio, Texas ($500,000)
Requested by St. Philips College

  • Texas is currently a national leader in wind energy generation. The funds will help St. Philips College expand its Power Generation and Alternative Energy Program to provide additional training for technicians to repair wind turbines to respond to growing demand.  St. Philip’s College is a minority serving institution and the only college in the country to be designated as both a Historically Black College and a Hispanic Serving Institution.

FINANCIAL SERVICES

Workforce Development Training Project; Pasadena, Texas; ($537,000)
Requested by San Jacinto College

  • This funding will allow San Jacinto College to expand workforce development programs to train workers to become welders, pipefitters and nondestructive testing personnel for the domestic energy industry. The project will also enable San Jacinto College instructors to move from a board-drafting lab to a computer-aided drafting lab, and will involve training in basic math skills so that individuals may enter or reenter the workforce with marketable skills.

Coastal Blend Business Continuity Planning Initiative; Corpus Christi, Texas; ($100,000)
Requested by Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi

  • This funding will allow Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi to assist 300 regional businesses with the development of business continuity plans.  Through the initiative, the university will design a training process, certify instructors, provide focused regional education, and supervised, trained university students will assist businesses in preparation of their plans. 

INTERIOR

Arsenic Water Treatment; Midland, Texas; ($750,000)
Requested by the City of Midland

  • This project will provide for the construction of a water treatment facility that will reduce the levels of arsenic and fluoride that occur naturally in Midland’s groundwater supplies.  Additionally, this project will enable Midland to use more groundwater from the Paul Davis aquifer, thereby conserving more surface water resources from local reservoirs and benefitting surrounding communities.

Beaumont Sewer Line Rehabilitation; Beaumont, Texas; $1,000,000
Requested by the City of Beaumont

  • Funding will be used to rehabilitate the City of Beaumont’s aging sewer system, which is estimated have 750 miles––or sixty percent––of lines in need of repair.  The system’s degradation is a potential public health hazard, and the City has committed to over $2 million annually to repair sewer lines.

Fort Bend County Water Treatment Grants; Houston, Texas; Technical Corrections
Requested by the Brazos River Authority (BRA)

  • The Brazos River Authority (BRA) is requesting two technical corrections be included in the 2011 Interior and Environment Appropriations Bill to change the recipient of two previously awarded Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) grants from the Brazos River Authority to the Cities of Richmond and Rosenberg (Cities).  FY04 EPA Grant - $482,100;  FY05 EPA Grant - $96,200

Lake #7 Project; Lubbock, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by the City of Lubbock

  • This funding will be used to support a feasibility study.  Lake #7 is a proposed reservoir to be located on the North Fork of the Brazos River about 5 miles southeast of Lubbock.  The Lake # 7 reservoir will supplement the water supply for the City of Lubbock which also supplies some of the surrounding communities with water. This structure will provide consistent management and flows by retaining and storing these developed waters.  It will benefit Lubbock as well as providing more consistent flow to area southeast of Lubbock. 

Lanana Creek Storm Mitigation; Nacogdoches, Texas; ($1,500,000)
Requested by the City of Nacogdoches

  • The funding requested will allow the City to continue its work to design and construct detention ponds to prevent flooding from Lanana Creek in Nacogdoches.  Flooding has the potential to submerge all bridges to Stephen F. Austin State University and the neighboring  community, which would prevent access by emergency and medical services.

National Urban Air Toxics Research Center; Houston, Texas; ($1,000,000)
Requested by the Mickey Leland National Urban Air Toxics Research Center

  • Funding will support the research program at the Mickey Leland National Urban Air Toxics Research Center (NUATRC), which studies the effects of air toxics on human health.  The Center’s studies will fill critical data gaps in understanding air toxics exposures in children that attend schools near busy roadways, border area residents, port neighborhoods, and residents living near oil and gas production sites.  Each of the proposed studies will provide critical information for these underserved communities, and will better inform public health decisions affecting these communities. 

Septic Tank Elimination Program (STEP); Keller, Texas; ($500,000)
Requested by the City of Keller

  • The project will provide for the construction of sewer mains and subdivision sewers to collect sewage from residential areas in the City of Keller.  The use of septic tanks in unsuitable soil types has caused backup and overflows resulting in substantial bacteria and nitrate levels, which can contaminate the surface and ground waters both in Keller and in surrounding cities.  Funding for the STEP will be used to convert the existing system to one that safeguards domestic water wells from the threat of contamination.

South Texas Water Treatment Plant; Laredo, Texas; ($1,000,000)
Requested by the City of Laredo

  • In order to meet the water availability and quality requirements of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality the City of Laredo is requesting funding for the construction of a 20 million gallon per day (MGD) Water Treatment Plant (WTP).  The City of Laredo is growing at a very rapid pace and the existing Jefferson WTP is nearing capacity.  The new plant will be located upriver of the City on the Rio Grande and ensure delivery of water to areas in the northern and eastern parts of Laredo. 

Thompsons Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant; Bryan, Texas; ($1,000,000)
Requested by the City of Bryan

  • Funding will be used for the construction of a new 2.0 million gallons-per-day (MGD) wastewater treatment plant facility, which will increase capacity and consolidate up to four existing wastewater treatment facilities in the Bryan-College Station area.  This facility will also provide the resources necessary for future biomedical research facilities to be built in conjunction with the Texas A&M Health Science Center.

Waco Mammoth Site; Waco, Texas;  Report Language
Requested by the City of Waco

  • The Waco Mammoth site contains the world’s largest known concentration of prehistoric woolly mammoths that died of a single cause.  Legislative efforts to make the site a permanent unit of the National Park System (NPS) are ongoing.  The NPS will then be responsible for ensuring the site’s protected status, and will oversee its use for visitor tourism and scientific study.  The language will direct the NPS to start formulating plans for the site.

Wastewater Treatment Plant Expansion; Edinburg, Texas ($1,000,000)
Requested by the City of Edinburg

  • Funding will be used for the expansion of Edinburg’s wastewater treatment plant from 6.7 million gallons-per-day (MGD) to 12.3 MGD.   The Texas Commission for Environmental Quality has issued a notice of non-compliance for inadequate flow and plant capacity, and will assess fines unless the existing plant is expanded to meet state and federal standards.

Water System Storage Improvements; Kennedale, Texas; ($745,000)
Requested by the City of Kennedale

  • Funding will provide for the construction of a ground storage tank and a high service pump station, which will enable the City to meet water consumption demands as well as new groundwater disinfection rules.  Kennedale does not currently meet the Texas Commission for Environmental Quality’s required water system capabilities and is currently operating under a grandfather waiver. 

Water and Sanitary Sewer Lines; Helotes, Texas; ($1,000,000)
Requested by the City of Helotes

  • Funding will be used to install water and sanitary sewer lines in Helotes.  This will provide water resources to an area without water and sewer lines, and will also protect underground drinking water from contaminants.

MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Naval Air Station Kingsville: Aircraft Fire and Rescue Station, Orange Grove; Kingsville, Texas; ($4,993,000)

  • This funding will provide for the construction of a dedicated facility for aircraft fire and rescue operations, supporting and enabling fire and rescue personnel to provide necessary and efficient responses in emergency situations.  Fire and rescue operations at Naval Air Station Kingsville’s Naval Auxiliary Landing Field Orange Grove are currently housed in a shared facility, which is overcrowded and inadequate to accommodate the necessary expansion of aircraft fire and rescue operations. 

Fort Bliss: Chapel Center; El Paso, Texas; ($15,500,000)

  • At this time, Fort Bliss lacks sufficient chapel facilities to meet the needs of its increasing population of soldiers and their families.  Fort Bliss is experiencing a huge growth, from a 2008 baseline of approximately 16,900 soldiers to roughly 33,422 soldiers by Fiscal Year 2012.  These soldiers will be accompanied by an estimated 47,806 family members, effectively making it the Army’s third largest post.  This funding will provide for the construction of a new chapel center in the East Bliss area.

Randolph Air Force Base: Fire Crash Rescue Station; San Antonio, Texas; ($12,500,000)

  • This project will provide a modern facility that safely supports and enables fire and emergency services personnel to provide appropriate and timely responses in emergency situations, and ultimately save lives.  The existing facility was constructed in 1966 and does not meet National Fire Protection Association standards and guidelines, as specified by the Air Force Fire Station Facilities Design Guide.  It is also 11,000 square feet short of the required space to support fire and emergency operations on base.

Fort Sam Houston: MEDLOG Company Motorpool; San Antonio, Texas; ($10,600,000)

  • This project will construct a standard design tactical vehicle maintenance facility and company operations facility, which is necessary to support the administrative and maintenance requirement for a unit stationed at Fort Sam Houston.  The existing facility lacks sufficient space for the consolidation of all organizational requirements, is inadequate to meet the needs of a modern equipped unit, and presents safety hazards and accident potential.  Without this new facility, equipment maintenance would continue to degrade and the operational posture of the unit would be negatively impacted.

Fort Hood: Modified Record Fire Range; Killeen, Texas; ($3,500,000)

  • This project will provide for the construction of a standard design Modified Record Fire Range, fulfilling a requirement for a permanent facility to support current programs to train and test individual Soldiers on the skills necessary to identify, engage, and defeat stationary infantry targets with rifles, including the M16 and M4.  Without this project, sufficient training on small arms ranges would not be available for the prescribed programs of instruction.

Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base: Security Forces Facility; Houston, Texas; ($5,800,000)

  • This project will construct a single facility to support a security forces squadron mission.  Currently, squadron operations are dispersed among three separate facilities, one of which does not meet current Air Force regulations for security.  Without this new facility, the squadron will be unable to operate as efficiently as possible, and its ability to perform both its day-to-day mission and its homeland defense mission will be negatively impacted.

TRANSPORTATION, HOUSING, AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

Andrews County Widening of SH176; Andrews, Texas; ($1,500,000)
Requested by Andrews County

  • Nuclear waste sites in the area have increased truck traffic dramatically in recent years on SH176 and several fatal accidents have occurred. These funds will be used to install passing lanes from the City of Andrews to the New Mexico state line. Passing lanes will provide a safer road for area residents and the nuclear industry.

Central City, Trinity River Vision Project; Fort Worth, Texas; ($10,000,000)
Requested by the Tarrant Regional Water District

  • These funds will help with design, engineering and construction of bridges on SH 199 and US Business 287 as part of the Trinity River Vision Project in Fort Worth, TX. The aging levee system in the Central City area is being replaced by a flood control project that consists of a bypass channel and related roads and bridges to span the channel. This project will turn the aging industrial area adjacent to downtown into a vibrant waterfront community. 

Denton Downtown Improvement Project; Denton, Texas; ($1,652,000)
Requested by the City of Denton

  • These funds will be used to upgrade streets and associated sidewalks in downtown Denton, making it safer for pedestrians.  The resulting corridor will provide a critical link between two local universities, a new commuter rail station and transit facility, and other central Denton employment and commercial centers. 

East Loop; Brownsville, Texas; ($4,000,000)
Requested by Cameron County

  • These funds will be used for the completion of environmental work, planning, design and engineering for a new four lane urban street.  It will facilitate the movement of goods and services by redirecting commercial traffic out of downtown Brownsville and providing a direct connection for commercial traffic leaving the Veteran’s International Bridge with the Port of Brownsville and U.S. 77/83.

Fredericksburg Road Bus Rapid Transit Corridor; San Antonio, Texas; ($1,000,000)
Requested by San Antonio VIA Metropolitan Transit

  • These funds will help VIA Metropolitan Transit to begin construction of a 10-mile Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) line. The project will connect San Antonio’s two major employment centers - the downtown business district and the South Texas Medical Center - to reduce congestion and delays and facilitate region-wide access to high-growth employment zones.

Houston Terminal Rail Improvements; Houston, Texas; ($2,000,000)
Requested by Gulf Coast Rail District

  • These funds will be used to undertake preliminary engineering and design, including environmental assessment, for rail improvements on the Houston Belt & Terminal and the Port Terminal Railroad Association track. Ten percent of the rail traffic in the United States is handled in Houston and these tracks have been identified as the greatest sources of delay for goods movement by rail through the Houston region. This project will save time at grade crossings, reduce locomotive emissions and improve safety.

Interstate 69 Texas; Statewide; ($1,000,000)
Requested by the Alliance for I-69 Texas

  • These funds will be used to obtain environmental clearances for the development of I-69 in Texas, in particular upgrading highways 77, 281, and 59 to interstate standards. I-69 has been recognized by Congress as a national transportation priority. It will serve as an important corridor from Laredo and the Lower Rio Grande Valley through Houston, Texarkana, and eight other states. 

Loop 82 Railroad Overpass; San Marcos, Texas; ($3,000,000)
Requested by the City of San Marcos

  • The Union Pacific Railroad bisects the City of San Marcos with an average of 47 trains per day. The existing at-grade crossing results in increased risk for automobile/railroad accidents and significant trip delays on Loop 82, the major arterial road connecting Texas State University with Interstate 35. These funds will help the City of San Marcos with the design, right-of-way acquisition and construction of a 4-lane railroad overpass and associated frontage roads to improve safety through increased mobility.

Northwest/Southeast Light Rail Transit; Dallas, Texas; ($86,250,000)
Requested by Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART)

  • These funds will help Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) with construction activities on the 28 mile Northwest/Southeast Light Rail Project, also known as the Green Line. The Green Line is expected to be completed by 2013.  DART anticipates that the Green Line will add approximately 60,000 daily riders to the system, which will have a positive impact on congestion and air quality issues currently facing the North Texas region.

RM 620 Overpass at Union Pacific Railroad; Round Rock, Texas; ($2,000,000)
Requested by the City of Round Rock

  • These funds will be used to help the City of Round Rock construct a four-lane bridge over the Union Pacific Railroad crossing near Interstate 35 and Chisholm Trail. Construction of this overpass will increase safety and mobility on RM 620, a main thoroughfare providing access to area schools, medical facilities, residential communities, and businesses.

South Center Street Bridge; Arlington, Texas; ($5,000,000)
Requested by the City of Arlington

  • These funds will help the City of Arlington construct the South Center Street Bridge over Interstate 20. Construction of this bridge will improve mobility and access to the Arlington Municipal Airport, Tarrant County College, and a business district immediately north of Interstate 20.

Tower 55 Improvement Project; Fort Worth, Texas; ($2,500,000)
Requested by the City of Fort Worth

  • Tower 55, located just south of downtown Fort Worth, Texas, is one of the most congested rail intersections in the nation with delays near the tower that often exceed 90 minutes per train. This project will complete final design engineering and environmental permitting for the construction of an at-grade improvement project including the installation of a new north/south mainline, new signaling, bridge upgrades, and improved street and pedestrian crossings.  This project would remedy delays, improving freight and passenger train mobility in the South Central United States.

US190 Widening; Killeen, Texas; ($3,700,000)
Requested by the City of Killeen

  • The project will support the widening of U.S. Highway 190 from Fort Hood to the City of Killeen.  The funds will go toward right-of-way acquisition and utility relocation. Fort Hood is home to more than 47,000 soldiers, and the area serves some 420,000 active duty soldiers, military retirees, family members, and support personnel.  The project is critical to movement/deployment of troops from Fort Hood.

West Ninth Avenue Extension and Overpass Construction; Belton, Texas; ($1,600,000)
Requested by City of Belton

  • These funds will help the City of Belton extend West Ninth Avenue and construct an overpass that will connect TX-317 with Loop 121. The project will alleviate congestion, promote public safety and facilitate economic development by opening new areas of the city and diverting thru traffic away from the downtown business district.
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