Pine Street Coalition

Tony Redington at U.S. District Court in Burlington

A group of citizen activists is seeking an injunction to keep the City of Burlington from building the long-planned Champlain Parkway connector.The Pine Street Coalition — a grassroots group of 150 people who want a “cheaper, greener, quicker and much safer roadway” — filed a lawsuit in federal court last week that asks a judge to halt construction of the 2.8-mile road in Burlington’s South End, which has been planned since the 1960s.The suit names Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger, Vermont Agency of Transportation Secretary Joe Flynn and Federal Highway Administration executive director Thomas Everett as defendants.Coalition member Steve Goodkind, formerly Burlington’s city engineer and public works director, said the group doesn’t oppose the project — just the current version on which the city hoped to break ground by year’s end “We want a modern road, a road that does divert traffic around neighborhoods, a road that provides multimodal forms of transportation,” Goodkind said.The group’s main contention is that the project’s 2009 environmental impact statement is stale because it relies on outdated population data, traffic models and land-use patterns. Pine Street Coalition member Tony Redington said the design is a “vestige of the 1950s and '60s that doesn’t fit the needs of today.”“Both the project and the natural and human communities through which it passes have significantly changed,” the 29-page filing reads. “The pace and magnitude of those changes has increased in the last 10 years since this project last went through [National Environmental Policy Act] review.”The suit says that review doesn’t account for the South End becoming a “vibrant city hub.” The coalition criticizes the design for lacking “separate and safe” facilities for walking and biking; the design includes shared-use paths.Just last month, however, the Federal Highway Administration ruled that the decade-old environmental review was still valid. Redington said this lawsuit effectively appeals that decision, and he thinks the public, if given the opportunity, would support a redesign.“This design is hurtful to the South End,” he said. “This design needs to be stopped and a new one considered.”The suit comes just after the project reached a major milestone: The Burlington City Council approved the parkway’s design and construction budget on June 3, moving the long-delayed project one step closer to reality.As proposed, the parkway would essentially help connect Interstate 189 to downtown Burlington.The nearly $45 million project would be 95 percent federally funded and 3 percent state funded; the city’s 2 percent share, plus related expenses, would be $3.2 million, Burlington Public Works director Chapin Spencer said.The suit asks for the court to issue a judgment in the coalition’s favor, and barring that, to stop construction until the case is heard.“We want a road to go through an environmental impact statement and come out as a much better road,” Goodkind said. “It’s a project that’s needed down there; it should be a much better project, and it can be a much better project.”Spencer rebutted the characterization that the parkway design is unfriendly to pedestrians and bikes, noting that the plans call for raised intersections, crosswalks and shared-use paths that will calm traffic. He said the city anticipated this lawsuit and plans to go out to bid this summer.City attorney Eileen Blackwood declined to comment on the suit's specifics until it's officially served on City Hall.“We haven't had a chance to analyze it,” she said. “We’re still understanding and figuring out what we’re going to do.”Blackwood said the mayor stands by his statement last spring that "the time for debate, amendment and appeal has long passed." The city maintains that the 2009 environmental statement is valid, she said.