Closing rest areas to have wide impact

Closing rest areas to have wide impact

Alexa Welch Edlund / Times-Dispatch

Jim and Janet Jenkins, of Norfolk, and their three-year-old son Matthew, look at the Virginia tourist information at the Goochland County rest area on the way to Skyline Drive.

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FROM THE NEWSROOM
Closing of rest areas to have wide impact

THE IMPACT
Closing almost half of Virginia's interstate rest areas will have far-ranging, and some unintended, impacts:

• More than 200 private and state employees will lose their jobs when the rest areas close.

• The state's blind-vendor business program and its tourism-promotion arm will lose nearly a million dollars in revenue from vending machines at closed rest stops.

• Police warn about more, and more dangerous, accidents from people stopping to sleep or relieve themselves alongside the interstate.

• Nearby gas stations, convenience stores and restaurants, though they expect their business will grow, are concerned about a flood of travelers and truckers wanting to use their facilities and parking spaces.

• Parents worry about finding places for their children to potty, and truckers wonder about where they'll be able to find parking to get legally required rest.

• The hospitality industry frets over the impression that closed rest stops could make on tourists about Virginia as a travel destination.

FROM THE EDITORIAL PAGES
No Rest

Sebastion nosed the water bucket as Hillary Edwards-Burdett leaned into the trailer to water the stallion at the soon-to-be-closed Ladysmith rest area on Interstate 95.

"That'd mess us up big time," the horse trainer from Marietta, S.C., said about the coming closures.

"We stop for the horses, to give them water. Every two to four hours, we're pulling off the highway.

"This is easy -- just pull in," Edwards-Burdett said, standing next to her truck and horse trailer rig. "The parking lots are designed for us."

But to save recession-squeezed dollars, the Virginia Department of Transportation will close 18 interstate-highway rest areas July 21 and the Interstate 66 West Welcome Center at Manassas on Sept. 16. The department says the closures will save $8.6 million this year.

But the closings will also touch other people, businesses, government agencies, even animals such as Sebastion.

Shutting almost half of Virginia's interstate rest areas has become the tangible, if unwelcome, poster child for the state's highway-finance woes.

The rest-area cutbacks are linked to a $2.6 billion reduction in transportation funding. But an estimated 44 million travelers a year use the state's 42 rest stops, and the closures have drawn viral public criticism.

"When you're on the highway, you depend on those rest stops," said Margaret Storti of Henrico County. "To close the public toilets seems like a really petty thing to do."

Safety

Though toilets are the most obvious service that the 24-hour-a-day rest areas provide the motoring public, they have always been linked to highway safety. VDOT's official name for the stops is "safety rest area."

Rest areas reduce dangerous drowsy and distracted driving, officials said, while giving travelers a secure alternative to hazardous parking along the roadside.

"Highways are not designed for cars to be stopped on the shoulders," said state police Capt. Steve Chumley in Richmond. "If a car runs into another car that's parked, we usually have a serious injury or fatality."

Julius Shaw, a truck driver from Newport News, was using the shady Goochland County rest area on Interstate 64 last week. Without a public rest area available, "we have to find places to stop that are dangerous for us and the public," the retired firefighter said.

Federal studies say truck-driver fatigue could be a factor in up to 40 percent of truck crashes and play a role in almost a third of fatal crashes involving truckers.

VDOT says it will create 225 more parking spaces for trucks at the rest areas remaining open. Truckers will have to travel farther to find them. However, highway-safety studies show that night-time truck crashes increase when the distance between rest areas increases.

Jobs

"A lot of good people are going to lose their jobs," said Buck Godwin, director of operations for DTH Contract Services Inc.

DTH handles the day-to-day maintenance at 32 Virginia interstate rest stops for the state Transportation Department, he said, and 15 of them are closing.

When the areas close, 209 contract workers will be laid off, VDOT's Britt Drewes said.

"I've got young kids to take care of," said Pam Jones, one of 23 attendants at the Goochland rest areas. "I've got to find something to do."

According to Tamra Talmadge-Anderson with the Virginia Tourism Corp., the state's tourist-promotion agency, another three welcome-center employees will be out of a job.

Revenue

Even while trying to save money, the state will also lose about $800,000 in revenue from vending machines at closed rest areas.

That money is split between the state's programs for the blind and for tourist promotion.

We estimate closing the rest areas will reduce the revenue as much as 40 percent," said Ray E. Hopkins, commissioner of Virginia's Department for the Blind and Vision Impaired.

The state Transportation Department gets about $1 million from the vending machines. It too anticipates losing 40 percent of that amount.

The Virginia Hospitality and Travel Association, which represents restaurants, hotels and tourist venues, manages the tourist-attraction brochure program at the rest areas.

"We make some income off that," the association's Megan Svajda said, though she would not say how much. Now, "we will lose some money."

A couple of hundred companies participate in the brochure program, Svajda said: "They tend to be the smaller ones. . . . For some attractions, the only place to advertise is the rest areas."

Travelers

With their two young children -- ages 5 and 2 -- Ron and Monica Ames were heading home to Erie, Pa., last week, making the 12-hour trek from visiting relatives in North Carolina.

They halted at the Ladysmith rest area. "My girls can't hold it that well," Monica Ames said. How important are the rest areas to her: "Very, very."

Storti's family takes all their trips by car. Storti said they depend on interstate rest stops, which allow them to get back on the highway quickly after they pick up maps or brochures, stretch, picnic or rest "without feeling that we are loitering."

"We were shocked to realize that Virginia is closing nearly half our public rest areas in less than two weeks," the music teacher said. "Virginia's centuries-old reputation of hospitality is in jeopardy over something as basic as public toilets for travelers."

Pets

Lack of rest areas will make auto travel with pets more difficult, pet owners and advocates said.

"Pets are no different than people," said Robin Starr, CEO of the Richmond Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. "They need to be able to take breaks to relieve themselves on long trips."

The designated pet rest areas at the Ladysmith and Goochland rest stops were doing thriving businesses last week.

"We have to stop every two or three hours," said Sandra Jacobs, a Canadian traveler using the Ladysmith rest area so her two dogs, Topaz and Ruby, could potty.

Congestion

Shuttered rest stops will drive travelers and truckers off the interstate to commercial establishments, officials and industry figures say. While some businesses could profit from that, the displacements could come with a price.

For instance, Interstate 81 runs heavy with truck traffic through the historic town of New Market in the Shenandoah Valley.

"These trucks are going to have to go someplace," Town Manager Chris Boies said. "We've had large trucks actually strike buildings in our downtown trying to make turns in our streets.

"There is plenty of room for a horse and buggy," he said, "but it doesn't work so well for an 18-wheeler."

Woodfin Oil Co. has 16 Pit Stop convenience stores on interstates 64 and 95. With the state rest stops' closure, those Pit Stops will get more business, said Jack Woodfin, the company's executive vice president.

"I'd rather have the rest areas open," Woodfin said. "They're going to bury us in people."

Wendy Madison manages the Oilville Exxon station and convenience store at the Oilville exit off Interstate 64. When the Goochland rest area closes, she expects greater numbers of people will come to use her store's rest rooms.

"My concern is people traveling with children," she said. When they need the store's toilets, "we might not be open."



Contact Peter Bacqué at (804) 649-6813 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by bdb09 on July 13, 2009 at 10:36 am

Could “waste” be shorthand for “government services other people use, but not me”? Naaah…couldn’t be!

Flag Comment Posted by bdb09 on July 13, 2009 at 10:29 am

Funny, I keep hearing about “eliminating waste” but nobody tells me what “waste” is.

I guess the rest stops are waste. I don’t use them, as I don’t make many long trips. why should the SCARY GOVERNMENT STEAL MY MONEY TO PAY FOR THEM!!?!? THIS IS COMMUNISM!

/snark

Flag Comment Posted by qhgirl on July 13, 2009 at 10:27 am

You know.. Squier13 makes a good point.. a lot of us want smaller government, but have a problem when the cuts impact things we want them to provide (like free rest areas).  I just got back from a short trip to FL and we drove for about 13 hours each way and never went into any of the state rest stops.  To be honest, since they don’t offer any gas or anything meaningful in the way of food..they aren’t particularly convenient.  Some of the stops were better than others.. had one sortof scary bathroom (always go for the places w/the bathroom doors inside the store..lol)., but we survived the trip.. This is probably something that the private sector can and does provide as a service more efficiently than the govt does.  The only advantage the state stops have is that they are right “ON” the higway.. making them potentially quicker stops.

I do also agree with some of the other posters that point out that there probably is money available to run these stops if we would only eliminate waste.. That’s sort of a hard thing because the govt isn’t run by a company interested in making a profit.. the workers really don’t have that much incentive to do their job “faster” or more “efficiently”.. they prefer to do it the easiest way.. often that is more wasteful.. Just look at the headlines regarding the City and it’s appropriation problems.. Govt just isn’t very good at running lean.  That is why they should probably be limited in their control.

So.. while I think the idea of rest areas is nice.. I for one CAN do without them.. if govt would attack it’s other programs with just as sharp of a knife I would applaud.. I just get a feeling this is done as a way to bend our arms into accepting new taxes.

Flag Comment Posted by Disgusted on July 13, 2009 at 10:22 am

Paving roads that don’t need it, like Gayton in Henrico. What happened to all the sales tax revenue from former Gov. Warners sales tax increase. Is it going to social programs for those who do not work and will not work.Maybe the truckers should boycot Virginia if Kaine does close the rest areas. As for Kaine he should get his nose out of Obamas but and take care of his state. Do the job and no new taxes.
Yes, I am disgusted…....

Flag Comment Posted by Richmond 98 on July 13, 2009 at 10:16 am

I wonder why they have to be closed so soon.  VDOT can’t wait until after labor day?

Flag Comment Posted by Reverend on July 13, 2009 at 10:16 am

As long as their is a buncha trees, and bushes along the highway, and I have access to Purell Hand Sanitizer?

I have a “rest area”.

Flag Comment Posted by GodFather on July 13, 2009 at 10:01 am

“Posted by ( squier13 ) on July 13, 2009 at 10:31 am

We could keep the rest areas open with a hike in the gas tax. But of course the Glen Beck set would through a fit about it.“

They could also keep them open by cuttine elsewhere (someone already mentioned the political appointees).  Not raising taxes does not equal cutting services (it can, but is not a maxim).  Eliminating waste, reducing programs in other areas are also alternatives.  But for democrats, they would rather cut services to those who pay for them, than to those who dont.

Flag Comment Posted by GodFather on July 13, 2009 at 9:56 am

“ummm… I think the article says the VDOT is closing the rest stops - not democrats, and not Kaine. “

Polidork - like it or not, Kaine is chief executive (which means he approves or disapproves of all executive decisions - this is one).  And he is a democrat.  The Buck stops there, not on the litter gitter at the rest stop.

Flag Comment Posted by squier13 on July 13, 2009 at 9:31 am

This is the fault of those teabaggers. They teabagged tax and spend policy and now they’re getting what they wanted, less government.

We could keep the rest areas open with a hike in the gas tax. But of course the Glen Beck set would through a fit about it.

Flag Comment Posted by bdb09 on July 13, 2009 at 8:44 am

“Neither have been able to solve it because their only solution is typical Democrat, tax tax tax until no one has any more money then tax tax tax some more. No other reason need be given.

Kaine is cutting services instead of raising taxes. Conservatives should be thrilled!

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