RALEIGH (WTVD) -- For the first time in a year, they filed into the large conference room on the second floor of the Bank of America building in downtown Raleigh.
About three dozen members of a key committee on the future of 540 were there.
People from the DOT, representatives from towns along the potential paths, engineers, and spin doctors, all there for the same reason: to get a long-overdue update on the "Complete 540" project, in the works for more than 20 years.
The catalyst was a federal environmental report the state received earlier this week that spells out the potential costs of each of the 17 possible routes the new road could take.
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE PROPOSED ROUTES (.pdf)
The report doesn't make recommendations or eliminate routes. It does clear the way for the project to move forward.
First step: three public hearings:
Monday, Dec. 7, 2015
Barwell Road Elementary School
3925 Barwell Road, Raleigh
Public Meeting: 6 to 8 p.m. (no formal hearing on this date)
Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2015
Holly Springs High School Cafeteria
5329 Cass Holt Road
Public Meeting: 6 to 8 p.m. (no formal hearing on this date)
Wednesday, Dec. 9, 2015
Wake Tech Community College - Student Services Building, Room 213/214
9101 Fayetteville Road, Raleigh
Public Meeting: 4 to 6:30 p.m., Hearing: 7 p.m.
The public comment period starts later this month (November 13); all comments have to be submitted by January 8.
At the public hearings, the state will spell out the federal report and its conclusions: the impact on streams, wetlands, flood planes, farmlands, historic sites, publicly owned land, and - of course - people.
It spells out how many homes, businesses, and parcels of land would have to be bulldozed to make way for the new road and quantifies the actual costs of each route, ranging from 2.2 to 2.6 billion dollars.
Best case, the schedule for the project looks like this:
CLICK HERE TO READ THE REPORT (.pdf)
And check http://www.ncdot.gov/complete540 for project updates.