Road 6 to be Extended, Further Opening Negev to Jews (INN) ISRAEL NATIONAL NEWS) By David Lev 05/31/12)
Source: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/156381#.T8eaabBo2uk
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Out of all of the dozens, perhaps hundreds, of programs and projects
to “open up” Israel´s northern and southern peripheries, encouraging
families to settle in the open spaces of the deep Negev and upper
Galilee, the one that has arguably been the most successful has been
the Cross-Israel Highway, also known as Road 6, say many economists.
While environmentalists have in the past (and continue) to object to
the road, which is six lanes in some of its segments, because it has
been built in areas that were until now considered rural, real estate
values in towns with access to the road show that demand has shot up
in many places. According to many economists, Road 6 has been the
most effective engine of peripheral growth in Israel, putting Tel
Aviv and its suburbs within commuting distance of far-flung areas
that were formerly considered too far off the beaten path for most
families to consider, due to a lack of professional, educational and
cultural opportunities.
Now, the Transport Ministry has issued a tender for the extension of
Road 6 southwards, adding some seven kilometers to the road. When
completed, the new extension will bring Road 6´s last exit to the
Lehavim junction, south of Rahat and several kilometers north of
Be´ersheva. The extension is likely to encourage more people to move
to the area north of Be´ersheva, where a string of Jewish
settlements, including towns and moshavim, “compete” with Rahat and
numerous Bedouin villages – many of them illegal – in the area.
Israeli governments have long sought ways to encourage Jews to settle
in this area, and Road 6, along with the extension of Israel Railways
to Be´ersheva, has fueled numerous housing projects in the
settlements.
With the extension of Road 6, officials hope to further lessen
commuting time to the center of the country for residents of these
towns, as well as for other towns in the “outer ring” of the
Be´ersheva metropolitan area. The extension is expected to cost NIS
300 million, and construction is expected to be completed by the end
of 2015.
Transport Minister Yisrael Katz said Thursday that he also intends to
issue tenders later this year for further extensions of Road 6,
eventually bringing the road 45 kilometers further south, to Hanegev
Junction, significantly south of Be´ersheva, and a few minutes away
from both Yeucham and Dimona. Residents and officials in both those
development towns reacted very positively to the news, which for the
first time makes both communities attractive to families whose
breadwinners work in the center of the country. An additional
benefit, Katz said, would be to ease traffic in Be´ersheva;
currently, the main highway southwards, Road 40, goes through the
center of town, and significantly slows driving times for anyone
going north or south. And, he added, it would make reaching IDF bases
in the deep south easier.
Road 6 is currently 140 kilometers long. (IsraelNationalNews © 2012
05/31/12)
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