Yavapai County Public Works is soliciting public feedback for the Yavapai County Traffic Study for Regionally Significant Roads. The study analyzed segments of Cornville Road, Iron Springs Road, Williamson Valley Road, and Pioneer Parkway to assist with developing a priority list of transportation improvements that improve safety, access, and mobility along these corridors. The comment period for this study will be open through January 15th, 2024. We encourage you to provide any comments you may have. Thank you for your time and participation.
Instructions for Public Comment
- Visit the Public Works webpage at https://www.yavapaiaz.gov/Resident-Services/Public-Works
- Scroll down to the “News” section of the Click on “Yavapai County Traffic Study for Regionally Significant Roads.
- Files for review are provided under “Related Information”
- Email all comments to public.works@yavapaiaz.gov. Include “Regionally Significant Roads” in subject line to help assist with capturing all submitted comments as part of the study.
- Include which road (Cornville/Pioneer Parkway/Williamson Valley/Iron Springs) your comment/comments are directed at in the subject line or body of the Any comments that cannot be associated with a roadway segment will not be addressed.
Please note, comments submitted will not be directly addressed through email response, however, Public Works may reach out for clarification or for additional information if needed to ensure comments are fully addressed. All comments will be compiled and addressed as part of the final report.
For additional information, please contact the Yavapai County Public Works Department at (928) 771- 3183.
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1 thought on “Yavapai County Traffic Study for Regionally Significant Roads”
While we feel the taxpayer always ends up paying for all government work, rebuilding roadways, round-a-bouts and new interchanges; I believe those benefitting should pay. Then, the benefactor needs to recover his cost through his buyers. The Dells interchange on 89A was paid for (21Million) by the City of Prescott . That benefited Fann Contracting who developed the Dells as I recall. That could have benefitted the home builders or home buyers but it sure didn’t benefit the average Prescott resident.
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