N.L. awards contract to finish finally Team Gushue Highway - Action News
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N.L. awards contract to finish finally Team Gushue Highway

Shovels will soon be in the ground to begin work to finish the Team Gushue Highway almost a quarter-century after it began, according to Premier Andrew Furey.

Construction started in phases nearly 25 years ago

A drone shot of a large stretch of road. There are houses, business parks and highways in the general area.
A 3.3-kilometre stretch of the Team Gushue Highway, which will connect the highway to more parts of Mount Pearl and parts of the Southern Shore, is yet to be finished. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

Almost a quarter-century after construction began, shovels will soon be in the ground to begin work to finish the Team Gushue Highway, according to Premier Andrew Furey.

Furey and a contingent of provincial and federal government representatives announced Tuesday that a $30-million contract, tendered in July, had been awarded to Bursey Excavating and Development to oversee the last 3.3 kilometres of highway.

When completed, the highway the planning of which was mapped outin the 1970s will complete Pitts Memorial Drive in Mount Pearl with the Outer Ring Road in the north end of St. John's.

The contract is cost-shared between Newfoundland and Labrador and Ottawa, each contributing $15 million.

"It was loud and clear that this had been left for too long," Furey said.

"So it's shovels in the ground here to complete this important project. It is the full completion of the original concept."

After decades of development and delays, construction on what was then called the bifurcation highway started inphases in 2000. The road was named six years later after the curling team skipped by Brad Gushue won gold at the 2006 Olympics in Italy.

Jamie Korab, who had been a member of that team and is now a LiberalMHA in the Furey government, said the completion will be welcomed.

"The guys, they're happy it's going to be open so they can finally stop getting those social media messages to finish the highway," he said with a laugh.

The final workwill connect Topsail Road to Commonwealth Avenue, Brookfield Road and the Heavy Tree Road area of Mount Pearl, along with a roundabout connecting Pitts Memorial Drive andRobert E. Howlett Memorial Drive, which connects the city to theSouthern Shore to St. John's.

Fureysaid the road network will open up economic opportunities and convenience for getting around the northeast Avalon Peninsula while cutting down congestion on municipal roads.

Bay Bulls Mayor Keith O'Driscoll said the connection,which could cut commutes in half, will be huge for the area.

"This road now will bring you into the middle of the town within 20 minutes from Bay Bulls," O'Driscoll said. "It's going to be great to see."

A man wearing a white shirt and black and red tie stands at a microphone on a sunny blue sky day.
Transportation and Infrastructure Minister Fred Hutton says negotiations are continuing to secure all the land necessary for the highway but he doesn't expect it to hold up construction. (Patrick Butler/Radio-Canada)

Although construction is set to begin in the coming weeks, Transportation and Infrastructure Minister Fred Hutton said not all of the needed land is in government hands just yet.

While he doesn't believe it's enough to derail the project, negotiations remain ongoing with some land owners.

"Transportation and Infrastructure do that on a regular basis when big projects like this are ongoing," Hutton said."I don't think we've gone down the expropriation point at this point, but the offer would be fair market value for whatever land would have to be used."

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With files from Terry Roberts and Patrick Butler

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