The Coachella Valley Association of Governments (CVAG) has been granted $50 million for the Addressing Climate Change, Emergencies, and Sandstorms (ACCESS) Project on Indian Canyon. The grant, furnished by the California Transportation Commission (CTC), aims to alleviate frequent road closures that have long disrupted traffic on Indian Canyon Drive.
As per the ACCESS Indian Canyon Drive project factsheet, Indian Canyon Drive often experiences substantial flooding and blowsand events, leading to road closures. This route is a crucial artery for some of the most underserved residential areas in Palm Springs, Cathedral City, and Desert Hot Springs.
The same factsheet further states that the $74.9 million project will aid in managing water and sand flow in areas of concentrated flow, which should reduce the frequency of road closures. The project encompasses two all-weather bridge systems, wildlife undercrossings, two miles of sand fencing connected to Amtrak’s Palm Springs Station, a two-mile active transportation pathway, a 40-mile regional multi-modal pathway and a solar-shaded pathway capable of generating 3 megawatts of energy.
A press release from CVAG confirms that the Indian Canyon Drive project is one of two high-priority projects in the state that received unanimous approval from the CTC.
Desert Hot Springs Mayor and Chair of CVAG Scott Matas expressed his views on this development. "This is a monumental moment. These prolonged and frequent closures of Indian Canyon are not just a minor headache for one city; they put roads across the western Coachella Valley at a standstill and have devastating impacts on our ability to get people to Desert Regional Medical Center at a time when every second counts," said Matas in the press release.