Go to main contentsGo to main menu
Thursday, April 23, 2026 at 11:59 PM

With Nothern Nevada expected to pay for I-80 expansion, RTC director seeks help from California

With Nothern Nevada expected to pay for I-80 expansion, RTC director seeks help from California
By Ray Hagar, Nevada Newsmakers

Expanding the clogged and sometimes dangerous stretch of Interstate-80 between Sparks and the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center is a much-needed project that local taxpayers will probably have to pay for, said Lee Gibson, executive director, RTC of Washoe County.

"We are going to have to look to ourselves to fund that and ourselves being the Northern Nevada community," he said on Nevada Newsmakers. "We will have to have a partnership with Storey County, Lyon County. We're going to have to talk to NDOT (Nevada Department of Transportation."

Gibson did not give a cost of a project but tossed out numbers of a "$30 million, $40 million, $50 million or $100 million project" during his interview with host Sam Shad.

Gibson, however, hopes to get help with any I-80 expansion from an unlikely source -- California.

California may want to join the project because it is important to the California economy that goods from the TRIC get to Northern California markets without delay or mishap. Businesses at the TRIC include Tesla, Google and Switch. It is also a logistics hub for many other manufacturers.

"To me, the real cost is going to be the opportunity cost by California for not coming to the table and helping us move our products and our good efficiently to Northern California," Gibson said, noting the North Valleys area also manufactures goods for California.

Veteran Nevadan Journalist Ray Hagar is known for fair and tough reporting and invigorating commentary.


"The goods we produce here at the TRI Center, the North Valleys that we are shipping, have value in California," Gibson said. "Yes, tourists come from California to Nevada and bring value to Nevada. But we are exporting value back to California and I think we need to leverage that because that opportunity cost could be much, much larger than just a $30 million, $40 million, $50 to a $100 million project to widen I-80 out to the TRI Center."

Marybel Batjer, the president of the California Public Utilities Commission, who was raised in Carson City and served as Gov. Kenny Guinn's chief of staff, "absolutely" would have a role to play in this, Gibson said, but did not expand.

Gibson called an expansion of I-80 "doable" and "design-able."

"When I look at the long, long term, that is something that we'll have to put on the table," he said. "We can widen I-80 to the TRI Center, to Fernley and Fallon. Engineers I have talked to believe is is something that is design-able and doable.

"But to me, if we produce goods in Northern Nevada and we are going to ship them overseas and they get stuck in traffic over on the other side, how quickly do we lose our competitive advantage, our comparable advantage in being able to sustain our manufacturing base?"

Gibson, who plans to retire soon after a 30-year career in transportation planning, added: "If I am looking to tell an emerging professional in transportation what to lose sleep over, that's the one I'm going to focus on."

Gibson and other Nevada transportation planners have met with the California federal delegation  He has not yet met with other California planners yet.

"I don't know about the state and local folks," he said. "But one of the things we did here a while back was the Assured Federal Framework and we actually met with the federal delegation on the other side of the border and I think we need to do that again and raise this issue because, the congestion, the delays, the challenges on I-80 in California will have a direct impact on them economically. It behooves both of us to come and talk about these issues."

Gibson stressed the importance of the California-Nevada cooperation over I-80 expansion.

"That is the issue of the future," he said. "That is the issue we need to deal with and this is a different animal, a different creature than just exchanging tourists back and forth.

Share
Rate

Comment

Comments

COMMENTS
Comment author: Jack & Nancy CookComment text: Wonderful man. Created a precious family with Linda. Will always respect and admire his contribution to teaching at FHS.Comment publication date: 4/18/26, 10:27 AMComment source: Howard David JacksonComment author: JeffDickersonComment text: Very well reported, even though our motion was denied.Comment publication date: 4/15/26, 11:05 AMComment source: Judge allows Fernley City Council to proceed with corrective agenda item in Lau expulsion caseComment author: Todd fossumComment text: Hi my name is todd fossum i'm clarence's stepson, I was wondering if he had any siblings. I think he said he had a sister that just survived cancer. If she can get ahold of me or any buddy, my number is 916. 3 4 3 1 1 7 7.Thank you have a blessed dayComment publication date: 1/16/26, 4:33 PMComment source: Clarence L Shields C Comment author: Carl HagenComment text: So just curious, what is the point of a franchise agreement if it is not exclusive?Comment publication date: 12/15/25, 4:18 PMComment source: Council approves non-exclusive franchise agreement for waste collection C Comment author: Christine S GleasonComment text: In the first photo, the woman in the middle, wearing the black shirt, is SaraH Jean Gleason. She is not an FHS Leadership Student but is the person who is responsible (with the help of her father) for starting the Fernley Community Thanksgiving Dinner in 2011. She attended this year's dinner while home from Arizona State University, where she is working on her PhD.Comment publication date: 12/8/25, 8:52 PMComment source: About 400 meals served at Community Thanksgiving DinnerComment author: SusanComment text: RIP Sean. Prayers to the family, sorry for your loss.Comment publication date: 9/25/25, 1:11 PMComment source: Sean Everett Turner
Community Foundation