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Officials from Pittsylvania County, Danville and the state
cut a red, white and blue ribbon Wednesday morning for a new industrial access
road leading to some of the region's newest and largest job
producers.
By MARK THOMAS, Star-Tribune Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 19, 2007 11:11 AM
EDT
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Sen. Charles Hawkins speaks at the ribbon cutting of Cane
Creek Parkway, the new access road into the joint county-city industrial park.
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Officials from Pittsylvania County, Danville and the state
cut a red, white and blue ribbon Wednesday morning for a new industrial access
road leading to some of the region's newest and largest job
producers.
"This is a corridor that helps us all," Chatham Sen. Charles
Hawkins said before the ribbon cutting for Cane Creek Parkway, which leads into
Cane Creek Centre, the joint county-city industrial park.
The two-mile, four-lane stretch of asphalt connects U.S. 58
East to the Ringgold East Industrial Park, going by already-operating Yorktowne
Cabinetry and Swedwood, a furniture manufacturer that will open in
January.
Dan River District Supervisor Bobby Scearce said the road
provides for an easy flow of traffic in and out of the industrial park. He said
it would take a large amount of traffic off of routes 655 and 729.
The
road opened following the ribbon-cutting ceremony. Officials celebrated
the county-city partnership required for the road.
"We're being told that nowhere in the state of Virginia has
this happened," Scearce said.
Gov. Tim Kaine has previously touted the
relationship between Danville and Pittsylvania County as a model for the rest of
the state.
"Our future is brighter due to this type of cooperation,"
Hawkins said.
Danville Mayor Wayne Williams and Hawkins said the access
road was a result of planning.
"If you want economic growth, you have to
plan for it, not be overwhelmed by it," Hawkins said.
The project, which
also included water and sewer lines, cost $5.2 million, said County
Administrator Dan Sleeper.
Money came from the Virginia Department of
Transportation, Virginia Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization
Commission, and city and county industrial bonds.
It was one of several
infrastructure projects that had to be done quickly to meet Swedwood's needs.
Sleeper said the county and city have actually been running ahead of
schedule.
An access road to Swedwood should be finished in the next few
weeks; a rail spur is already completed.
Swedwood, the manufacturing
subsidiary of IKEA, will employ more than 700, while Yorktowne will have more
than 500 jobs. Matrix Technologies, which will locate in the Ringgold East
Industrial Park shell building, is expected to employ 500.
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