New overpass dedicated in Alma

A map showing the Alma overpass
A map showing the Alma overpass

ALMA -- A new bridge over the Union Pacific Railroad tracks that run through Alma was dedicated Tuesday, officially named for the late Marsha Woolly, a local educator and public servant who sparked the movement to create the span.

"Through her efforts and many others, we have this great overpass and this great avenue to get in and out of Alma," longtime Assistant School Superintendent Ronnie Newton said during a dedication ceremony at the foot of the 485-foot span.

Speaking at Tuesday's ceremony were Lt. Gov. Tim Griffin, Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, and representatives of U.S. Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton and of U.S. Reps. Steve Womack and Bruce Westerman. Several area legislators and local officials were in the audience of about 50 people.

Woolly, who died in 2012 at age 62, worked for 36 years in the Alma school system as a teacher and principal. She served more than 20 years on the Alma City Council and two terms on the Crawford County Quorum Court.

Newton and others praised Woolly for her work to ensure the safety of schoolchildren who crossed the tracks in buses daily.

Woolly's widower, School Superintendent David Woolly, said the effort to develop the overpass started about 40 years ago with an accident at a railroad crossing on Fayetteville Avenue that killed a family.

The bridge project, which included the span and relocating Arkansas 162 north to meet U.S. 64, cost $9.6 million, according to Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department District Engineer Chad Adams. Construction began on Dec. 14, 2015, led by primary contractor Forsgren Inc. of Fort Smith.

Metro on 07/12/2017

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