Notice the crosswalks and other means of making pedestrian passage across this wide street easier.
That's right. There are none.
The intersection of Bank and Main also is bad for drivers, especially those northbound from the surface lot. It's been two and a half years since this was first pointed out to BOW (reprint below).
Now the situation is worsening at 4th and Main, where Hull & High Water is generating a great deal of foot traffic, both from area parking and the beautified corridor.
Jeff Speck had thoughts about this. These are 17-foot traffic lanes and 8-foot parking depths. That's a whole 50 feet from one side to another, without any effort to slow traffic or assist pedestrians.
Until city officials do something about this, anything they say about "walkability" is to be taken as an insult. After all, it's "not an option," is it?
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May 13, 2015
Board of Works approves new city slogan for new city seal: "It's not an option."
There were many curiosities at yesterday's Board of Public Works and Safety meeting, held at the usual 10:00 a.m. slot which precludes so very much in the way of attendance and public input.
We learned that some folks can temporarily close streets with little effort, while others must assemble a petition. We noticed that when it comes to communications, it doesn't. It was reported that John "Human Chainsaw" Rosenbarger will be felling 30+ trees on Thomas Street, and planting 50 more ... and so on.
However, let's focus on just one of the items.
At a previous meeting, local businesses occupying the evolving Underground Station property on the corner of Main and Bank had asked the Board of Works to refit the intersection in front of their building (Main and Bank) into a 4-way stop, and to add a handicapped parking space on Main.
It wasn't surprising to hear street department commissioner Mickey Thompson speak for the board in waving away these requests, but his justifications (and his tone) were puzzling.
As for the handicapped space, Thompson feared establishing a harmful precedent, as though to say that if one business seeks a handicapped space, all of them would. Left unsaid was whether people with handicaps would find this useful.
But isn't the real question this: Why doesn't the city, through its Board of Works, proactively address parking issues and enforce parking ordinances? Why be troubled by a solitary handicapped space when no laws presently are enforced? After all, don't just do something -- stand there.
As for the 4-way stop request, which was made owing to steadily increasing traffic probably resulting from the simple fact that finally there is commercial traffic where before there was none, Thompson could do no better than grunt: "It's not an option."
The obvious question that should have been asked and answered: "Why Not? Why isn't it an option?"
We already know that through the top-down marionette otherwise known as the Board of Works and Safety (that word again), the Democratic municipal machine is delaying all movement toward street grid reform for 18 months or more. However, as the intersection of Main and Bank attests, the grid already is unsafe, and in the regrettable vacuum created by Jeff Gahan's politically-inspired and plainly cowardly deferrals, our streets are becoming more unsafe by the day.
Jeff, Warren, Adam ... yo, guys, can we at least have a Band-Aid to staunch the bleeding?
Even a wooden clothespin in place of the necessary tourniquet might help us to stay alive and watch you ineffectually fiddle.
Following are some fair and balanced pros and cons of the 4-way stop.
The Great Stop Sign Experiment, by Sam Newberg (Streets MN)
... In the big picture my personal hope and goal is for my neighborhood (and city) to be a safer place for all ages to walk and bike. If that means cars have to drive slower or there is more congestion in places or at certain times of the day, I’m willing to accept that. If we build and manage our roads to accommodate rush-hour traffic, the livability of our city will suffer at all hours.
I have a lovely view of this intersection as I sit and sew every day. Every day my staff and I listen to horns, squealing tires, and peel outs as people avoid hitting one another. Watching accidents is also not an infrequent occurrence. One of the first things I tell people when they start working for me is that they must use the lot behind the building so that they aren't taking up customer parking along the streets. The second, and more important thing that I tell them is that when exiting the lot, they should never EVER come up Bank Street, but should loop behind the buildings and come up on Pearl Street at the light for their own safety.
ReplyDeleteThough as City Hall already has informed us, correcting the situation is "not an option."
ReplyDelete