It’ll be good to stop for a while
It may not seem like it, but it is one of the more difficult aspects
of city planning and leadership: deciding when it’s worth it to add
stop signs or signals.
We can’t have a stop sign or signal at every corner. It’s not a
good way to plan a city. But last week, the City Council voted in
favor of safety when it approved a temporary stop sign at Park Avenue
and Terrace Drive.
Residents near the intersection have said that the area is too
dangerous. Most agree. Even Councilman Wayne Baglin who disagreed
with placing a stop sign there said it is a dangerous intersection,
though he ultimately said a stop sign would decrease the amount of
fear in drivers and therefore the amount of precaution they take.
That may be so, but if there’s that much danger that drivers have
trained themselves to be scared to death, well, perhaps there’s a
problem.
Unfortunately, the final straw is often a tragedy. Somebody dies
or is severely injured at an unsafe intersection. Then, the community
outcry and the emotions involved lead city leaders to make the
decision to spend the money.
The city installed a stop sign at Rosa Bonheur and Cliff Drive
after Elizabeth Stock was hit and killed there in 2000.
Of course, it really isn’t that simple. Not every corner can have
a stop sign because someone may be injured there some day, but a
particularly dangerous intersection, one with our newest and often
least diligent drivers -- the high school student -- passing through
daily, seems like a likely place for trouble and a good place to
spend the money.
The City Council voted Oct. 21 to put a temporary sign at the
intersection and good for them. The sign will stay up for six months,
and the city will determine if it should stay permanently.
The council listened and decided the people who have to travel
through that intersection on a regular basis needed some protection
provided by their local government. It gives us confidence that the
final decision on whether to have the sign there permanently will be
made in the best interest of the neighborhood.
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