Residents call for safety on Nyes Place
Mike Swanson
A cement truck carrying nearly a full load lost control and hit four
houses on Nyes Place on Nov. 14, prompting several residents of the
neighborhood to ask the City Council on Tuesday to prevent its
happening again.
The truck, driven by 30-year-old Daniel Escamilla of Tustin and
carrying eight yards of wet cement, hit 370 Nyes Place at 4:19 p.m.
after losing control coming down the hill, then fell on its side and
hit three more houses, Officer Tony White said.
“The driver had come down the road about two or three months back,
but his truck was empty, and he didn’t properly account for how much
weight he was carrying this time,” White said. “It’s a weird street
to negotiate even in a regular automobile.”
Charles Michael Murray, who lives at 370 Nyes Place, called the
street a war zone considering its grade and speed limit, especially
when a truck weighing 40 tons is involved.
He said his family has asked the City Council and the Parking,
Traffic and Circulation Committee to do something on several
occasions to prevent accidents he thinks are sure to happen given the
street’s current condition.
“Our homes have ended up being the escape ramp,” Murray said.
“It’s just too steep. It was wrongly designed.”
Murray also asked that the city impose a six-ton limit for
vehicles on Nyes Place, which he said he’s asked for before with no
success.
“This situation is just beyond belief,” Murray said. “I can’t
believe we’re here again.”
Another truck lost control coming down Nyes Place on Wednesday
carrying a full load of rocks, Sgt. Jason Kravetz said. The driver,
28-year-old Christopher Lanning of Fontana, was able to drive the
truck into the hillside before it reached any houses.
Both trucks were being used on a street resurfacing project in
Arch Beach Heights, which will continue through December.
Lanning and a passenger were taken to Mission Hospital with minor
injuries, but no residents were hurt. Some trees were damaged,
Kravetz said, and Nyes Place was closed for about an hour.
Wet cement spilled all over the street Nov. 14 and the truck hit a
gas line at 364 Nyes Place, causing a leak, White said. The street
was closed until about 9 p.m. before it could be cleaned and the
truck removed. Escamilla was taken to Mission Hospital with a cut on
his head, an injured arm and lower back pain, White said. No
residents were injured.
Andrew Hollinshead said he and his son were in their home at 255
Nyes Place when the accident occurred, just as they were four years
ago when a similar accident happened. His house wasn’t one of the
four that was damaged.
“Sooner or later, there are going to be people missing, and it’s
going to be because of the city’s lack of diligence in solving the
problem,” Hollinshead said.
Councilman Wayne Baglin said the city needed to address interim
and long-term solutions to a problem he said was condemning the
neighborhood’s houses.
“This issue does not belong at [the Parking, Traffic and
Circulation Committee] any longer,” Baglin said. “It belongs with
City Council.”
Escamilla received a speeding ticket for traveling at an unsafe
speed considering the conditions, White said.
“I’m sorry for your frightening experience,” Mayor Toni Iseman
told the Nyes Place residents.
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