Traffic circles at the busiest intersections would slow down the drivers and have been shown to reduce accident rates.


From: RamDas Singh Khalsa via Neighbors_nobhill-nm
Sent: Monday, September 12, 2016 2:43 PM
To: Thomas Simic
Reply To: RamDas Singh Khalsa
Cc: bluet-78504@mypacks.net; neighbors_nobhill-nm@mailman.swcp.com
Subject: Re: [Neighbors] Lead/Coal accident statistics

I live on Carlisle between Central and Lomas.  It is a 2-way, one lane in each direction street.  It is posted 25 MPH.  There is no traffic law enforcement by the APD so my stretch of Carlisle is really more of a race track.  Almost nobody parks along this section of Carlisle out of reasonable concern for the well-being of their vehicles.  The key is not making Lead and Coal 2-way streets.  What is needed is more APD officers enforcing our traffic laws.


On Mon, Sep 12, 2016 at 2:13 PM, Thomas Simic via Neighbors_nobhill-nm <neighbors_nobhill-nm@mailman.swcp.com> wrote:
I think it would be a big mistake and put more cars on these streets since they will be traveling in both directions. Besides, what happens at Washington when the road. changes to Zuni?

Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE Smartphone

------ Original message------
From: Susan Michie via Neighbors_n...
Date: Mon, Sep 12, 2016 2:03 PM
To: Stephen Mullens;Anderson Robert;
Subject:Re: [Neighbors] Lead/Coal accident statistics

The primary problem here appears to be the double lane one-way streets that are now straight and thus, provide good opportunity for racing. What do neighbors who live on these streets think about changing both Lead and Coal into two-way streets? Which would eliminate racing and all the noise, etc. that goes with it. Just curious...S


From: Stephen Mullens via Neighbors_nobhill-nm <neighbors_nobhill-nm@mailman.swcp.com>
To: Anderson Robert <citizen@comcast.net>
Cc: bluet-78504@mypacks.net; Hill Nob <neighbors_nobhill-nm@mailman.swcp.com>
Sent: Monday, August 29, 2016 9:14 PM
Subject: Re: [Neighbors] Lead/Coal accident statistics
Good stuff. Bob. Thank you.> On Aug 29, 2016, at 12:29 PM, Anderson Robert via Neighbors_nobhill-nm <neighbors_nobhill-nm@mailman.swcp.com> wrote:>
> Thanks Dave for this useful information.  As Juan points out, the data show the accidents with severe injuries are more as perhaps the number total accidents may be less.  I say perhaps as this data is probably incomplete because some people will settled between themselves rather than report it.  Or, how do we chart like the day I was almost killed at the corner in my yard trimming weeds by a car that spun backwards out of control in a run-the N/S stop sign collision, with a car stopping inches behind me in just seconds with the read bumper on my legs.  Yes, I have a personal stake in safety on this roadway.  The latest collision here that spun out went through my yard wall headed toward the bed room where my girls sleep.  The wall is in the process of being rebuilt.  One night I had two cars nose to bumper in my yard against the both having jumped over a large set of boulders to prevent this kind of thing.
>
> After watching this section for 13 years now, before and after the rebuild of Lead/Coal, I think there are several things that could be done.
>
> Carlisle and Coal (maybe at Lead too) is a death trap.  A reasonable proposal would be that the Coal/Carlisle intersection should be a flashing red in all directions, all stop.  This would help stop the drag racing from Girard to Bryn Mawr and Carlisle by those trying to beat the lights.  The light at Bryn Mawr should be removed or a 4 way stop also.  I can see no purpose the one at Bryn Mawr serves other than to give the go start signal for drag racing from Girard to Carlisle.  I have seen APD cars cruise this section of Coal and drivers are nice then, but once they are not seen it is open season for racing and high performance driving show off driving. One way this could be tamed too would be to have and strongly enforce a "silent neighborhood" ordnance on vehicles with no mufflers or with the racing exhausts (another motorcycle just zoom by blasting away the silence in my office), I can hear it tearing out of Carlisle. 
>
> The accidents I see on this section are probably along with injuries also more in total cost vehicle damage.  My adopted mother was almost a kill turning off Lead south on Richmond.  Two cars were destroyed.  That intersection is usually blocked by both the telephone switch boxes out near the sidewalk/street to the east and on the west by residents parking large SUV on the turn-in side.  One has to come to a full stop on Lead to turn onto Richmond if there is a vehicle stopped with its nose out in the traffic lane at the north direction stop sign.  The residents on the west corner have lots of photos of cars rolled over in their yard, up against signs and the trees (which have never been replaced), etc. 
>
> Richmond going south at Coal has the almost same problem due to the poor design that has been inherited by legacy zoning that allows people to build tall walls blocking visibility to the west.  Large brush growing there also compounds the problem as drivers have to pull way out past the pedestrian walk zone to see the traffic. 
>
> No modern designer would build streets like this with the N/S flow pattern but A.R.T. is doing that and as a result is only going to make for more and worse crashes, imo with the increased traffic flow.  I even see big semi size trucks on Coal probably trying to make local deliveries on Central.  Something has to be done about the N/S and line of sight problems on this section.  I have some proposals on that problem too…
>
> Bob
> (corner of Coal and Richmond concerned homeowner)
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Aug 28, 2016, at 4:34 PM, bluet-78504--- via Neighbors_nobhill-nm <neighbors_nobhill-nm@mailman.swcp.com> wrote:
>
> Thanks Dave,
>
> The speed limit was reduced from 35 to 30 and accidents with injuries go up by double digits. It will be interesting (entertaining) to hear the speed limit reduction apologists make excuses for this. Scientific facts are much more valuable for a reasoned discussion than opinions.
>
> Juan
>
>
>>
>> Neighbors,
>>
>> After much discussion in the early part of this year about the frequency
>> of accidents along the Nob Hill Neighborhood corridor of Lead and Coal,
>> I asked our APD crime prevention representative, Laura Kuehn, for some
>> information about this.
>>
>> At our May crime prevention and safety meeting, Commander Griego, APD
>> Southeast Command, presented those statistics. I scanned them and
>> uploaded them to our web site:
>>
>> http://www.nobhill-nm.com/traffic-accidents-leadcoal-112013-4302016/
>>
>> Dave Dixon
>>
>>
>
>
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