Beschreibung
Cars on Frontage routinely run the red light at high speed We need a camera that identifies them and sends tickets to their owners, or an officer that tickets them on the spot. This should pay for itself in a few weeks and would make us all safer.
11 Kommentierens
James Lewis (Gast)
Anonymous (Gast)
Anonymous (Gast)
Anonymous (Gast)
Anonymous (Gast)
Mark (Gast)
The intersection is going to remain "dangerous" as long as it is designed as a major highway running through a dense pedestrian district. There's simply no way around that, unless you park 2 cops at the corner 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
If only the DOT would stop treating our lives like they are worthless. The community has called for the street to be designed as it would in any dense pedestrian area in Europe, with top speeds of 10-15MPH and streets that are designed for walking, not for taking your life in your hands when you try to cross. Unfortunately that is the only way to prevent more injuries and fatalities at the location. To say nothing of the personal stress, health problems, and loss of retail sales and property values that this creates.
There is a 10MPH speed limit (and narrow street cross section) in front of the Legislative Building in Hartford -- why can't we have one at one of the busiest intersections in New England, one that is filled with pedestrians and hospital patients of all ages and disabilities? It really makes me wonder.
Anonymous (Gast)
Anonymous (Gast)
Anonymous (Gast)
Cameras are now legal in CT and it's time for one to be put up. It would pay for itself in a week.
There has been absolutely no enforcement at this corner.
The only time I've seen police are when they park there cars to go to Dunkin Donuts. A car ran the red light on S Frontage last week while a police car was in the process of parking on York - the act got no reaction from the officer.
Anerkannt CT Livable Streets Campaign (Registrierter Benutzer)
CT Livable Streets Campaign (Registrierter Benutzer)