A major national effort is underway to promate more children walking and bicycling to school--and to make it safer to do so.
MoBikeFed is represented on MoDOT's Safe Routes to School committee, which gave a grant to a Springfield area program that is helping slow traffic near schools:
a positive development has happened for the children: The Missouri Department of Transportation is giving the district 20 flashing yellow LED warning lights for several schools, which will warn drivers of the speed limits near schools. I know the LED light I pass often in front of Jarrett Middle School nails my attention if I'm distracted, and I slow down as soon as I see it.
Dan Jessen, a project engineer in the city's traffic engineering department, says they put traffic counters measuring speed and numbers of cars near LED flashing signals.
Then, they conducted a two-year study of traffic traveling where there are counters, and the data shows a whopping change in driver behavior where the flashing signals are.
"We have seen a reduction of speeds, especially of those going over 10 and 20 miles per hour over the speed limit," Jessen says. "Those going 30 and 30-plus miles per hour over the limit really went down."
(Thirty and 30-plus mph over the speed limit? Are these people nuts, or just trying to get a better run at the kids?)
Read the rest of Sarah Overstreet's column in the Springfield News-Leader here.
- Related:
- News: MoDOT ready to roll out new Safe Routes to School Program
- News: Springfield uses electronic speed boards to slow traffic near schools
- News: Springfield drops speed limits to make neighborhoods bike/ped friendly
- News: Miles driven in U.S. down even more
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