Upper & Middle Park Blvd

Project

Overview

These two projects are categorized together but are two different sections of Park Blvd. Upper Park Blvd is between Monterey Blvd and Hollywood Avenue, Middle Park Blvd is between Hollywood Avenue and Grosvenor Place.

Why Are Changes Being Proposed

The overall argument is one of safety, specific problems reported are:

  • High number of pedestrian incidents
  • Claims of high-speed vehicles being the cause of injuries
  • Claims that more cyclists will use this section of road if bicycle lanes are added

 What Are the Proposed Changes

  • Removing two travel lanes
  • Adding bike lanes
  • Adding 5 additional sets of traffic signals

What Supporting Evidence Is There

Simply stated – none ! The captured data does not indicate speed to be an issue – at least not vehicle speed. The only incident on Middle Park Blvd which was speed related was a solo cyclist, and only one incident on Lower Park Blvd was speed related. The below data shows the incidents on Upper, Middle and Lower Park Blvd between 2006 and 2016, with details of the type and who was at fault:

Upper Park Blvd
Upper Park Blvd Car/Bike/Pedestrian Collisions 2006 to 2016

Car driver was at fault

2 bike/car – cause improper passing, turning

1 pedestrian/car – cause pedestrian right of way

 

Middle Park Blvd
Middle Park Blvd Car/Bike/Pedestrian Collisions 2006 to 2016

Car driver was at fault

1 pedestrian/car – cause pedestrian right of way

1 pedestrian/car – cause unsafe backing or starting

Cyclist was at fault

2 bike/car – cause improper turning

1 bike/car – cause wrong side of road

1 bike solo – cause unsafe speed

Pedestrian was at fault

1 pedestrian/car – cause pedestrian violation

 

Lower Park Blvd
Lower Park Blvd Car/Bike/Pedestrian Collisions 2006 to 2016

Car driver was at fault

13 pedestrian/car – cause pedestrian right of way – 6 of these are by the school where they plan to keep two lanes uphill so still a problem

1 pedestrian/car – cause unsafe speed

1 pedestrian/car – cause traffic signals

1 car/car – cause following too closely

1 car/car – cause right of way

Cyclist was at fault

2 bike/car – cause wrong side of road

1 bike/car – cause right of way

Pedestrian was at fault

2 pedestrian/car – cause pedestrian violation

What are the Consequences

Assuming that speed is truly a problem, which is a difficult assumption to make, given the lack of any supporting data, we must consider that only a solution which limits the speed at all times of the day and night will work. The current plan of road diets and traffic signals will only reduce speed when there is congestion – at other times, the traffic will flow as it does today – at the “alleged high speeds”. So, unless we have a solution that addresses this 24 hours a day, we are not addressing safety at all – what happens on Saturday morning, light traffic, no congestion, kids on their way to synagogue, who will protect their safety, or off-peak-hour, light traffic,  elderly, mothers with children, disabled trying to visit business districts? Is OakDOT really addressing the problems – the answer is NO!

The supporters of road-diets, suggest that post road diet will have a “minimal” effect on traffic, and approximately 10% of vehicles will divert to other roads. What does this mean for Park Blvd and surrounding neighborhoods? The average total vehicle volume per day is 21,000 cars on Park Blvd, so a 10% diversion would be 2100 cars a day would use alternative routes, with Trestle Glen Road being a likely option. The current total volume of traffic on Trestle Glen ranges from 1000 at the upper part joining Park Blvd, to 3000 at the lower part joining Lakeshore, so just a 10% diversion from Park Blvd will potentially mean a possible 66% to 200% increase on traffic on Trestle Glen Road – which are narrow, lower speed streets, not designed to support this flow, and also used regularly by cyclists. Is this an improvement in safety – by any standard NO!

Are There Better Options?

Yes – holistic options that consider the safety of all road users – car, bike, and pedestrians, including consideration of current demand, projected future demands, and impact of surrounding neighborhoods.

Who to Contact

Who To Contact

The list below provides the important contact information for your Mayor and city council. You can also Sign Our Petition which will automatically send an email to each of them.

Contact City Council and Administrators

Is there a problem with this project, and you want to make it right? The best way for your opinion to count is to be vocal, and contact the Mayor and your council person. Use our petition below to send email, and call to vocalize your concerns, the contact information is below. If you don’t say something, your opinion won’t matter.

If you don’t know your council district look here

Who to Contact

Libby Schaaf : Mayor

Libby Schaaf

Mayor

Email: officeofthemayor@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-3141
Dan Kalb : Council District 1

Dan Kalb

Council District 1

Email: dkalb@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7001
Abel J. Guillén : Council District 2

Abel J. Guillén

Council District 2

Email: aguillen@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7002
Lynette Gibson McElhaney : Council District 3

Lynette Gibson McElhaney

Council District 3

Email: BCook@Oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7003
Annie Campbell Washington : Council District 4

Annie Campbell Washington

Council District 4

Email: ACampbellWashington@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7004
Noel Gallo : Council District 5

Noel Gallo

Council District 5

Email: Ngallo@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7005
Desley Brooks : Council District 6

Desley Brooks

Council District 6

Email: dbrooks@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7006
Larry Reid : Council District 7

Larry Reid

Council District 7

Email: lreid@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7007
Rebecca Kaplan : Councilmember At Large

Rebecca Kaplan

Councilmember At Large

Email: atlarge@oaklandnet.com
Phone: 510-238-7008

 

 

Sign our Petition

Petition

Complete the petition below, to automatically send an email to the mayor and council members, to let them know you are not satisfied with this project proposal. You may also wish to  Contact the Mayor and council members by telephone for maximum effectiveness.

No Road Diet on Park Blvd

Dear Mayor Schaaf, Council members Guillen, Gallo, Campbell-Washington, Kaplan

I have learned of this project from http://www.keepoaklandmoving.com/projects/upper-middle-park-blvd.

I do not support the proposals given for adding road diets to Park Blvd as described in http://www2.oaklandnet.com/government/o/PWA/o/EC/o/TS/parkblvdsafety/index.htm . We need more comprehensive data backed studies that show:

  1. What the actual problems are
  2. How the proposed solution will address each problem identified
  3. How the proposed solution will not impact neighborhoods in the proximity of the site
  4. Example and longitudinal studies of other sites where these changes have been made, and supporting evidence of success.

I live, work and play in Oakland, and do not support you compromising my safety,

Regards,

%%your signature%%

3 signatures

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