Forget what the calendar says, I say it’s Spring! And with this hopeful season comes good news on the Connecticut’s transportation front.
A reader recently told me my
weekly screed comes off sounding like I’m a “cranky old man”. Guilty, on both counts. So let’s celebrate these rare glimmers of
hope for our roads and rails.
INCREASED TRAFFIC ENFORCEMENT: The CT State Police has announced a new crackdown on reckless drivers to, as one pol put it, “take back the highways”. Special patrols will be working the interstates and parkways and writing a lot of tickets.
The problem is that this State
Police traffic unit is only a quarter the size of what it once was, and the
overall force is still only 75% of what it should be. But even spread this thin, any enforcement
may help stop the speeding, red-light-running and impaired driving that has
seen death tolls soar in the last few years.
The question is: why the increased enforcement now? Why wasn’t this begun months ago?
The trend in fatalities has
been obvious as has the lack of police enforcement. The more people see others behaving badly on
the roads the more they’re likely to do the same thing.
But, it’s Spring! So let’s take this as good news, albeit it
late.
DRUNK DRIVING: As
I wrote last May, Connecticut has a serious drunk / drugged driving problem. Last year a state lawmakers died in a wrong-way
crash and, in another case, a pol flipped her car in front of the Capitol and
was arrested for DWI. Meanwhile,
lawmakers have been encouraging more boozing… allowing “to go” purchases from
bars while Connecticut is one of only nine states not banning open containers while
driving.
Well, this year the
Transportation Committee is reportedly considering lowering the blood alcohol
limit defining drunk driving from .08% to .05%.
That’s good news… if it passes and there are enough cops to enforce it.
STAMFORD STATION GARAGE: Lastly, we celebrate the long overdue
opening of the massive new garage at the Stamford train station: 914
parking spaces, 92 electric vehicle charging stations, and 120 spots for bicycles.Rendering of new garage
The structure is beautiful,
inside and out, adorned with 200,000 color LED lights you can’t miss while
driving by on I-95. Like the old garage,
it’s connected by a covered pedestrian walkway directly into the station.
The $100 million garage was
months late in opening and years
later than planned. It was back in 2006 that CDOT decided that it would be
cheaper to replace than to repair the 1985 garage, crumbling from neglect. A planned PPP (Public Private Partnership) to
do the work got embroiled in political intrigue and a zoning fight with the
city and went nowhere.
With the new, larger garage now
open for business the old garage will be torn down, a messy project that will
take about six months. The space will then
be home to a massive TOD (Transit Oriented Development) project.
Another reason for hope, so
Think Spring!
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