Monday, August 11, 2008

Teen's death underlines need for traffic light

It shouldn’t take the death of a 16-year-old honor student to bring attention to the need for a flashing yellow light/curve sign before the deadly bend on Chester Pike (Route 13) at Laurel Road in Sharon Hill.

There’s no guarantee that such a warning signal and signs would have prevented such a tragic incident which took the life of Faith Sinclair of Ridley Township about 10:15 p.m. Aug. 3.

Still, this dangerous section demands added safety improvements.Faith was crossing the four-lane state highway from the Collingdale side to the Sharon Hill side that Sunday night with several friends on her way to her girlfriend’s house.

For some unknown reason — but which a skeptical lawyer-wary reporter could surmise — the driver of a black Mercedes-Benz failed to stop at the scene after plowing down the teenager who celebrated her 16th birthday only two weeks before.

The speed limit on the state highway connecting Sharon Hill with Darby Borough and Collingdale is 35 mph and I’m sure most drivers don’t adhere to it. Trying to get the state to lower the speed limit on such a highway is akin to beating your head against a wall.If they lowered it to 25 mph, most drivers still would do at least 10 miles above it.

PennDOT reported three accidents at the intersection between January 2003 and December 2007, but no fatal crashes during that period. The average daily traffic count in both directions is 8,523 vehicles, according to PennDOT spokesman Charles Metzger.

Low-cost options to improve the safety of the intersection could be line-striping indicating a curve ahead or chevron-arrow signs, Metzger said.

The only safety measure currently in place is a traffic light at the intersection, which has pedestrian pushbuttons on both sides of the highway to change the light to green.

If a flashing yellow light and curve-symbol sign were installed indicating a curve ahead in the road, the borough of Sharon Hill would have to maintain it, Metzger said.

This brings me to a similar bend in the road in Morton for which the borough officials had enough foresight many years ago to take some preventive action.There is a flashing yellow light signal with a curve symbol, and a second sign that states “High Accident Curve” on Providence Road near Morton Avenue, a few blocks below Baltimore Pike.

This two-lane stretch of road along a residential area is not a state road, according to Metzger, who therefore had no accident statistics or traffic-volume figures available.

The PennDOT official said that stretch of Providence Road between Morton and South avenues is a municipal road, and only becomes a state road after South Avenue.Borough Secretary Martha Preston said she did not have any records on file when or why the flashing curve light was installed and they’re somewhere in its archives.

She said the “best I could come up with” was from people who remembered it may have been put up in the early 1980s because of speeding complaints. “Nobody was injured or anything, but there were complaints of speeding around the curve,” she said.

I checked the Daily Times files back to the early 1970s but couldn’t find any information on when the flashing signal in Morton was put up. However, I did find a news brief dated May 16, 1986, that said speeding motorists on Providence Road may find themselves in trouble with the law when borough police use ESP, a speed-detection device, loaned by Springfield police “to make Providence Road between Morton Avenue and Baltimore Pike safer for both communities.” The road is the boundary between the borough and Springfield.

Back then, Mayor Gerald Connolly said officials from both communities were concerned about the number of accidents along that stretch of Providence Road.

If such a flashing warning signal and signs can be installed for just a two-lane, local stretch of road in Morton, then why can’t a similar traffic device and signs be placed near the dangerous, hilly and curvy section of Route 13 North at Laurel Road in Sharon Hill? Its four lanes certainly warrant it.

I don’t want to hear any excuses from any official – especially for Faith’s sake. Such a remedy is the least we can do.El project nearing completion SEPTA Market-Frankford El service between 69th Street Terminal and 40th Street Station will be replaced by shuttle buses for the next 14 days as the El reconstruction project has its final extended service shutdown. Service resumes 5 a.m. Aug. 25.

Also, the busy intersection of 63rd and Market streets — a major link between Upper Darby and West Philadelphia — will be closed to traffic until 4 a.m. Aug. 25.There will be no El service to 52nd Street, 56th Street, 60th Street, 63rd Street, Millbourne or 69th Street Terminal as all-stop and non-stop shuttle buses replace train service.

Regular Market-Frankford Line service will only operate between the 46th Street Station and Frankford Transportation Center during weekdays of the 16-day shutdown, while weekend service from FTC will terminate at 40th Street Station.The all-stop shuttle buses will stop at all designated locations between 40th and Market streets and 69th Street Terminal. Passengers should look for shuttle bus stop signs.Non-stop shuttle bus service will only operate on weekdays to and from 69th Street Terminal and 40th and Market streets 6-9:30 a.m. and 3:30-6:30 p.m. without making any other stops.Traffic delays

Line Painting — Chester, Essington, Havertown, Villanova and Upper Chichester, a slow-moving operation to paint lines on state highways. Motorists should remain an ample distance behind line-painting trucks and stay off traffic lines 7 a.m.-4 p.m. weekdays.Haverford — U.S. 1 North/South, bridge wall repairs at Township Line Road 8 a.m.-3 p.m. weekdays.Yeadon — Church Lane, utility installation, closed/detoured between Baily Road and Myra Avenue 9 p.m.-6 a.m. Wednesday-Thursday, detour posted.

Upper Chichester — Chichester Avenue, curb/sidewalk installation between Bethel Road and Flora Lane 9 a.m.-3 p.m. weekdays through Aug. 25.Ridley Township — Route 291 North/South, paving between Stewart Avenue and Crum Creek 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Monday-Tuesday.Tinicum — Wanamaker Avenue, utility installation by Aqua Pennsylvania, closed/detoured between Route 291 and Second Street, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. weekdays through Oct. 31. Work began July 21. Chester — Flower Street, ramp construction, closed/detoured between Second and Front streets, 24-hour detour posted through Sept. 8.
Began July 7.

Amosland Road — Prospect Park and Norwood, Aqua installation between MacDade Boulevard and Chester Pike, 9 a.m.- 3 p.m. weekdays through Aug. 29. Work began June 30.


Chester Township — Concord Road, utility installation between Commerce Drive and McDonald Boulevard 9 a.m.-3 p.m. weekdays through Sept. 25. Work began Feb. 19. “Road Watch” appears Sundays. Only messages and mail with phone numbers will be considered. E-mail: jroman@delcotimes.com.

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