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Property owner seeks road solution
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
The building that houses Serenity
Salon near the corner of 118th Street and State Route 302
has been hit by cars veering off the road twice in the
last eight months. Owner Scott Wagner met with a
representative of the Washington State Department of
Transportation at the site after both accidents, and
requested the installation of a guardrail to keep cars on
their own turf. WSDOT declined that action, and instead
reapplied road reflectors at closer intervals, and 4-foot
fiberglass reflectors as well.
Wagner was advised that the state
“doesn’t do things to protect private property,” he said.
Wagner said he was curious why the nearby roadside creek
had the security of a guardrail, but not his building and
the people inside.
According to Steve Bennett, a traffic
operations engineer with the WSDOT in Olympia, guardrails
themselves can attract accidents when they impair drivers’
line of sight. The WSDOT is in the business of driver
safety, not preservation, and guardrails are used in
various ways to accomplish that, he said.
Those fronting creeks and the like
prevent errant autos from running off-road into
below-grade streambeds, gullies and drop-offs. Guardrails
occurring just before concrete barriers the state places
on either side of bridges are there to act as cushions,
the first line of defense in preventing drivers from
crashing into those unforgiving concrete blocks. Bennett
was familiar with the building on SR-302, and admits he
and his staff are mystified why, after eight years of no
traffic-related damage at all, this site could suddenly
sustain two accidents in the last year.
“There is no rhyme or reason to it,”
he said. “That building must be 25 or 30 feet from the
road, giving a driver plenty of time to self-correct.”
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