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WSDOT high-fives new SR 302 study
By Chris Fitzgerald, KP News
The Washington State Department of
Transportation (WSDOT) began the first phase of its $5
million environmental study of State Route 302 in July,
just in time for Vicki Steigner, assistant planning
manager for WSDOT Olympic Region, to host a booth at the
Key Peninsula Community Fair. Her staff gathered replies
to short surveys, asked fair-goers to circle their
primary focus of concern on SR-302 maps, write comments
in the margins, and talk about their frustrations with
the existing highway. The results of that interaction
(which can be found at
www.wsdot.wa.gov/projects/sr302/newcorridor) supply no
surprises, or anything astonishing that wasn’t already
obvious when WSDOT spent millions on a previous study in
1993.

The section of SR-302 that is part
of the study.
Graphic courtesy WSDOT |
Citizens complaints range from the
opposite poles of “traffic too slow” to “traffic too
fast” and include commentary about the inadequacy of the
bridge at Purdy Spit; calls for the use of Pine and/or
Powerline roads as new arterials; and requests for
lighting along dark alternate routes, signage, passing
lanes, and more enforcement of speed limits. Why the
state could not use the $5 million to begin correcting
some of these deficiencies can be explained away with
the statement that the 1993 Environmental Impact Study
(EIS) expired (current state guidelines provide for a
maximum three-year EIS lifespan) and recommendations
made then may no longer be viable now.
This new study, which includes no
action of any kind during its implementation, is
expected to take three to five years to complete. The
current growth rate on the KP is not expected to wane,
and the project’s end-result EIS will still expire in
three years unless state guidelines change, potentially
resulting in yet another fruitless expenditure of
gas-tax revenues. During the two-year comprehensive
planning sessions recently concluded, citizens
consistently pleaded for small and economically
practical immediate fixes such as safety “turtles” on
centerline dividers, signage, and reflectors, none of
which appear to be on the near horizon.
WSDOT’s Website says, “State Route
302 has a six-mile long high accident corridor. The main
reason for this project is to improve safety on the
route… The study will evaluate the environmental impacts
of creating a new corridor or widening the existing
State Route 302 to improve mobility and enhance motorist
safety.” No mention is made of tangible action. What the
department will do is “spend eight months collecting
data, evaluating existing conditions and determining
motorist travel patterns.” The second phase of the study
is expected to begin next January.
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WSDOT information session
WSDOT will hold a public
information-gathering
meeting about SR-302 tentatively
scheduled for
Sept. 25, 4:30-7:30 p.m. at Peninsula High
School.
KP residents should expect to receive notice in
the mail.
For more information, contact Vicki
Steigner,
project manager, at 360-357-2651 or
email
steignv@wsdot.wa.gov. |
Steigner plans to host a public
event in mid-September at Peninsula High School, and
asks the public’s help in “identifying the problems and
what they see as concerns.” She envisions a drive-time
meeting that will capture commuters on their way home
and plans to display maps and have break-out tables
arranged by topic or concern, along with a short
presentation. Her primary concern, she says, is to begin
designing a tiered set of alternatives, with safety
being the first, to make SR-302 less dangerous.
Steigner said her crew will be out
counting cars at intersections: how many turn left, how
many turn right, and when. They will chart the traffic
before and after school, during drive-time and at
midday, and will look at the most treacherous
intersections where drivers “take risks they shouldn’t
take” to discover specific ways the intersections work —
or don’t. She welcomes citizen calls. When WSDOT crews
are out near the road with a clipboard, waiting in a
truck behind an electronic counting signboard, or
walking the roads looking for clues, she encourages
those who know the road to stop and take a minute to
give them some answers.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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