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PBOT moves to find “immediate” solutions for N Broadway/Flint/Wheeler intersection


Broadway and Flint meeting-2
A meeting back in June helped highlight
safety concerns at the intersection.
(Photo © J. Maus/BikePortland)

It looks likes years of citizen activism might finally bear fruit. Yesterday, Betsy Reese — the co-owner of the Paramount Apartments situated on the peninsula formed by the intersection of N. Broadway, Flint, and Wheeler streets near I-5 — announced that PBOT is set to host a special public meeting next week to come up with safety fixes for the notoriously dangerous location.

I first reported about serious safety concerns at this intersection back in December 2007, when the Portland Water Bureau (who has their headquarters just northwest of the location) decided to prohibit their employees from making the right turn from Broadway onto Wheeler. Water Bureau safety officials made the decision out of concerns about right-hooks following two fatal collisions just months prior.

In the years since, there have been numerous injury collisions and likely thousands of near-misses. Last month, I reported yet another injury collision involving a man who was right-hooked when someone operating a truck turned right onto Flint. That collision came just weeks after Reese held a meeting at the location with bike advocates and staff from ODOT, PBOT, and the Water Bureau.

PBOT and ODOT are currently partnering on a $400 million project that will add a lane to I-5 through the Rose Quarter. Improvements to Broadway/Wheeler/Flint (and other surface street improvements) made their way into the plans of that project, but the implementation timeline for them is uncertain and likely years away (skeptics worry that ODOT will construct the new freeway lane in the first phase and then have no funding or obligation to do the rest). ODOT, upon hearing the safety issues and appreciating the political optics of the situation, agreed recently to speed up their timeline for removal of an I-5 slip lane that feeds onto Broadway just north of Flint and contributes significantly to the safety issues.

Broadway and Flint meeting-3

Now it appears that PBOT is also not satisfied with waiting for these surface street improvements and is not willing to let them take a back seat to the freeway widening element of the larger plan. Yesterday, Reese sent an email to an ad-hoc group of activists and other stakeholders that PBOT wants to meet next week to discuss the situation and move forward with solutions.

Here’s an official statement from PBOT shared by Reese yesterday:

“Thanks to everyone for your interest in helping with a pressing safety concern at the intersection of N Broadway, Wheeler, and Flint. Staff from the Portland Bureau of Transportation and Oregon Department of Transportation have been working to analyze the situation and to identify immediate, mid-term, and long-term safety solutions for this complicated intersection. This meeting will be to share information related to ongoing analysis of the safety concerns, potential alternatives for addressing these concerns, and identification of timeline to address the safety problems present at this location.”

Next week’s meeting won’t be a brainstorming sessions for new ideas, it will be an opportunity to hear from PBOT what near-term safety fixes they feel they can jump on and implement right away.

As proof of their commitment to this element of the plan, a PBOT source pointed out that a new action item has been officially added to the Draft N/NE Quadrant Plan document. Action TR19 on page 38 states:

“Study and implement near term bicycle and pedestrian safety enhancements in the “box,” especially along N Broadway, that address major safety needs and advance the long range plan.”

The timeline for these near-term fixes is stated to be 2014 or sooner.

We’re definitely not across the goal line yet; but for Reese, there is reason for optimism that her dedicated activism might finally pay off.

“We appear to be closer than ever before to making this notoriously dangerous intersection safe and orderly for all modes of travel,” she wrote via email yesterday, “Before long, hopefully, we can all look back, and without exaggerating say, ‘We probably have saved a life, even though we’ll never know whose family and friends we spared that grief. I was one of the people who had a hand in that.’ Thank you, everyone.”

Stay tuned.

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