Hi,
I attended the Charleswood Transportation Study Public Information
Display tonight, and the news was quite bad. The draft plan
completely ignores the city's AT policy in their recommendations for
Shaftesbury. They are recommending widening this road to four
excessivley wide lanes without providing any cycling facilities at
all on a roadway that connects one of the city's main east west AT
corridors (the Harte Trail) to Assiniboine Park, the Canadian
Mennonite Museum, and a critical bicycle pedestrian bridge over the
Assiniboine River. This is despite the fact that north of the study
area, a multi-use pathway runs along the west side of Shaftesbury
all the way to the pedestrian/bicycle bridge and over the Assinboine
River. I wish I could say I was surprised by this, but in truth it
is not at all surprising.
Beyond the issue with Shaftesbury, both Shaftesbury and Taylor/West
Taylor were omitted from the City's network of proposed AT
facilities, and while both Grant and Roblin were correctly marked as
having sharrows, there was no indication that these would ever be
upgraded to something useful such as a bike lane, or better yet, a
buffered bicycle lane or cycle track, which would be warranted. In
fact, I was told point blank by one of the MMM staff that AT was not
within the mandate of the study other than to identify existing
facilities. Shaftesbury was the one exception, but as I indicated
above, they have inexplicably excluded any cycling facilities from
their recommendation to widen this roadway to four lanes (each 4m
wide)! The only other AT related recommendation I saw was what
appeared to be a recommendation to remove the restriction on right
turns on red in front of a busy pedestrian crossing leading to Royal
School.
Here are the points I think need to be made:
- Any widening of Shaftesbury needs to include a bicycle path
and sidewalk on the west side of the roadway
- A bicycle/pedestrian overpass for the Harte Trail must be
included in any southward extension of the William Clement
Parkway
- Bicycle lanes or cycle tracks should be added to West Taylor
and Taylor from Shaftesbury to Kenaston
- A recommendation to add buffered bicycle lanes or cycle tracks
to Grant and Roblin as part of any future rehabilitation
- The study needs to look into traffic calming on North/South
residential streets in the study area that would encourage more
cycling and walking, especially on streets leading to schools
and commercial nodes
- If the city had maintained the AT Advisory Committee, these
errors would have been spotted prior to the public information
display
This can likely all be paid for if they simply reduce the lane
width on Shaftesbury from 4m to a more reasonable 3.35m (11 ft),
which is still wider than the current edition of the Highway
Capacity Manual (The Green Book) recommends.
Mark