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Slower speeds for safety on residential streets
HILLARY ROSENTRETER
JUST days ago, I heard another one of those familiar sounds — crunch.
It’s the sound two-ton hunks of metal and plastic make when they collide. I looked over from a snow-packed multi-use path lined with footprints and bike tire tracks to see people clamouring out of their vehicles to inspect the damage.
Although this sound is not unique to the winter months, unfavourable weather conditions do highlight just how dangerous our roads and sidewalks can be.
On Dec. 12, I spoke before city council on this very topic. After passing through multiple committees at City Hall, seeing record turnout for such an issue with over 50 delegations in an executive policy committee meeting in support, and shapeshifting to the wills of various councillors multiple times in the process, a motion addressing the hidden dangers of the beautiful Wellington Crescent was on the agenda.
Much to the dismay of many, the motion titled “Item No. 4 of the Report of the Standing Policy Committee on Public Works dated Nov. 29 — Speed Limit Reduction on Wellington Crescent,” did not contain any provisions for a speed limit reduction.
To help you understand why I stood at City Hall’s podium that day — aside from standing on the shoulders of those who came before me — I need to take you back in time, six months ago, to June 6, the day Rob Jenner was killed on Wellington Crescent. Already before lunch that day, our online Winnipeg Cycling Community’s main message thread was ablaze over news about a cyclist being hit by a driver along Wellington Crescent earlier in the morning, and taken to hospital in critical condition.
We were anxious and devastated. To be honest, we were also angry. We were desperate for more information.
Our group has many residents of the wards of Coun. John Orlikow (River Heights), Coun. Sherri Rollins (Fort Rouge-East Fort Garry) and Coun. Cindy Gilroy’s (Daniel McIntyre). They use Wellington Crescent for their daily commutes because it’s their only choice, being right at their doorstep. They know better than anyone that this beautiful right-of-way hides darks secrets among the cracks in its narrow sidewalks, with unmarked pedestrian crosswalks the width of four lanes and the frequent speeders along the Crescent. They would be the first to tell you that Jenner’s death was an inevitability.
Even though Jenner was among the most cautious cyclists, he is not with us today.
Jenner’s death was entirely preventable. And to be clear, I did not speak to city council because of a reckless driver. I can promise you nearly every single person who walks or rolls along Wellington Crescent has a harrowing story about a few near death experiences. I am here because one death is one too many, and change needs to happen.
Since moving back to Winnipeg in 2021, I have avoided Wellington Crescent after having a white-knuckle experience on my very first time using the route, almost exactly where Rob was hit. And yes, the driver in Jenner’s case was reckless. (In case you were not aware, the vehicle that hit Jenner was travelling at nearly 160 kilometres per hour down Wellington Crescent.)
Wellington Crescent encourages high speeds. It is incredibly wide and winding, and hints at drivers that they can travel at highways speeds along what is, first and foremost, as residential as a street can be. Wellington’s design is built to kill and we need to make sure Jenner’s death is the last on the street. And in an ideal world the last death at the hands of a driver, but we have already had more deaths since then.
Much of June 6 was agony, to be honest. We could all see ourselves and our loved ones in Jenner. When the photos of the crime scene were added to media articles, my stomach sank. The lead shot was Jenner’s bike on the boulevard. I know my way around a bicycle, so I immediately noticed that not only was the rear wheel severely mangled but the rim had been completely obliterated. I need to emphasize here that it takes an incredible amount of force to do that. It was so clear to me that the cyclist had been hit from behind. It tore me up. I had a terrible feeling about their chances of survival.
Being hit by a driver from behind is basically a worst-case scenario. I know because I speak from experience. I was heading home along Waterfront Drive near Higgins below the Disraeli Bridge. I was so fortunate that the driver and I were slowing down as we approached a red light.
Being hit from behind is scary because you have no way of anticipating it, especially on roads without dedicated, separated and well-maintained infrastructure. One moment you’re rolling along, the next your body and the pavement become one. Had the driver and I not been going at similar speeds I would probably be dead today.
My partner and mom got a message saying: “I’ve been hit. But I’m OK.” It took me a few minutes to type up the message through tears and although bike riding is the most joyful experience on the planet for me, I will always carry a twinge of anxiety about whether my life will be cut short too.
Not a single person in our group knew Jenner personally. But we were all grieving. There had been a life involuntarily taken too soon by entirely preventable causes. Like Nardia Bedward, Tammy Bateman, Doris Porter, and too many others.
My ask to city council was to amend the motion to include provisions for a 30km/h speed limit along the Crescent.
Coun. Brian Mayes (St. Vital) rattled on about all the calls he receives from people in his ward about lowering their street’s speed limit to 30km/h and, like some other councillors, used this as an excuse to “not treat Wellington Crescent like a special case.”
The irony of this type of argument is not lost on me. I am completely in favour of consistency in our 30km/h speed limits, believing they should be year round and apply to all residential streets in the city.
Consistency is safer and more practical for everyone. Unfortunately, city council did not amend the motion to include reducing the limit to 30km/h, but we heard from multiple councillors to hold tight until the city’s report on their 30km/h pilot streets would be released some time in 2025.
Maybe with a study completed on a pilot, city council will finally take action on life and death matters.
Hillary Rosentreter is an advocate for safe streets.