Polk
County has undertaken Project 22 to address what the locals call the
"Highway
of Death." Simple
crosses of white, surrounded by flowers and stuffed animals, stand
as silent sentinels to the memory of loved ones who have died along
its path. School bus drivers and combine operators cringe as they
attempt to cross its narrow lanes and dodge the high-speed traffic
headed west to the Oregon Coast.
Highway
22 West:
Literally an Accident Waiting to Happen.
What
used to be a scenic and pleasant traffic corridor through the beautiful
Willamette Valley and the Coast Hills has become a nightmare to the
residents, workers, and tourists who struggle to navigate the thoroughfare
together.
The year 2000 not only rang in a new
millennium, it also rang in the deadliest era in the history of Highway
22. The death rate is 2.5 times greater than the national traffic
fatality average.
Highway
22 West is no longer being utilized for the purpose for which it was
originally designed. In reality, it is now comprised of two different
roads, both vying for the same space. The first is a local transportation
corridor serving local business traffic. School busses and slow moving
farm equipment frequently cross it. The second is a high-speed expressway
serving the central Willamette Valley and carrying millions of tourists
intent upon visiting the Central Oregon Coast and the many regional
attractions to be found along the way. Blending these two traffic
populations and patterns without modifying the original roadway design
is a recipe for the disaster we are now seeing.
Are
the physical improvements made by the Oregon Department of Transportation
and local jurisdictions on Highway 22 to curb accidents and reduce
the loss of human life enough? Absolutely not.
Current
improvements do not address the dangerous combination of mixing high-speed
expressway traffic to the coast with local and farming traffic. Traffic
volumes are increasing at a rate faster than local population projections,
especially due to the increase in tourism activity. Given the rapid
increase in traffic volume, as well as competing traffic populations,
the remaining improvements are outside the scope and resources of
local and state government. Procuring outside resources has become
a necessity.
The
Solution:
Project
22
Provide
a safe means for local and expressway traffic to share the road. Where
necessary, separate the traffic to substantially reduce the number
of accidents caused by access, egress and speed differentials.
Divide
traffic along the entire length of the road, thereby greatly reducing
the incidence of head-on collisions.
Click "Next"
to learn more about the solution, and what YOU can do to help.
~Next