Hill Rag Magazine – September 2021

Page 82

.capitol streets.

/ Opinion /

ZERO VISION DDOT? by Mark R. Grace

T

he District’s Department of Transportation (DDOT) is showing itself to be short-sighted, arrogant, and inequitable in the well-being of the whole of the community in its redesign of the 1300 block of North Carolina Ave. NE. What is happening is an 11th hour, post-game revision of the C Street NE Implementation Project (www.cstne.com). Originally and rightfully envisioned as a project “to improve safety, comfort for all right-of-way users while ensuring improved connectivity and mobility for all modes within and through the area,” now, late in the process, DDOT is attempting to change the plans and story of the C Street NE Implementation Project, with limited transparency and without adequate analysis, meaningful public input, or consideration of the needs of all members of the community. At its inception, the project had been scoped, mapped, surveyed, and designed with project limits that extended along C Street NE from 22nd Street NE to 14th Street NE. Extensive community input was solicited through a series of well-publicized public meetings. The final design, released in 2014, did not include the 1300 block of North Carolina Ave NE. Documentation of DDOT’s decision-making process is not publicly available, but neighbors who participated in the initial process remember that it was considered redundant (given other bike infrastructure a block away) and not advantageous to cyclists (as the terminus would be the multi-modal traffic mixing bowl that surrounds Lincoln Park). The block experiences a steady flow and morning rushhour cluster of cars, bikes, trucks, buses, pedestrians, children coming and going to Maury Elementary, and is bookended by two active churches with near daily events (before Covid). Focused solely on cyclists, they are now strongarming hundreds of residents, church congregants, and others to choose one of two plans to accommodate the addition of two bike lanes on this block. In brief, the options are to have a single, westbound travel lane and retain parking on both sides of the block, or to keep two-way traffic and lose all the parking from the street’s south side (approx. 35 spaces) — an exceptionally frustrating, insensitive option because: • It pushes competition for parking onto neighboring blocks (removing 35 parking spaces does not mean 35 cars are magically off the road and no one wants to fight for a parking space with a neighbor). • It greatly inconveniences those with mobility issues e.g., a family with a disabled child.

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It inhibits residents – particularly the elderly – from going out to enjoy the city because they fear coming home at night. Having to walk on darkened streets searching for parking blocks... yes, blocks away, in an area experiencing a crime surge that the city has not been able to stop, • It encourages further gentrification and less equity. Capitol Hill should not become more of a “boutique bourgeois” neighborhood. There are still residents who do not have the economic luxury of choosing alternative modes of transportation, those who need their car for work or rely on it to live their life. • It is simply not needed. DDOT’s alternative one-way plan (removing the right hand, east-bound turn lane from 13th street) has not been subjected to serious analysis to evaluate the inevitable “domino effect” of rerouting traffic onto neighboring streets. With so many streets already one-way, drivers would have to navigate circuitous routes with multiple additional traffic lights and congestion. Also extremely troubling is the prospect of speeding. Respected studies show that one-way streets encourage this unsafe behavior, already a problem on this block because it is a heavily trafficked morning commuter route with drivers racing from light to light. Finding both alternatives unacceptable, over 200 residents of this and other nearby blocks responded with proposed compromise solutions that serve all interests, but which are not being given serious consideration. They’ve asked that no action be taken until the C Street project has been completed so that proper traffic studies can be undertaken – to no avail. They have been mischaracterized by the bicycle lobby as anti-bike. Nothing could be farther from the truth; many residents are avid cyclists, and the proffered compromises include bike lanes. This block is not alone in the city but just the latest target of an agency and city administration that is tone deaf to the residents to whom they report. Hill residents, no matter their needed or preferred mode of transportation, are adversely impacted by DDOT’s herky-jerky leadership. We are students, businesses, bike riders, drivers, exercise walkers, families, the young, the old and all of us rely on efficient and safe transport. We are happy to share and do not appreciate being bullied. We are not being listened to. DDOT, it is time that you hear us! Mark Grace is an avid cyclist and a resident of the 1300 block of North Carolina Ave. NE. u


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Articles inside

NCB Grants $30,000 to Eastern’s IB Program

6min
pages 110-111

BodyWise Dance: Movement to Enhance Everyday Living

6min
pages 107-109

Poetic Hill by Karen Lyon

4min
pages 103-104

Bulletin Board by Kathleen Donner

22min
pages 86-94

Literary Hill by Karen Lyon

3min
page 102

Art and The City by Jim Magner

4min
pages 100-101

At the Movies by Mike Canning

6min
pages 98-99

Capitol Cuisine by Celeste McCall

6min
pages 95-97

Another Opinion / It’s Time to Stop Fighting Safer Streets by Amber Gove

5min
pages 84-85

Opinion / ZERO VISION DDOT?

3min
pages 82-83

CHRS Guided Outdoor Walking Tours

2min
pages 44-45

The Peculiar History of Buzzard Point by William Zeisel

8min
pages 32-35

The Hill Gardener: In Praise of Crape Myrtles

5min
pages 66-67

Capitol Hill Presbyterian Church Welcomes New Pastor: Rev. Rachel Vaagenes

4min
pages 80-81

The Capitol Hill Garden Club presents: Dear Garden

4min
pages 68-69

Buzzard Point Rises by Michael Stevens

10min
pages 26-31

The Damp Realities of Doglegs by Dr. Christina K. Wilson

4min
pages 62-65

Fall Home Improvement: Tips from the Pros

8min
pages 46-49
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