The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Perth ‘rat run’ fears after bollard removed.

Woman claims vehicles are speeding along Perth road at all hours of the day

- RYAN MAHER rmaher@thecourier.co.uk

A Perth resident fears the disablemen­t of a bollard on a quiet neighbourh­ood street will transform it into a “rat run”.

An automatic bollard was disabled on Florence Place, near Perth city centre, in September after a number of cars were damaged.

The council said it had been spending around £6,000 per year maintainin­g the bollard since it was installed in 2007.

It will go through a six-month review period to determine the next steps to manage traffic on the street.

However, Florence Place resident Grace Sharkey is concerned her street will be overwhelme­d with traffic as there are four schools nearby and it will be an obvious route for those on school runs.

She said: “It’s my view that what they have done by opening it up as a two-way street is opening it as a rat run.

“They are allowing traffic to speed through our area morning, noon and night.

“It was a safer place to live with the bollard.

“I anticipate that with the volume of traffic in the area, the small roundabout­s on Florence Place will block drivers and then the traffic can’t go anywhere.

“In the last month when the bollard hasn’t been there, there have been two weeks of school holidays. It has taken a while for people to catch on that the road is open, but I think they are getting there.

“I don’t know how they can send traffic through a residentia­l area with schools and old people’s homes.”

Traffic cables are currently on sight at Florence Place to review the speed and volume of traffic.

The review process is set to be concluded in March, when council bosses will make a decision if it will be closed off to traffic from Dunkeld Road, or stay open as a two-way street.

Liberal Democrat councillor Peter Barrett said: “In my mind, this was the least intrusive of all of the options.

“The traffic survey is being carried out and will determine if it is a rat run.

“The council’s consultati­on period when deciding to disable the bollard was not the best. But I can’t see that there will be an increase in traffic.

“In the month or so that the bollard has been reduced there has not been any serious impact on traffic. If, after a number of weeks there was chaos, we would have stepped in.”

The traffic survey is being carried out and will determine if it is a rat run. COUNCILLOR PETER BARRETT

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? Concerns have been raised following the removal of a bollard on Florence Place, with the road now becoming a two-way street.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. Concerns have been raised following the removal of a bollard on Florence Place, with the road now becoming a two-way street.
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