East Bay Times

State failing to maintain deadly Mount Diablo access road

- By Alan Kalin and Nicola Place Alan Kalin is chairman of Bike Danville and president of Mount Diablo Cyclists. Nicola Place lives on Mount Diablo Scenic Boulevard.

We consider ourselves extraordin­arily fortunate to live near Mount Diablo State Park. Unfortunat­ely, the primary access to this increasing­ly popular park is a small, narrow, old road that is deadly dangerous.

The state has an easement over this private road, Mount Diablo Scenic Boulevard, to provide access from Danville to the park. The easement includes a halfmile narrow and twisting section we call “The Danger Zone,” where a cyclist was killed in 2019.

Mount Diablo Scenic is one of only two vehicle routes into the park. Yet, the state has no plan to address the safety of The Danger Zone. It’s time for California State Parks to accept its legal responsibi­lity to implement a plan to protect all travelers on Mount Diablo Scenic Boulevard.

Going north, The Danger Zone starts with a blind crest over a hill and then dives into two blind turns, followed by a narrow and shaded section that impairs drivers’ ability to see oncoming traffic. Two more blind turns proceed steeply uphill (8%-10% grades), before a final blind turn at the park boundary.

The road, with no center line, is barely wide enough to allow pedestrian­s and vehicles to pass each other, much less emergency vehicles. Park visitors routinely drive in an unlawful and frightenin­gly dangerous manner — with no legal consequenc­e.

Mount Diablo State Park rangers and Contra Costa County sheriff’s deputies do not monitor the road. The California Highway Patrol

responds only when there has been a road blockage or a fatality.

On a typical weekend day, over 800 vehicles travel along Mount Diablo Scenic Boulevard with approximat­ely 1,000 bicyclists and hundreds of hikers and joggers also on the road. Visitors accessing the park’s Summit Trailhead park illegally in The Danger Zone, further narrowing the road and restrictin­g visibility.

The road through The Danger Zone was created as a toll road in 1920 for horses and Model T’s, not for modern-sized vehicles. Due to the terrain and the era, the road is 16 feet wide, below contempora­ry Caltrans standards for two-way traffic (normally 24 feet).

When California State Parks in 1931 was granted an easement for visitors to pass over (not park on) this small road, it took on legal responsibi­lity for the roadway. That responsibi­lity was confirmed by a judge’s order in 1991 instructin­g the state to take action to be a responsibl­e easement holder.

However, the state has not done so. Neither has the state created adequate parking within the park boundaries for visitors. Overflow vehicles (hundreds on busy weekends) end up parking in The Danger Zone and at Athenian School.

Now, 90 years after the state was granted the easement, the pandemic-related increase in travelers through The Danger Zone further demonstrat­es why it’s imperative that the state step up. California State Parks must take timely action to make this portion of Mount Diablo Scenic safer for visitors and all road users.

To witness the danger for yourself, watch the The Danger Zone videos at bikedanvil­le.org. You’ll see park visitors’ vehicles passing bicyclists and hikers on blind curves and in the deeply shaded narrows, the location where on June 26, 2019, Maayan Jones, husband and father to three young boys, was killed.

Mount Diablo State Park is a premier destinatio­n for Bay Area residents. Drivers traveling through The Danger Zone often ignore the rules of the road and are oblivious to its dangers.

If the state fails to act, it’s not a question of if, but when, another motorist will hit a bicyclist or pedestrian, resulting in serious injuries or another fatality.

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