Miami Herald

After that traffic nightmare, Miami drivers need answers

- BY THE MIAMI HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD

You don’t have to be a traffic expert to understand what happens when you shut down a bridge connecting an island to two major thoroughfa­res in South Florida.

Chaos.

And that’s what happened Sunday evening when hundreds of drivers were stranded on Key Biscayne for hours on end after the closure of the Rickenback­er Causeway’s flyover bridge, which connects westbound traffic to South Dixie Highway and Interstate 95 north in Miami.

The closure happened for a good reason: to restore aging concrete on the road. But it also happened at the tail end of South Florida’s busiest tourist season, and on a gorgeous beach day.

The bridge was supposed to remain shut for two months, but, on Monday morning, the Florida Department of Transporta­tion, which local officials have blamed for causing the mayhem, reopened one of the lanes that connects to Interstate 95. The southbound exit ramp onto U.S. 1 will reopen Wednesday, the Herald reported.

Perhaps that was a recognitio­n, after the fact, that the planning for the closures wasn’t as thoroughly studied as FDOT reportedly had told the mayor of Key Biscayne before Sunday. There’s little known about what went into the decision to close the flyover bridge, and more will likely surface as the Herald and other media outlets continue to investigat­e.

For now, Miami residents are left with lots of outrage and questions. For example, why didn’t traffic officials wait to close the bridge in June, when kids are out of school and there are fewer tourists in town, as some residents are asking authoritie­s via an online petition?

“Commute times from Key Biscayne to the mainland have increased to a staggering 80-90 minutes, making it nearly impossible to get children to their school on time each morning,” the petition reads.

Key Biscayne Mayor Joe

Rasco wrote in a statement posted on Instagram that FDOT had assured him the state agency had the closures “under control.” Clearly, that wasn’t the case.

Videos posted on social media showed lines of cars at a standstill. Some families even decided to camp out on the sidewalk. A woman posted on Instagram she was stuck in traffic for 9 1/2 hours and that some cars ran out of battery and gas. Not knowing what was actually going on, some people thought the bridge had collapsed or caught on fire. Grocery stores were packed with people stocking up on food in case they had to spend the night in their cars.

Miamians are used to bad traffic, long commutes, what appears to be perpetual road work and congestion on I-95 and U.S. 1 at all hours of the day. But being stranded for almost half a day on the road to an island is special kind of traffic hell, even for Miami. It didn’t help that it happened on a Sunday, when families expected a break from the crazy pace of South Florida life.

It’s hard to remain patient when it feels traffic officials are making decisions without thinking of the people who will pay with their time and blood pressure levels. That’s especially true in a place like South Florida where there are few transporta­tion options besides driving.

Our communitie­s were not developed with mass transit in mind and, as the region has grown, residents can see the consequenc­es of that virtually every time they get behind the wheel. Miami-Dade County has made significan­t steps to alleviate that issue with the SMART plan to build six transit corridors but it will be years before that is fully built out.

For now, South Florida remains a car culture and road repairs are inconvenie­nt but critical. It’s the price we pay for making sure our burdened driving infrastruc­ture doesn’t fall apart.

There’s a lesson in this mess, about planning and traffic and listening to locals. Was there a less inconvenie­nt way to make required repairs on the Rickenback­er Causeway? Miami needs answers.

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