The Mercury News

Bay Area’s roads worst for animals

A 23-mile stretch of Interstate 280 between San Jose and San Francisco is most troublesom­e with 386 incidents last year

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LOS ANGELES >> If you are a commuter, Southern California freeways are your nightmare. If you happen to be a deer, coyote or raccoon, the highways of Northern California are a lot worse.

A study released Thursday by the UC Davis identified the state highways that are the worst for collisions and near-misses with animals. The Bay Area has most of the worst offenders. Only two are in Southern California

A 23-mile stretch of Interstate 280 that connects San Jose and San Francisco is the most troublesom­e, based on the cost-per-mile of animal issues. It had 386 collisions reported in 2016 that cost nearly $875,000 in cleanup and maintenanc­e.

U.S. Highway 101 north of San Francisco in Marin County is second-worst, followed by State Route 13 from Oakland to Berkeley.

In Southern California, State Highway 2 in northeast Los Angeles provides the biggest problems, followed by U.S. 101 in the San Fernando Valley.

The study does not include every “wildlife-vehicle conflict” as the researcher­s call them, only animalrela­ted incidents that are reported to the California Highway Patrol.

“The need for projects that reduce the risk to driver safety and lives, property damage, and impacts to wildlife is critical,” the study said.

The California Department of Transporta­tion, which would oversee such projects, did not have an immediate response.

A map of hotspots shows the worst areas are along the coast and on busy high- ways in mountain areas. The worst highways are heavily trafficked and gen- erally in at least semi-ur- banized areas.

The “risk is greatest when there are more driv- ers driving fast through or near wildlife habitat, such as the Peninsula, the Si- erra Nevada foothills and the hills surroundin­g the Los Angeles basin,” the au- thors said.

The study recommends erecting more fencing along the worst spots, saying it would quickly pay for itself in the money saved on ani- mal-versus-vehicle collisions.

Fencing along I-280, for example, would pay for it- self in six months with re- duced animal issues, the study said. It also suggests underpasse­s and overpasses for wildlife in key areas.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A bull is led to a livestock trailer after it escaped from a pasture near Vacaville. Wildlife creates more havoc on highways than domesticat­ed animals.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A bull is led to a livestock trailer after it escaped from a pasture near Vacaville. Wildlife creates more havoc on highways than domesticat­ed animals.

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