Miami Herald (Sunday)

Faster cars, more bikers revive call to redesign Rickenback­er Causeway

- BY LINDA ROBERTSON lrobertson@miamiheral­d.com

With the pandemic encouragin­g a surge in bicycle traffic on the Rickenback­er Causeway, the coexistenc­e of bikers and speeding auto drivers has become more dangerous.

For Lee Marks and veteran bicyclists like him, the Rickenback­er Causeway used to be like a heavenly ride floating across Biscayne Bay to Key Biscayne. Now, it’s harrowing.

“If I’m riding alone, I feel absolutely terrified,” said Marks, who usually joins a group at dawn seven mornings a week. “Drivers are speeding at will, putting the pedal to the metal and going 60, 70, 80 mph, rocketing right past the cyclists, triath

letes, runners and walkers on the shoulder of the road.”

A car swerving into the bike lane recently grazed his handlebars. He’s observed accidents and close calls. “It’s only a matter of time before a car careens into a pack of cyclists or runners and wipes them out.”

The Rickenback­er ranks among the busiest roadways in South Florida, with some 10 million vehicles per year traveling on it. But its picturesqu­e views also make it one of Miami’s most popular recreation routes and in the most recent months of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the number of bikers, joggers and walkers has surged. That many exercisers so close to speeding vehicles has become an increasing­ly treacherou­s mix — reviving calls to lower speed limits or even redesign the iconic road.

Police who patrol the six-mile stretch from the tollbooth through the ascent and descent of the William Powell Bridge, across Bear Cut and along Crandon Boulevard to the island village of Key Biscayne acknowledg­e that the causeway has become more like a speedway.

“It’s wild out there,” said Charles Press, police chief and interim city manager of Key Biscayne. “It’s a wide open road that induces speed and a mindset of lawlessnes­s.”

City of Miami and Miami-Dade County police share jurisdicti­on of the Rickenback­er, and while neither department said they could provide longterm trends on speeding or accidents, the county alone has written thousands of annual citations in recent years. Yet the risk continues to rise on the Rickenback­er.

“Between the cyclists getting killed, pedestrian­s getting injured, road rage incidents and DUIs, it’s a very dangerous situation that has worsened,” said

Lt. Alex Valdes, commander of the city’s traffic enforcemen­t unit. “The mentality of too many drivers on the causeway is to floor it and go as fast as possible.”

Ironically, traffic police suspect a drop in car traffic during the pandemic may be one contributi­ng factor, with emptier or more open lands tempting drivers’ inner Dale Earnhardt. “We see a correlatio­n between the reduction of traffic and the increase in severe speeding and speeding complaints,” Valdes said.

Converting the tollbooth at the causeway entrance into an automated Sunpass drive-through also sped up traffic. “With the toll takers, everybody had to stop and pay and it created a slowdown effect,” Press said. “Now it is chaotic and the traffic pours through onto a straightaw­ay with no interrupti­on until you get to the MAST Academy stoplight.”

Howard Srebnick, a Miami attorney who has been riding with Marks in a group of 12 every morning for 15 years, estimates that the number of cyclists on the Rickenback­er has tripled in the past year.

“You’ve got hundreds and hundreds of cyclists out there every morning and thousands on the weekends with the same narrow bike lane and nobody slowing down to accommodat­e them,” Srebnick said. “In fact, they’ve painted a second white line on the side of the bike lane, narrowing it by another foot.

“The Rickenback­er has become a recreation destinatio­n and not just for cyclists. People come from Aventura and Kendall to the most beautiful recreation area in the county, with water views on both sides. It’s still the best place to ride because there are not many places you can go for a steady, challengin­g, scenic bike ride.”

Srebnick has witnessed numerous accidents over the years and he’s also been on the scene for all five fatalities that have occurred along the road to Key Biscayne since 2006. All took place in the early morning, when many serious cyclists ride to the key but also when some people are driving home after a night of partying and drinking. In the most recent incident, on June

28, 2020, one cyclist was killed and his riding partner was injured when a Miami-Dade police cruiser collided head-on with the pair as they were riding back to the causeway on Arthur Lamb Road on Virginia Key.

: “It’s long past time to recognize that this is a road that goes through a large park, past beaches, tourist spots, schools and into a residentia­l community that leads to a state park,” Srebnick said. “It’s not a highway.”

He advocates lowering the speed limit, which is 45 mph on most of the causeway and 40 mph on Crandon Boulevard, to a uniform speed of 30 to 35 mph.

“That would only add two minutes’ driving time between the tollbooth and the village,” he said. “It would improve everyone’s quality of life.”

The causeway was originally designed to take a circuitous route through Crandon Park with bay vistas, but real estate developers wanted a more direct path and engineers built it to move traffic quickly and efficientl­y, said Key Biscayne Mayor Mike Davey.

“It needs to be totally redesigned to make it more bicycle- and pedestrian­friendly,” Davey said.

“We’ve got 13,000 residents within 1.1 square miles and more visitors and traffic than we’ve ever had. We’ve got high school kids speeding and people driving recklessly to and from the key. Yes, we want to maintain people’s ability to get out here and residents’ ability to get to work and the mainland, but we also need to safeguard those who use the road for recreation, which includes a lot of our residents.”

On weekday mornings, Marks encounters young drivers late for school racing to the mainland and a chokepoint at MAST Academy, where there is no school speed zone. Some parents who don’t want to wait in the dropoff line pull pell-mell into and out of the bike lane to drop off their kids.

“These are parents who feel they can ignore the rules and they are setting a careless example for the next generation of drivers,” Marks said.

While cyclists are struck and killed in other areas of the county — Miami-Dade consistent­ly ranks among the five worst metro areas in the nation in bike-fatality rates — the Key Biscayne corridor is the biggest draw in the region for cyclists and triathlete­s. Many of them have urged a redesign for years.

The Z Plan created by Miami architect Bernard Zyscovich, would reduce the Rickenback­er from its occasional three-lane sections to a consistent two lanes and devote the extra space in each direction to a separated bikeway. The plan, drawn up years ago but never acted on, also envisions a partly elevated cycle-track that would connect the mainland to the causeway and a new 20-acre park on Virginia Key by shifting the roadway north.

“The Z Plan would be majestic and it would change the way people drive,” Press said. “I’ve driven the Rickenback­er for 16 years as a Key Biscayne cop and I drove the MacArthur Causeway for 30 years as a Miami Beach cop and neither was designed to handle the volume of vehicles we see today. The difference on the Rickenback­er is the amount of pedestrian and cycling traffic.

In lieu of the Z Plan, which is still in the conceptual stages, or other funding for design changes, police say a more immediate solution is beefed up enforcemen­t. While Key Biscayne has reduced its patrols along the Rickenback­er and Crandon Boulevard due to higher staffing demands within the village, the Miami and Miami-Dade police department­s intend to operate more traffic details in response to complaints.

The county set up recent checkpoint­s on five dates in December and January, resulting in two arrests, 67 moving violations, 64 written warnings, one impounded vehicle and one weapon seizure, said Miami-Dade Det. Alvaro Zabaleta.

“There’s a perception that we don’t enforce speed limits or write tickets, but we are out there trying to deter speeders,” said Zabaleta, citing a total of 3,291 citations and warnings on the Rickenback­er in 2019. “A lot of these traffic initiative­s do not produce a lot of citations because of social media apps that work against us by warning drivers about police presence. They know we are there, we lose the element of surprise, they slow down. But we are determined to work these details whenever our personnel needs allow it.”

Valdes, the Miami traffic enforcemen­t commander, said more traffic lights between the causeway entrance and MAST would force drivers to slow down. “That’s the longest stretch in the city without a traffic device,” he said.

Meanwhile, Valdes said the city plans to add up to four officers to its current motorcycle traffic enforcemen­t unit of 24 officers.

The department is also devoting a $232,500 grant from the Florida Department of Transporta­tion to a “Speeding and Aggressive Driving Saturation Patrol Project” for the purchase of additional radar guns and allocation of additional training and overtime hours, Valdes said.

“I can assure the public that we hear you and the Rickenback­er will be one of our areas of focus,” he said. “The city recognizes the problem and is really trying to crack down, get more radar details out there.”

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Lee Marks rides the Rickenback­er Causeway nearly every day.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Lee Marks rides the Rickenback­er Causeway nearly every day.
 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? A cyclist in the bike lane travels along the William Powell Bridge between Miami and Key Biscayne.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com A cyclist in the bike lane travels along the William Powell Bridge between Miami and Key Biscayne.

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