Miami-Dade traffic needs synchronized lights
Miami-Dade residents have endured seemingly endless traffic gridlock and frustration for many years. Synchronized traffic lights could help but that fix has been elusive. And now there’s another hitch.
First promised to voters over 20 years ago as part of the county’s controversial half-percent transportation sales tax, computerized “smart lights” were supposed to cut down on congestion. But as commuters can no doubt attest, that hasn’t happened.
This week, the county revealed that Yunex Traffic, the company hired in 2020, has fallen behind in its work on the county’s 2,900 traffic intersections. It turns out Yunex has installed smart controllers at just 790 intersections — far from the target of 1,500 by the spring of 2024, according to a memo from Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava. The company failed to deliver needed software, too.
On Tuesday, the county said it would terminate its contract with Yunex. A new company will be coming in to finish the project, which — assuming that company actually does the job — is good news for drivers.
Levine Cava, facing an election this year, appears to be on a mission to address at least some longignored issues in the county. Last month, she began eviction proceedings with the company that runs Miami Seaquarium. Prior to that, she ended her support for the controversial Miami Wilds project near Zoo Miami. And she has proposed a $2.5 billion general obligation bond to pay for sewers, housing and resiliency efforts.
Pushing forward on smart traffic signals is another long-delayed issue that desperately needs fixing. Yunex won the $160 million contract four years ago; the county has already paid out $18 million.
Commissioners agreed this week to have Levine Cava negotiate a deal with a replacement company, Horsepower Electric, the Hialeah company that finished second in the bidding contest for the county contract in 2020. The estimated cost for the new deal with Horsepower — plus the software — is about $175 million. The county estimated the system and software could be installed within 18 months after approval later this year.
Rather than continuing down the same unproductive path, the mayor told commissioners she was willing to start fresh if that’s what it takes to tackle one of the most persistent problems in the county: our misery-inducing traffic.
Glad to hear it. Even though we talk a lot about Interstate 95 and the Palmetto Expressway traffic, it’s not just highways that are problem. As the Miami Herald reported, a 2023 county report found that 22% of our intersections had faulty mechanisms that are supposed to trigger an accelerated green light when a vehicle pulls up.
PROMISES
Taxpayers expect and deserve to see their transportation dollars properly spent to ease the daily struggle of driving in Miami. “It’s about time we start delivering for our residents,” Commissioner Kevin Cabrera said ahead of the vote. “It’s about time we start fixing things instead of talking about them.”
Getting the smart traffic light system right is crucial to Miami-Dade’s quality of life and economic competitiveness.
We know more traffic improvements are included in the SMART plan. Remember the SMART Plan? That’s the plan adopted in 2016 by the Miami-Dade Transportation
Planning Organization’s governing board to help alleviate our traffic problems. We’re still waiting.
That, too, was an election-time promise, unveiled during Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez’s reelection campaign.
But here we are in 2024. If the county succeeds — finally — in getting the smart light system functioning, it will be a major milestone for this community. Our traffic has been bad for so long, it would feel like a minor miracle if it actually improved.
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