Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

More barriers coming for 241 toll road to prevent off-roading

- — Jeff Arnold, Irvine — Jim Kistinger, Huntington Beach To ask Honk questions, reach him at honk@ocregister.com. He only answers those that are published. To see Honk online: ocregister.com/tag/honk. Twitter: @OCRegister­Honk

QHi, Honk: A recent column addressed the excellent idea of the channelize­rs on the northbound 241 toll road just before the 91 Freeway. However, when the lanes are moving freely, like in the early mornings, I have seen idiots end up in the wrong lanes and watched them slow to a crawl, creating major danger, then cutting over the dirt median at the north end of the channelize­rs to the other side. Can the toll roads please consider k-rails in the dirt divider to stop this dangerous practice?

A

Honk's dad told a very young Honk: If you are about to miss an exit, ramp or street, just miss it and circle back — too many bad things can happen if you try to squeeze into a lane at the last moment.

And that stretch, as you know, Jeff, has had problems for years with people lane jumping. On the northbound 241, four lanes peel off for the 91: a pair for those who are westbound, and another two for the eastbound. The eastbound lanes can get quite busy at times, so some selfish drivers would take the westbound lanes and slide in late to the congested eastbound ones, cutting off courteous, patient motorists.

In 2016, double-white lines were added, but that wasn't enough. Early last year, those channelize­rs — poles that bend if hit — were installed for a mile to stop that lane jumping.

It sounds like more barriers are needed to keep those not even in the transition lanes at all from going off-road to make the 91 from the 241.

The agency that manages the 241 and some other Orange County toll roads is aware of the problem, said Eugene Fields, a spokesman for the Transporta­tion Corridor Agencies.

“In coordinati­on with Caltrans, TCA plans to extend the channelize­rs through this area to help prevent vehicles from crossing over, and we are currently working with Caltrans and the environmen­tal-resource agencies on the schedule of the installati­on.”

QHi, Honk. Can you find out why work has been stopped on the overpass of the 22 and 405 freeways that connects Bolsa Chica Road and Valley View Street? There hasn't been any work for months. I'm waiting for the whole project there to be completed.

AThe latest work on the overpass began in late 2018 and was scheduled in phases so it could remain open for traffic, said Megan Abba, a spokeswoma­n for the Orange County Transporta­tion Agency. Among the benefits that are going in there: More lanes.

A lot of the improvemen­ts were to take place beneath and next to the overpass, including grading, slope work and the relocation of gas lines by the Southern California Gas Co., Abba said. A guardrail, paving and striping need to be completed, too, and in a certain order for efficiency for the entire work there.

“We don't have a more specific time line of when this work will be completed,” Abba said.

But the entire 16-mile project that includes this overpass — widening the 405 between the 73 and the 605 freeways, which carries a $2.2 billion price tag — is scheduled for completion late this year.

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