San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

RESIDENTS PROPOSE SIGNAL FOR NEAR-MISS INTERSECTI­ON

- BY KAREN BILLING Billing writes for the U-T Community Press.

A group of residents came before the Carmel Valley Community Planning board last month to request a new traffic signal for Carmel Country Road and Derrydown Way. The item will be on the agenda for considerat­ion at the board’s Feb. 23 meeting.

Derrydown Way is one of the only streets on the long sloping Carmel Country Road without a stop light — the adjacent Craven Ridge Way and Stone Haven Way within a little over a half-mile stretch have each had lights installed within the last 10 years.

Currently, there’s a fourway stop at the Derrydown intersecti­on and neighbors said there have been many near misses and multiple times a week someone blows through the stop sign.

Resident Mark Goldberg said he first requested that the city of San Diego take a look at a potential traffic light for the intersecti­on about two years ago and then again recently.

The city considered traffic patterns and accident history and determined that a light was not warranted, prompting the alternativ­e process.

“We want to go back to the city to revisit the applicatio­n for the traffic light and would like the support of this community group,” Goldberg said at the board’s Jan. 26 meeting.

The city’s study showed that there had been one accident at the intersecti­on in five years but Goldberg didn’t believe that to be true — he lives on the corner and has personally gone out to assist in three accidents. So many neighbors talk of near misses at the intersecti­on that a San Diego police officer frequently sits there and tickets drivers: “While appreciate­d, that cannot be a good use of police resources,” Goldberg said.

The majority of the board supported considerin­g the traffic signal at its next meeting, the sole hold-out being board member Vic Wintriss, who is generally opposed to traffic lights as they are expensive and create pollution.

Board member Jeffrey Heden said it would be helpful for the board to understand the criteria the city uses for a stoplight, so that the board can be consistent in decisions and hopefully have a successful installati­on. Cost and funding will also need to be considered.

“I think anything that is going to improve public safety in a community is worth doing,” said board member Michelle Strauss. “This is a major road with lots of traffic and I think it’s worth looking into studying, adding our support to the community.”

Three seats up for election on planning board

The planning board will hold its elections March 23, hoping to fill three board vacancies. The representa­tive seats up for election are Carmel Valley Area 3 (now vacant as Steve Davison has announced his resignatio­n), Area 4 (Debbie Lokanc), Area 6 (vacant), Developer seat, (Allen Kashani), Pacific Highlands Ranch Property owner seat (Daniel Curran) and Pacific Highlands Ranch District 2 (vacant).

The board meets on the fourth Thursday of the month (on Zoom. Terms are for two years. If anyone is interested in running or learning more about the seats, email Chair Frisco White at white@wwarch.com.

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