Posted Sep 6, 2020, 3:34 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Dec 2015
Posts: 15,608
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Not a fan.
Quote:
Concerns are being raised about the new 216th Street interchange in Langley following a deadly crash Friday morning.
Mark, who didn’t want his last name used, is a Lower Mainland commercial truck driver with more than 25 years of experience. He says he takes this route regularly and the crash isn’t surprising.
“I predicted this would happen yesterday. And today, lo and behold, first week of the change we’ve already got an accident,” he says. “This will repeatedly happen.”
He says the new 216th eastbound merge to Highway 1 is tricky because traffic is merging into fewer lanes.
Essentially, Mark says commercial trucks are instructed to stay in the right-hand lane, but as they travel on a downgrade to the 216th onramp, other vehicles merge ahead of them into the slow lane.
The lane then has to merge again.
“So what’s happening, is truckers can’t get into that lane because the vehicles that are in the new lane because of the expansion are not letting these trucks in,” Mark explains. “The risk is, these trucks are coming down a downgrade, they’re doing 80 (km/h), but you might as well be doing 120 when you weigh 100,000 pounds.”
For safety, speed, and consistency, Marks says commercial transport drivers try to stay in one lane
“This is a critical new infrastructure, [that cost] $61 million, and this merge is an epic failure.”
Mark takes issue with the HOV lane, which he says is likely causing distraction and confusion over which lane a driver is in.
“The 216th onramp should be like any other onramp where it’s just one car moving in, and then the traffic continues to flow. But when you’ve got cars coming from the right, and then that lane needs to merge again, and trucks have to come to dead stops, it’s not working.”
He says he has reached out to Drive BC on the matter, and he’s calling for the BC Trucking Association to look into the problem.
Marks says he’s concerned crashes will continue to happen if the merge stays the same.
According to the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure, it is aware of the situation and traffic operations team are on-scene observing operations.
“The ministry will conduct an internal review of the traffic management plan for the project to ensure it was being followed as required. As with any new project, the ministry will continue to monitor traffic operation during this effective period. We ask drivers for their patience as this is still an active project, and remind all travellers to follow traffic control signage,” a statement to NEWS 1130 reads.
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https://www.citynews1130.com/2020/09/04/highway-1-exchange-problems/
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