Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
police-crosswalk-crackdown
Full Text:
Police Mount A Crosswalk Crackdown On Main St.
(with photos)
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
A detail of town police officers reported to Main Street the morning of
October 23 where they focused on motorists' violations of the state law
requiring drivers to yield to pedestrians who are in crosswalks.
Plainclothes Officer Joseph Joudy repeatedly crossed Main Street in the
crosswalk near Edmond Town Hall, testing whether oncoming motorists would
yield for him.
Many motorists stopped.
Some did not.
Those who didn't stop were pursued by officers waiting in marked cars to
enforce the crosswalk violations.
Although traffic signs along Main Street state motorists must yield to
pedestrians who are in crosswalks, the road is so wide near Town Hall, it is
thought that motorists may not see those signs when approaching the congested
area.
Police handed out about 10 tickets to motorists violating the crosswalk law.
Motorists who received the $78 tickets can either mail in the fine to court,
or appeal the charge.
The stepped-up enforcement program comes following the recent death of Wolcott
Toll.
Mr Toll, 78, of 4 Pocono Road, Hawleyville, while walking across Main Street
at about 9:10 pm October 15, was struck by a 1993 Cadillac DeVille, driven
northbound by motorist Allen Storch, 77, of 39 The Boulevard. Police have said
Mr Toll was not in the crosswalk while crossing the street.
Mr Toll received extensive injuries and died the next morning in Danbury
Hospital. The accident is under investigation.
Police Chief James E. Lysaght, Jr, said Wednesday he will seek Police
Commission support for a series of recommendations intended to promote
pedestrian safety along Main Street between Edmond Town Hall and Booth
Library. The Police Commission is the town's traffic authority.
Chief Lysaght said he will recommend that certain parallel parking
restrictions be created on both sides of Main Street to improve pedestrian
safety.
Also, Chief Lysaght said he will seek Police Commission approval to have
highly visible, weighted, portable plastic barrels placed in the center of
Main Street near Edmond Town Hall and Booth Library. The barrels would bear
signs explaining that motorists must yield to pedestrians in crosswalks.
Drivers and pedestrians must share the responsibilities of traffic safety, he
said. While motorists must yield to pedestrians in crosswalks, pedestrians
must use crosswalks with common sense and care, he said.
Any concerns about the aesthetics of high-visibility safety barrels in the
Borough Historic District are outweighed by traffic safety concerns, Chief
Lysaght said.
Traffic accidents are the most serious physical dangers that many residents
face, he said.