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  • Clarksville crosswalk debate comes to confusing crossroad
    By: Emily Craighead, Staff Writer 11/25/2005
    Staff photo by Mark Czajkowski
    A resident of Avalon Watch makes a dash across Clarksville Road from the Village Square shopping center, a location identified by a task force as one of the most dangerous crossings.
    A dangerous crossing but disagreement on how to solve the problem

       WEST WINDSOR — By the time NJ Transit Bus 976 from the Princeton Junction at West Windsor train station makes its 6:16 p.m. stop at Avalon Watch, a steady stream of rush-hour traffic is speeding along Clarksville Road at about 50 miles per hour.
       Three people stepped off the bus into the pouring rain Monday night and stood on the westbound side of the road, nearly invisible in the darkness, waiting for a break in traffic to dash across the street into the housing complex.
       "In the summer, it's daylight, it's still OK, but in the winter, it's a worse situation," said Kiran Patel, once he made it safely across Clarksville Road. He has lived at Avalon Watch since July, and makes the dangerous crossing every night when he comes home from work.
       Members of the Mayor's Bicycle and Pedestrian Task Force identified this location as one of the most dangerous in the township. But although Mayor Shing-Fu Hsueh said he supports installing a crosswalk at this location, the township has not received county approval to put a crosswalk across Clarksville Road, a county road.
       Questions about the need for a crosswalk across Clarksville Road were raised at a recent Planning Board meeting, where the board approved amendments to the circulation elements of the Master Plan, affirming the township's commitment to build a safe pedestrian-and-bikeway system. The recent circulation-plan amendments promote the idea of integrating Clarksville Road into the township's network of bike-and pedestrian-friendly paths and roadways.
       "I think the interested parties need to come together and find a solution," said Ken Carlson, former co-chairman of the Mayor's Bicycle and Pedestrian Task Force. "I don't want a fatality to be the reason for doing something at Avalon Watch."
       Mr. Patel and many of his neighbors cross the busy road not only to take the bus, but also to get to the Village Square shopping center to eat out, do some shopping or take their children to the daycare center.
       However, in addition to being subject to county approval, the crosswalk — which would be a mid-block crosswalk, meaning it is not located at an intersection — requires special state Department of Transportation approval. For now at least, the township's hands are tied.
       "Unfortunately, even if we have the money, we cannot do it," Mayor Hsueh said.
       Back in 1991, when the Village Square application was first submitted to the township, Planning Board members recognized the need for a sidewalk. The approval granted in December 1991 stipulated that the developer must put a crosswalk between the shopping center and the housing development, then known as Steward's Watch.
       However, Mercer County traffic engineers concluded, based on traffic studies, that the traffic conditions did not warrant a crosswalk, and the Planning Board application had to be amended in 1995.
       The county said no to a crosswalk then — but it might not say no today.
       "I wouldn't rule it out," Mercer County traffic engineer George Fallat said. "If people are using it and crossing at that location, there needs to be protection."
       At the same time, he pointed out that it is important to recognize that the speed limit is 45 miles per hour, and simply putting in a crosswalk won't necessarily solve a dangerous situation.
       "If motorists are unable to see and unable to stop, you're actually making it less safe," he said, by giving pedestrians a false sense of security. He said he has not seen a recent, formal request from the township asking the county to review the possibility of adding a crosswalk.
       Mayor Hsueh says he will not give up on the crosswalk. "We have already requested this many times, and we are going to continue to request it," the mayor said.
       Meanwhile, the Mayor's Bicycle and Pedestrian Task Force has been disbanded, following the conclusion of its work on the circulation plan amendments. But members say they are planning to regroup independent of the township, to continue to identify and remedy dangerous crossings throughout West Windsor.
       "You look around town and you want people to feel comfortable walking across the street to buy a gallon of milk," Mr. Carlson said.

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