Residents fight to slow neighborhood traffic
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A group of residents are preparing to take on City
Hall to get stop signals installed in their neighborhood.
Neighbors concerned about speeding drivers along Seapoint Avenue said
they’re ready to go to the City Council with their request for stop signs
or traffic lights at Seapoint and Doral Drive.
The request stems from a June 22 accident in which then-12-year-old
Trevor Schulte was struck by a car near Doral Drive while riding his bike
along Seapoint to his home in the Estates at Seacliff community. He spent
69 days in a hospital. Part of the time he was in a coma, and he suffered
10 broken bones, including three skull fractures.
“I think that if there was a stop sign there or something, the driver
who hit me would have been more cautious, instead of being distracted
trying to find a water bottle in his car,” Trevor said.
Running from Garfield Avenue to Pacific Coast Highway, Seapoint is
less than a mile long.During an Oct. 18 meeting, the city’s Public Works
Commission rejected a plan to install stop signs or a traffic signal at
Seapoint and Doral, where residents say traffic flows at life-threatening
speeds.
“We’ve seen cars driving down Seapoint, going between 50 and 70 mph,”
said Judy Schulte, Trevor’s mother. “The two children who almost died
there, those are the only numbers we care about.”
In addition to Schulte, Josh Haynes, 18, was injured by a speeding car
in May 1999.
“I love it when neighborhoods come together like this to get things
done, but I’m concerned that adding stop signs won’t control the
speeding,” said Phillip Smith, a public works commissioner.
A stop light, city officials added, would probably have more success,
but it would cost about $60,000 at the Seapoint-Dorsal intersection, and
there are higher priority streets. The Public Works Department is limited
to installing stoplights in up to three intersections a year.
This year, the city compiled a list of 29 intersections across the
city that need stoplights to control excess speed, congestion and other
traffic problems. The Seapoint-Dorsal intersection ranks near the bottom
of that list at No. 26.
However, for the past few months, the city has been working with
residents to resolve the issue. Speed limits have been lowered from 45 to
40 mph, restriping has narrowed lanes and radar enforcement has been more
frequent, Brohard added.
City officials said a stoplight could be installed sooner if the
county, which could build one in conjunction with a park planned to run
along Seapoint.
But Trevor, his mother and other residents say they plan to appeal the
commission’s decision and have collected more than 900 signatures in
support of stoplights and signs.
“I just wonder what they are waiting for,” Judy Schulte said. “I mean,
will it take a death to convince them we need something there?”
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