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Project News
From
the Ocala Star Banner
Article published Mar 17, 2004
Time to move forward
with SR 40
Our Opinion
It's time to stop talking about improving State Road 40 and start moving forward
to make this heavily traveled highway safer for the motoring public - and yes,
the bears and the deer, too.
For a decade, maybe more, state and local governments have been discussing
this road. But a long, complicated path must be followed and we haven't even
begun to move in that direction.
We've all heard the bureaucratic excuses hundreds of times by now: Traffic
surveys have to be done, a need assessment must be documented, and, of course,
there must be an environmental study to ensure rare, sky-blue-pink Antarctic
curly-toed orchids and all-but-extinct ring-tailed night screechers are no
closer than 1,000 miles from this corridor.
OK, so we've exaggerated, but let's get real. The need to add lanes to this
highway and improve safety has been apparent for so many years that it's close
to negligent on the part of the federal government, the Florida Department
of Transportation and local officials that they haven't been more aggressive
on this issue.
Worse, there's still so much to accomplish that unless state or federal officials
soon step up to the plate and get on with it, 20, maybe 30 years will have
passed before improvements that are actually needed today become a reality.
It is admirable that a number of environmentally minded residents are concerned
about the affect a high-speed, four-lane highway will have on wildlife in the
Ocala National Forest. So are we, and we hope everyone is concerned about Florida's
wildlife population. But there are people dying, too, on State Road 40, and
being critically injured as well.
Over a three-year time period, 2000-03 there were 330 crashes on this road
and 15 deaths. The year 2004 doesn't show any hope for improvement. Three people
have already died on SR 40 in the first three months of the year.
Even before consultants took an emergency look at that section of SR 40 between
Silver Springs and the Marion/Lake county line, it was readily apparent that
a traffic light should be erected at the intersection of State Roads 40 and
19. The same is true of road signs. More are needed. It didn't require a consultant
to reach such common-sense conclusions.
Members of the Ocala/Marion County Metropolitan Planning Organization need
to press the DOT to expedite these relatively small improvements because they
do have the potential of helping reduce the number of crashes.
But nothing short of a four-lane highway, with underpasses for wildlife crossings
and fencing to keep animals off the road, will help slow the human carnage.
The state determined years ago that SR 40 should be four-laned and become part
of an intrastate system of roads that carry traffic more safely and provide
escape routes for Florida's coastal populations in advance of hurricanes or
other major storms.
Currently, there is no continuous four-lane east-west corridor between Interstate
10 in north Florida and Interstate 4 in central Florida. It is a visible and
worrisome gap in the ability to quickly move large amounts of vehicles out
of a threatened area.
Everyone recognizes the problem: too many vehicles and too few traffic lanes,
traffic control devices and signs.
Talk is cheap. Lives and limbs are priceless
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