Abingdon and Barter Theater is coming together to make crosswalk improvements

The town of Abingdon and the Barter Theater are coming together to make major safety improvements.

In 2019, two people were hit while crossing the crosswalk in front of the Barter. And the Barter Theater was killed just before Christmas.

“A lot of people come to our theater every day and a lot of people cross that crosswalk,” said Barter managing director, Ross Egan.

Egan said they have all come together to brainstorm ideas to fix it.

“I’m starving the town is taking action in conjunction with Barter to make sure it’s as safe as we possibly can have it,” he said.

Public Works Director John Dew said they were taking a fresh look at what they could do to improve the crosswalk.

“We’re taking a look at lighting, sidewalk visibility, sight distance and clarity from the pedestrians,” said Dew.

The town has been added reflective paint and cleared out landscaping that was blocking the view.

“We’ve always kept it at a low height, but given the two incidents we’ve decided to clear that out,” he said.

Dew said in the future they are going to add reflective tape to the signposts and possibly add more lighting.

“We’re open to listening to any ideas on how to improve it because obviously, we don’t want any other incidents as we’ve had,” he said.

Carleton Police awarded a grant for new safety equipment

The AAA Auto Club has helped provide high-visibility gear such as vests and traffic cones to the village shelves.

Throughout his law enforcement career, Officer Gene Taylor was struck by vehicles three times while directing traffic.

Although he was wearing a safety vest, Taylor, a part-time patrol officer for the Carleton Village Police Department, said older reflective equipment sometimes struggled with the darkness in rural communities.

“I was on dark roads, and all I had was a flashlight,” Taylor said. “Because of the oncoming traffic and headlights, they just want to see me. It was never serious because traffic was moving slow, but it could have been much worse.”

It was these types of preventable injuries that inspired the department to seek supplementary funds to purchase updated, high-visibility safety equipment to protect traffic officers and other first-responders while on the highways.

The department’s vision was met Friday morning at the station when the American Automobile Association (AAA) formally presented the agency with a check for nearly $ 750 to purchase much-needed traffic incident management equipment, including high-visibility vests with reflective tapes, collapsible flashing traffic cones and traffic safety wands.

As part of the annual AAA Traffic Safety Grant, the department was selected among about a half dozen other police and fire agencies throughout the state seeking new safety equipment unavailable through existing financial resources. “With the equipment having a lot of past years, this is quite an improvement,” Taylor said.

“When we started, we all had our uniforms and a flashlight to direct traffic, but people would still see you. The reflective vests, wands, and cones will help protect our first responders.”

When applying for the grant, Taylor said he and Chief Roy Johnson specifically proposed purchasing high-visibility equipment because of the darkness in both the village and throughout Ash Township.

When directing traffic, the department targets each of its officers to be equipped with high visibility safety vests and flashing traffic wand, along with bright traffic cones to alert motorists and protect other first responders in the area.

The total cost for the vests, wands, and cones came to $ 731.15, purchased in full by AAA. Now every Carleton police vehicle is equipped with at least one adjustable news and wand, as well as a tote filled with portable, collapsible traffic cones.

Any time the officers, including three full-time officers and up to eight part-timers, are on the roadways – excluding traffic stops – they may be required to wear the vests, Taylor said.

The hope, he added, is that the equipment will not only reduce but prevent injury, while also helping the department to exceed safety standards set by the Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).

“This is exactly what we want these grants to do, as far as saving lives,” said Adrienne Woodland, AAA spokesperson.

The Traffic Safety Grant program has been providing funding for potentially life-saving equipment throughout the state since 1993, Woodland said.

Since its conception, the program has provided nearly $ 1.5 million worth of traffic safety equipment donated to agencies through Michigan.

Officials say the grant program is part of the AAA history of traffic safety advocacy efforts.

Safety Vest Decorations Change Conversations With School Bus Passengers

The “West Fairy” arrived recently at the Brewster Central School District in New York. Today, her fashion efforts are not only improving transportation department morale but also encouraging more positive interactions with students who ride the school buses.

Five years ago, the district decided for all drivers or any transportation staff members in the school bus yard to wear yellow reflective vests. Mary Smith, supervisor of transportation for the district, said the vests help staff be easily visible to motorists, especially in the early morning, late afternoon or evening.

However, vests quickly became a fashion faux pas among drivers. Smith explained that when she became a supervisor in 2017, the drivers felt more comfortable approaching her to complain about the news situation.

“I came from the driving population and moved up in my role here,” Smith explained. “So, I guess they thought I would have a sympathetic ear. They started asking, ‘Do we have to wear it?’ I certainly want to bypass safety for them, even though they felt uncomfortable wearing it.”

Smith continued, “They started asking,‘ Do we have to wear them while driving? Do we have to wear them when we go to the schools to use the restrooms? ‘Because they felt like it was a fashion faux pas. It matches their outfits, and they walk into that building with all the educators all dressed up nice, and as school bus driver Irene Farias said, they felt like a flag around the side of a highway.”

Farias was also tired of her hearing coworkers complaining about the vests and decided to do something about them. She used a fabric die-cutting machine to make items for her daughter’s wedding, and it soon became a hobby for her.

Farias said she was using the machine so much that the idea came to her to Cricut her news.

“I was listening to everyone complain about their vests, that they are ugly, they are annoying,” Farias said. “I went the opposite [way] because I am positive. I said I am going to embrace my news. I’m going to love my news and make it my own.”

Farias made decorations for her news first and the concept snowballed from there. Her coworkers started asking her to also decorate their vests. Now, Farias has a line of people waiting to be visited by “West Fairy.”

The vests range in style and decoration based on each person’s interests. She said people have asked for sports logos, Harry Potter themes, Disney characters and more.

“One of the women would rather be on the beach because she talks about the beach all the time,” Smith relayed. “Farias made me a shirt, not a news item that says, ‘I Made The Yard Great Again,’ because I’m the new supervisor. The old supervisor is gone, and morale has been lifted. Farias contributed to boosting morale.”

Farias noted that sometimes people would tell her what they want on their vests, while other times, she chooses the design based on their personalities and what they talk about.

“She’s surprised a few people with some vests. Someone retired and made a retired Superman news for them,” Smith explained. “I think a few birthdays gave her the news.”

“I decided that everybody should like their vests,” Farias said. “I’m going to have everyone who wants their vests done to put their name in, and twice a month I’m going to pick a name out and decorate their vests.”

While also boosting departmental morale, Smith said the idea is to give student riders another opportunity to interact positively with their drivers. Smith explained that students often only see the drivers as being disciplinary, and many young students think the drivers never actually leave the bus.

“Fun, but most importantly, it inspires the kids,” Smith said. “This idea kind of personalizes the drivers a little bit and invites a nice friendly conversation about ‘Hey, you like Micky Mouse.’ It makes the driverless intimidating, and the monitors as well, they wear the vests too. And a lot of the monitors have been hit with the fairy. ”

Farias said the idea is spreading, and other surrounding districts have reached out to her about decorating their vests. She said she was hoping her idea spreads even a farther, and expressed the hope that it could even be used as a safety campaign for the community.

“I want mine to say, ‘Red Means Stop,'” Smith added.

A day in the life of a crossing guard: crossing a precarious profession

Devin Way wakes up early, pulls on a fluorescent green safety jacket and grabs his stop sign – the armor of a crossing guard.

Three times a day, he stands at busy Halifax crosswalk and shuttles school children across four lanes of traffic.

The crossing guard has been yelled at, honked at, swiped by bumpers, and given the finger more times than he can count.

“I take that in what I do. But it is a precarious profession,” Way said after a recent morning shift.

“An epidemic of people being stuck in the crosswalks.”

Crossing guards are on the front lines of a protracted clash between cars and pedestrians, one that claims hundreds of victims across Atlantic Canada every year.

In 2019, Halifax Regional Police said 175 pedestrians were injured by vehicles, with four deaths. An additional 72 collisions involved vehicles and a bicycle, scooter or skateboard.

In St. John’s, there were 86 collisions in 2019 involving pedestrians, according to Service NL. So far in 2020, 14 pedestrians have been involved in collisions with vehicles in the Northeast Avalon region, the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary said.

The problem a police, government and community groups are trying to address.

Awareness campaigns across Atlantic Canada, like Heads Up Halifax, promote safer behavior on the roads.

A few streets in the region have been redesigned with speed bumps, raised crosswalks, narrower intersections, and reduced speed limits.

Still, vehicle-pedestrian collisions continue.

Visibility not the main factor

In Halifax, the majority occur in crosswalks with clear weather conditions and in daylight. The peak time for collisions is about 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. on weekdays – when crossing guards are at their posts.

Yet even crossing guards – with their neon reflective vests, stop sign and training – get hit.

In January, a Halifax crossing guard was injured when a two-vehicle collision sent one car careening off the road, striking the guard who was standing on the side. Last year, a crossing guard was hit by a vehicle in Clayton Park while helping pedestrians cross the road.

“Getting worse,” said Glenna Casavechia, president of the Halifax crossing guard union CUPE Local 4814.

“We’ve been a crossing guard for 25 years and still amazed at how fast people go without even paying attention.”

Situated near the airport, this Caldwell Road Elementary School is in Dartmouth. She’s been yelled at, hit, and has witnessed rear-enders and cars going up on the sidewalks to avoid crashes.

Still, she keeps donning her safety news and ferrying students across the road to help them stay safe and “make a little extra money for the grandchildren.”

Casavechia said the problem is a lack of enforcement.

“They don’t enforce the rules on the drivers,” she said. “We need permanent radar signs, we need to remind people of the fines are doubled in school zones and we need a lower speed limit.”

Crossing guard pay, safety clothing allowance

Eugene Holloway, a crossing guard since 1985, helps pedestrians cross the street at the intersection of Quinpool and Connaught on Tuesday, January 28, 2020. Eugene Holloway, a crossing guard since 1985, helps pedestrians cross the street at the intersection of Quinpool and Connaught on Tuesday, January 28, 2020. – Ryan Taplin

Despite the risks crossing guards take to help kids get to school safely, many make minimum wage or slightly more.

Halifax’s 150 crossing guards earn $ 14 an hour and receive a $ 175 clothing allowance upon hire. The majority work a 3.5-hour shift, although a handful only works two hours if no lunch-hour shift.

In Charlottetown, the city’s 22 crossing guards make the minimum wage or $ 12.25 per hour, and most work three hours a day.

The city of Moncton was unable to say how much its crossing guards make. It pays an hourly rate of $ 14.25 to $ 14.75 to Neptune Security, a private contractor who oversees the municipality’s 29 crossing guards. A spokesman for Neptune said he could not divulge the pay of its employees, as it goes against the company’s policies.

In St. John’s, 16 crossing guards are paid between $ 12.59 and $ 13.96 an hour, and receive a weekly travel allowance if they travel more than 1.6 km to the school.

While most crossing guards across the region receive a piece of reflective safety news and hand-held stop sign, John’s they are also provided with a whistle and rain suit.

Contributing factors

Students cross the street to attend Birchwood Intermediate School in Charlottetown in this file photo. – Alison Jenkins

“Drivers in St. John’s are faster and wilder than they used to be,” said Roger White, a geography professor at Memorial University.

“Gotten worse over the last 20 or 30 years and still not enforcing here.”

He said sidewalks are rarely adequately cleared, forcing pedestrians to walk into the street.

Daniel Fuller, the Canada Research Chair in Population Physical Activity at Memorial University, said roads need to be safer for everyone – including drivers.

“We need to focus the conversation away from just making pedestrians safer because then we get into this pedestrian versus driver argument,” he said.

“We need policies like Vision Zero that are going to make the roads safer for everyone.”

Vision Zero aims to improve road safety to eliminate deaths and serious injuries on the road. The idea is that by making the roads safer for the most vulnerable users – like school children and the crossing guards helping them – roads will also be safer for motorists.

Fuller said changing road design, particularly at intersections, and reducing speed limits are proven ways to improve road safety.

“Every time you add 10 km to the speed, you double the risk to the person being hit,” he said. “Violated an exponential curve.”

We are not opposed to change, but the traffic police have not suggested anything to us

The Ministry of Transport is ready to hold a debate on some of the changes that the new head of traffic police Tomas Lerch would like to push through. One such change could also affect the point system. Lerch is considering compulsory reflective clothing in the dark for pedestrians or confiscation of technical certificates on-site.

According to the Ministry of Transport, however, the police have not yet submitted any proposal for changes and the Ministry has not consulted on such a thing. However, it does not oppose the proposal.

“Some recommendations of the traffic police can be debated. Possible changes in sanctions for traffic offenses must be assessed with a view to not softening the current system and loosening discipline among drivers,” said ministry spokesman Tomas Gerold.

He hinted at Lerch’s talk to MF DNES on Monday about possible adjustments to the point system. “The system today says – twice and enough. And we say three times and enough, but the driver is punished on the spot. There is no need for community discussions and obstructions that are often written,” Lerch said.

In addition to adjusting the point system, the traffic police are also burning the condition of the fleet. The road is often returned to vehicles after total accidents. “If you buy a new car today, after a year you crash and get it repaired, and the repair is not done professionally, you don’t need a technical inspection for three years and your car is not only a threat to you,” says Lerch.

According to the Ministry’s spokesman, the ministry is ready to work closely with the traffic police in this case. “If legislation is to be made on this matter, it is necessary to set the measures so that they are unambiguous for both the driver and the traffic police,” Neřold said. It would be necessary, for example, to carefully define in which cases the police may drive the car off the road after an accident and require a new technical inspection, the spokesman said.

Lerch’s proposal for mandatory reflective material features on pedestrian wear in the dark will have less chance of enforcement. In the past, the Ministry of Transport has advised the Ministry of Transport to use reflective accessories in poor visibility. It is unrealistic to impose reflective elements on them.

More dogs are driven into traffic – this is how you can save their lives

Far more animals than so far lost their lives in traffic. Now insurance company calls to make the animals visible in traffic.

Animals that run freely can be extremely difficult to see in the dark for Danish motorists.

That is why the insurance company Agria Pet Insurance now calls for pet owners to make more of the animals visible in traffic – this could be by equipping them with reflectors and small lights to ensure that motorists may be able to slow down and avoid driving an animal death.

This is stated in a press release.

Violent rise

The call comes after the company can see a 60 percent increase in their injury statistics last year in the number of dogs driven into traffic.

At the same time, it is important to make sure that the reflexes are clean and working properly.

“Most reflexes have a short lifespan. They last for some years, after which they need to be replaced. One can make a quality check of his old reflexes by lighting them with a lamp at a distance of four meters. They need to be lit. Replace the reflectors that appear worn. With a good reflective material, we can save our four-legged friends from road accidents,” says Tine Antvorskov, director of Agria Animal Insurance.

Agria Animal Insurance states that a good reflex can be seen at least 125 meters away.

Their advice to the pet owners is as follows:

Combine reflections with a small lamp on the animal. It is smart in that the reflex becomes visible when it is hit by light, while the light will be visible when it is completely dark.

If your dog has a large coat, a reflective vest is the most visible type of reflection.

Remember that the reflective vest is only visible on the sides of the animal and thus not front and rear.

Use a dog line with reflectors in for the walks in the dark.

Cats thrive best with a reflex collar combined with a small lantern.

It is also important that you wear reflections on your clothes when you walk in the dark.

How to behave on the road, driving a motorcycle?

Hundreds of new motorcycles are registered annually at UBDD. At the same time, an increase in the number of cases of traffic accidents involving two-wheeled vehicles is also recorded (the figure is almost doubled every year).

The Central Internal Affairs Directorate of Tashkent shared some recommendations both for owners of “iron horses” and for other road users.

Motorcyclists, in comparison with other drivers, are at greater risk – they are more difficult to notice on the road because of the size, and in the event of an accident, the lack of a body gives increased trauma. Therefore, they need to have exceptional technical knowledge and driving skills. Motorcyclists can help drivers and other road users in different ways notice them on the road on time, including:

Put on a reflective jacket, reflective vest, and helmet in a bright color;

Use reflective elements;

Avoid blind spots of other vehicles,

When driving in the aisle, choose the optimal speed situation (including, do not slow down the movement in blind zones),

Apply high beam headlights during daylight hours,

Blink a stop signal before braking.

As for motorists, they must follow the rules of the road, since two-wheeled vehicles can be noticed by them too late.

The recommendations are as follows:

When changing lanes or entering a busy highway, make sure there are no motorbikes nearby. Motorcycles are small and therefore can easily be in the blind zone.

When following or near a motorcyclist, keep a distance that you can travel in 4 seconds. If a motorcyclist suddenly brakes or falls from a motorcycle into your lane, this distance will help to avoid hitting him.

Give the motorcycle the full width of the lane. Sharing one lane with him is unsafe.

Never try to overtake a motorcycle while on the same lane.

If possible, move to one side of the lane to provide the rider with enough space to overtake.

When planning a turn or a U-turn, check if there are any motorcyclists nearby and evaluate their speed.

Take a close look if there are any motorcyclists nearby before opening the door while in the traffic area or turning right.

Take into account road conditions such as potholes, gravel, wet or slippery road surfaces, connecting seams of road surfaces, level crossings and corrugated asphalt. For a motorcyclist, they are dangerous, so he can dramatically change the speed or direction of movement.

Did you know that the reflexes also go out of date?

Autumn means that it is dark in the early morning and evening. Also, there can be extra demanding driving conditions, with rain and wet roads that almost extinguish all light.

Under such conditions, it is of utmost importance that all pedestrians use reflexes.

Statistics from the Norwegian Public Roads Administration show that a third of pedestrian accidents occur in the dark. In the period 2005 to 2014, 40 percent of traffic accidents involving pedestrians occurred in the dark.

During the same period, statistics show that half of the pedestrians who died in road accidents did not use reflective vests.

It’s not just food that has the best before date. Reflections are also fresh and should be replaced more often than many people think. Bad reflexes can be dangerous to traffic, Tryg Forsikring believes.

“This is because you behave differently when you think you are protected from reflex. According to the road authorities, reflex has a life span of over three years. Reflections on children often get harsh momentum through play. And if you, as an adult, have the reflex in your pocket along with car keys, there is often so much scratching in the reflex that the effect deteriorates considerably. At our home we exchange reflexes every fall,” says Espen Opedal, manager of Tryg Forsikring.

Thursday, October 17 is National Reflection Day this year. The use of reflex reduces the risk of being hit in the dark by 85 percent. Even if you see the car, it is difficult for the motorist to see you if you are walking in the dark without reflex. The little lifeguard is cheap life insurance.

“If you walk along the road in the dark without reflex, you are first visible to the motorist at a distance of 25 meters. With reflex, you will be seen at 140 meters distance, with a dipped beam. A driver at 50 km / h thus has ten seconds instead of two seconds to respond. It can be the difference between life and death. Therefore, you should spend 15 seconds wearing one or more reflexes before going out in the dark,” says Opal, in a press release.

How do you check if the old reflex still works properly?

“All worn reflectors have a reduced effect, including integrated reflections in children’s and exercise clothes, which are often subject to wear through rough use, and which are washed frequently. To check if the reflex is still good, test in a dark room. Light the reflex with a flashlight and compare it with a new reflex. Those who reflect light poorly should be replaced,” says Opal.

Most accidents happen in cities when people cross the street. Lights from cars and shop windows compete for attention and make it difficult to see pedestrians without reflective materials.

Many people think that reflective tapes are not necessary when walking in areas with street lights. That’s wrong. When it is dark outside, it is difficult for the motorist to see you, even in street lighting. If it also rains, it is even harder to see you along the way.

Surveys conducted by Trygg Trafikk show that only 4 out of 10 adults use reflex. The worst adults are over 30 years of age. The best are children.

At night, on an empty road, traffic police wave me. And if you do not slow down?

An unlit night track with rare foci of civilization does not cause any desire to once again slow down and even more so get out of the car. There is no choice when the law requires it.

If I caught up with a DPS car, is it worth it to overtake?

The main document for the driver is SDA. Clause 6.11 establishes that “the request to stop the vehicle is made using a loud-speaking device or with a gesture of a hand aimed at the vehicle,” and the driver must stop at the place indicated to him.” There are no restrictions on the type of road and time of day. It is understood that the patrol works to ensure traffic safety, and if it stops in case of doubtful circumstances for the driver, there is a good reason.

Clause 1.2 of the SDA describes what the traffic controller should look like when serving. The presence of uniforms and/or a distinctive sign and equipment is mandatory. Regulators include police and military vehicle inspectors, road maintenance workers, duty officers at railway crossings and ferry crossings in the exercise of their duties, authorized persons from among the employees of transport security units.

As you can see, the list is quite extensive, and some of them have all the “distinctive” features except a reflective vest. Of course, you need to act on the situation. If a road worker is persistently waving at you, and behind him, you can see an ice rink standing across the road, it is worth fulfilling his requirements. But if a dubious person waves a rod on an empty road, standing near an ordinary car, this is a completely different matter.

You can look at the order of the Ministry of Internal Affairs No. 664, in other words – the rules of the traffic police. Paragraph 62 reports that “the place, time, forms and methods of monitoring traffic by employees are determined by the head of the traffic police unit”. Paragraph 65 already explicitly states that work at night is by no means forbidden: “In the dark and conditions of limited visibility, an employee must have a luminous wand (wand with retro-reflective material elements) and retro-reflective equipment.”

Verification is inevitable: which cars are most often stopped by traffic cops

Clause 84 of the same regulation lists 14 reasons for stopping a vehicle. Again, without reservation at the place and time of day. If “there is reason to believe,” a traffic inspector can stop you anywhere. It is stipulated that the stopping place should be selected taking into account the requirements of traffic rules. But it is possible to brake cars in forbidden places if traffic safety is ensured (for example, by the flashing lights of an official car).

If you still found the traffic cops to be potentially dangerous and ignored their demands, they can only pursue you on a patrol car with a special light and sound signals turned on (paragraph 96 of the regulations). You can watch in a personal car, but you can’t chase it.

The good old recommendation to go to the nearest stationary post is now completely useless due to the almost complete absence of these same posts. Faster and more logical in this case, turn into the nearest settlement with the police department.

Finally, we recall that under article 12.25.2 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation, failure to comply with the lawful requirement of a police officer to stop is punishable by a fine of 500-800 rubles.

Can traffic police fine for lack of a vest

“Should a reflective vest become a mandatory item in the baggage of the driver,” says DEITA.RU.

Explanations regarding vests should be started on December 12, 2017, when the government amended the traffic rules section, which regulates the duties of drivers by the new paragraph 2.3.4, which states that in the case of an emergency stop or accident in the city at night or in conditions limited visibility while on the roadway or curb, the driver must be dressed in a jacket, vest or wrap vest with stripes of retro-reflective material.

These amendments entered into force in March last year.

Thus, the mere absence of a vest in a car is not a violation and is not punishable by fines. Experts note that the reverse information that the fine still exists is artificially supported by sellers of these vests.

At the same time, close attention should be paid to the fact that a fine is provided for a driver leaving a car without a reflective vest with reflective tape, outside the city, at night or in conditions of limited visibility. In this case, indeed, such a driver will be fined 500 rubles.

But a fine of 1000 rubles is provided under the same conditions, but already in the event of an accident. If the driver responsible for the accident walks around the car without a vest, he will be fined.

In other words, it turns out that until the driver stopped at night in the forest and got out of the car without a vest, he did not violate anything. If he had to stop and he went out without a vest – then he will be fined, which will be doubled in case of an accident. So just in case, you need to have a vest in the car, but its absence is not necessary until the conditions specified above are met, it is not punishable by a fine.