Turn Left onto Main Street Downtown, Risk a Ticket
Police are enforcing the no left turn from Millburn Avenue onto Main Street, which is part of the traffic changes due to the bridge project.
A driver attempted to make a left-hand turn from Millburn Avenue onto Main Street Thursday morning, but he stopped to allow pedestrians to cross the street. A driver stopped for the light on Main Street waved to him to say not to make the left hand turn. But he turned. That's when he was stopped for a ticket from police stationed there.
Drivers aren't supposed to be making left turns onto Main Street from Millburn Avenue as part of the new traffic pattern for the downtown bridge construction project. There are signs posted in the area about the traffic change.
Police, though, have received a number of complaints from pedestrians and drivers about people making the left turn, said Police Capt. Greg Weber. It's part of why officers were out on Thursday enforcing the no left turn.
Two officers were standing along Main Street in front of Martini Bistro & Bar and Pizzeta watching the traffic. When someone turned left from Millburn Avenue, they stepped into the road, pointing for the driver to pull into the right lane and stop. They then issued the driver a ticket for making the illegal turn. The ticket carries an $85 fine and two points on the person's license.
There were light cycles when no one made the left turn in the late morning, but they were stopping people steadily. At times they had three, four or five cars lined up on Main Street. Weber said he didn't have official totals on how many tickets were issued Thursday, but the officers at the scene said they issued around 50 tickets during a two-hour period around 8-9 a.m. on Thursday.
In addition to the complaints, Weber said police picked up the enforcement because school is opening in two weeks. "We're anticipating more vehicle and pedestrian traffic," he said. "We're trying to educate drivers... The quicker people comply, the quicker we can stop handing out tickets... We want a smooth transition (to the school year)."
In addition, Weber said, police are working with school officials to distribute information about traffic flow and pedestrian access throughout downtown. School officials also plan to route buses around downtown where they can.
County officials are overseeing a project to demolish and replace the Millburn Avenue bridge over the west branch of the Rahway River. The bridge is just east of Main Street. The project is expected to take about eight months to complete, and there have been traffic pattern and pedestrian access changes due to it.
In addition to the no left turn onto Main Street from Millburn Avenue, the right lane is for turns onto Main Street only. Two lanes of traffic are to be open at all times. The no left turn is expected to be in place for the first phase of construction. On-street parking also has been removed in the vicinity. The parking lot adjacent to the Millburn Deli and Basilico remains open. The sidewalk on the south side of the street in the area is closed for the first phase.
Damian
1:23 pm on Thursday, August 26, 2010
It's about time, drivers have been ignoring the signs. Ticketing people parking or idling on Millburn Avenue west of Main Street should also commence.
Acton
2:24 pm on Thursday, August 26, 2010
They have done a poor job in the community of publicizing this change. People should have been issued warnings, not tickets.
M.Moore
2:30 pm on Thursday, August 26, 2010
There are signs everywhere....on the side of the road, on the overhead light and there was a portable sign before the construction began. People are ignoring the signs and they should be ticketed.
Damian
2:31 pm on Thursday, August 26, 2010
There are more than several signs leading up to the intersection; I guess drivers are too busy chatting on their cell phones to notice. It's the 'I'm too important to obey the rules' sense of entitlement that's all too prevalent around here. Same goes for the people parking in the clearly marked 'no parking' spots. God forbid someone has to walk a block away to get their latte at Starbucks.
GlenwoodGuy
11:34 pm on Friday, August 27, 2010
A couple of weeks ago the signage was pretty questionable as there was only the portable sign and drivers tended to make a left onto Main Street. They have added some new signs but are they effective and drivers are ignoring the new traffic pattern or is the signage placed poorly?
As a resident that works and walks around downtown a lot, I believe there is a bigger problem isn't people making a left on Main Street but drivers who ignore crosswalks, speed up to run lights at Rector & Main, Lackawanna & Millburn Ave and increase their speed significantly when passing Lackawanna and the Post Office. These drivers are a real danger--not those that make a left turn, which is not illegal as part of new traffic patterns for temporary construction.
Where are the police for these dangerous driving habits? Is it going to take an accident with one of our children for the police to enforce speed limits and crosswalk rules?