Scientology
Fort Harrison Avenue may take on new role
Shifting Alt. U.S. 19 to Myrtle Avenue,
however, would require cooperation from
both the state and federal governments.
By CHRISTINA HEADRICK
St. Petersburg Times, published April 15, 2000
CLEARWATER -- City engineers want to redirect car and
truck traffic moving through downtown to an improved
Myrtle Avenue, shifting the cars away from Fort Harrison
Avenue, downtown's busy north-south route.
To do that, Clearwater officials asked the Florida
Department of Transportation this week to give the city
control of Fort Harrison and to move the state's designated
route for Alt. U.S. 19 to Myrtle.
If the state agrees, said City Manager Mike Roberto, it
'would change the whole character" of what the city could do
with Fort Harrison.
The city would love to reduce Fort Harrison to two lanes,
with a center turn lane, and beautify the road, Roberto said.
City officials also want to be able to shut down Fort Harrison
regularly to hold street festivals in the heart of downtown.
Roberto has discussed the idea privately with some
commissioners, who are supportive.
'I think it's a great idea," said Commissioner Ed Hart. 'But to
me, this is sort of long-range future planning, rather than
something that is on the horizon in the very near future."
Said Commissioner Bob Clark: 'The general concept I'm
very much in favor of, but I haven't seen any of these details."
But officials caution that there would need to be a lot more
public debate, as well as tough negotiations with the state,
before the ideas could become reality. The city's plans might
even be a long shot, officials said.
'It's a long uphill climb, I have a feeling," said City Engineer
Mike Quillen. 'So any configuration we suggest now is still
just talk."
In addition to negotiating with the state DOT officials, the city
also will have to work with federal transportation planners to
reroute traffic, Quillen said. The state oversees the upkeep of
Alt. U.S. 19, but the road is part of the federal highway
system.
City officials wish they could make the road changes when
the state resurfaces Fort Harrison in 2002, Quillen said.
But state officials already are concerned that the city wants
northbound drivers on the proposed Alt. U.S. 19 route to
take a harsh right turn on Lakeview Road to get to Myrtle
Avenue, said DOT spokesman Ron Winter.
'We'll have to look at a lot of things about what kind of street
we'd be moving to," Winter said. 'What condition is it in.
Myrtle is a more residential street. . . . This isn't
unprecedented, but it will have to be reviewed."
The city has been toying with changing traffic flow on Fort
Harrison and Myrtle for several years. County traffic counts
in 1999 showed about 12,000 cars travel Myrtle daily,
compared with 17,600 to 25,500 cars moving along Fort
Harrison.
The segment of Alt. U.S. 19 that would be reassigned to
Myrtle would run from Lakeview Road north to a point
where Myrtle and Fort Harrison converge.
Previous plans suggested making Fort Harrison and Myrtle
into primarily one-way streets, with three lanes of traffic in
one direction and single lanes of traffic headed the opposite
way. That idea is dead, Quillen said, because of state road
rules.
From: Bob Minton <bob@minton.org>
Date: Sat, 15 Apr 2000 08:56:32 -0400
Organization: The Lisa McPherson Trust, 33 N. Fort Harrison Ave., Clearwater, Florida 33755 Telephone (727) 467-9335, Fax (727) 467-9345
Message-ID: <hkpgfsopp1dm6o63jjjjr20s8914sg9gh2@4ax.com>