San Francisco Chronicle

West Portal status quo deplorable

- Reach the Chronicle editorial board with a letter to the editor at sfchronicl­e.com/submityour-opinion.

When the driver of an SUV hurtled at high speed into a bus shelter near the busy intersecti­on of West Portal Avenue and Ulloa Street in March, hitting and killing a family of four, it shook San Francisco. Cries for street safety reforms came from every direction, including the Chronicle editorial board.

Investigat­ions into the cause of the horrific incident are ongoing. So are calls for action to redesign the crash area to ensure that similar incidents of traffic violence can never happen again.

The San Francisco Municipal Transporta­tion Agency recently released a proposal for the bustling intersecti­on, which on any given day is host to buses, Muni trains, Muni inspector vehicles, private vehicles, pedestrian­s and cyclists.

The draft of a proposed reconfigur­ation of several streets around West Portal Station would limit the flow of private vehicle traffic in the intersecti­on, opening it up for pedestrian­s and transit vehicles to move through more safely. Private vehicles heading toward the station on Ulloa Street and West Portal Avenue would be forced to turn right, to head away from it. The design would stop cars from driving through the bustling intersecti­on.

Many of the suggestion­s seemed like common sense; it doesn’t take a traffic engineer to understand why allowing cars to make left turns in front of oncoming trains emerging from a tunnel near multiple busy transit stops is a bad idea — putting pedestrian­s in danger if drivers feel like they have to rush to avoid a collision.

But instead of the community coming together to agree on some of these basic safety upgrades in the wake of the tragedy, chaos ensued.

Some West Portal merchants, business owners and residents spoke against the plan, citing concerns that it would impact neighborho­od businesses by cutting parking spots and pushing traffic onto other, overburden­ed side streets where there are also safety concerns. They demanded the process slow down to include more community feedback.

Supervisor Myrna Melgar, who represents the West Portal neighborho­od, initially appeared ready to blaze forward in the face of this opposition. But SFMTA’s proposed safety upgrades are now on hiatus.

This weekend, a press release from Melgar announced the creation of the “Welcoming West Portal Committee,” a new group that wants to create a second, new traffic safety proposal.

“The proposed plan is over,” Deidre Von Rock, president of the West Portal Merchants Associatio­n, told the editorial board. “We’ll be starting fresh with actual data.”

This, however, would imply the SFMTA’s proposal for West Portal and Ulloa was rushed out from scratch. It wasn’t.

In 2019, the agency piloted changes to West Portal to speed up trains delayed by private vehicle traffic. Data was gathered to study its success. The latest plan drew from these efforts.

However, Von Rock and others say they want the city to look at West Portal and Ulloa, and four other intersecti­ons in the neighborho­od. They’d like to review the number of bus stops on Ulloa, study the traffic impact on four adjacent streets, and scrutinize the passenger loading and drop-off zones in the neighborho­od.

It’s a lot to figure out, and the more players there are involved the longer it could take.

That’s time we don’t have.

A few weeks ago, we had a definitive plan to improve an intersecti­on that is broadly viewed as dangerous, confusing and contentiou­s — and one that SFMTA Director of Transporta­tion Jeffrey Tumlin told the editorial board, “has been notably problemati­c since the tunnel opened in 1918.”

Now, we have no hard and fast plan, but we do have yet one more committee.

Is this new approach a delay tactic? Or will it lead to not just better designs, but more of them?

All the neighbors the editorial board talked to, on all sides of the debate, said they’d requested support for years from the SFMTA concerning dangerous areas in West Portal to little avail. In those conversati­ons, they highlighte­d other areas of the district that they believe deserve just as much attention as the one where the recent deadly crash occurred, which they felt had long been ignored. A five-way intersecti­on at Vicente and Wawona streets was one example.

New members of the Welcoming West Portal Committee, and Melgar, expressed hope that by launching a community-led process to redesign one intersecti­on, long-overdue attention could finally be brought to other problemati­c streets in the neighborho­od.

“We don’t want to stay in the 1950s,” Karen Tarantola, president of the Greater West Portal Neighborho­od Associatio­n, told the editorial board. “It would be great if we have discussion­s with the committee on how we can move forward.”

It’s true, perhaps this horrific collision could finally bring improved street safety not just to one intersecti­on in West Portal, but to several — so long as conflictin­g opinions on an approach don’t stymie progress indefinite­ly.

Calls for greater neighborho­od safety and calls for improving West Portal Station, however, don’t have to be mutually exclusive. Progress can be made incrementa­lly.

Which brings us to the perpetual San Francisco conundrum: How much community input should the city consider before institutin­g a plan?

One thing, however, is certain: We can’t let the status quo remain.

If months progress, no action plans emerge and efforts fizzle out, it’ll be more than just a disappoint­ment.

“Safety delayed is safety denied,” Joe Girton, a neighborho­od resident and proponent of the SFMTA plan, told the editorial board. “The longer we wait the more we risk.”

We agree.

 ?? Jessica Christian/The Chronicle ?? Pedestrian­s pass a memorial on March 26 at Ulloa Street and Lennox Way in S.F. for a family of four killed by an SUV.
Jessica Christian/The Chronicle Pedestrian­s pass a memorial on March 26 at Ulloa Street and Lennox Way in S.F. for a family of four killed by an SUV.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States