ODOT to install new 11th Street crossing in Hermiston
Published 2:21 pm Wednesday, December 2, 2020
- Traffic navigates the section of Southwest 11th Street between Orchard Avenue and Highland Avenue in Hermiston on Monday, Dec. 7, 2020. The stretch, which has been the site of multiple pedestrian fatalities, will be getting a sidewalk and a crosswalk with flashing lights under funding from a Safe Routes to School grant provided by the Oregon Department of Transportation.
HERMISTON — Pedestrians trying to cross Southwest 11th Street in Hermiston will be assisted by a new sidewalk and a crosswalk with flashing lights between Orchard Avenue and Highland Avenue.
The project is one of 43 in Oregon to receive funding from the Oregon Department of Transportation through the latest round of Safe Routes to School grants.
Hermiston has seen multiple pedestrian fatalities along the busy stretch of road, which is part of Highway 207. A 72-year-old Hermiston man was killed in a hit-and-run there in May 2020, and an 80-year-old Hermiston man was killed by a commercial garbage truck in the same area in 2015 while crossing the road in the middle of the block.
Teresa Penninger, transportation planning manager for ODOT’s Region 5, said having no sidewalk on the side of the highway leading to Hacienda West Apartments makes things difficult for pedestrians, including children who use that route to get to West Park Elementary School half a mile away, or Hermiston High School located just beyond that.
“It basically leaves you no choice but to walk along a very narrow shoulder, or try to cross a busy highway with no crosswalk,” she said.
Penninger said the first phase of the project will be a crosswalk with flashing lights that pedestrians can activate before crossing, located between Butter Creek Apartments and the area where a short path from Hacienda West Apartments connects to the highway. The second phase will add a sidewalk along the west side of the highway.
“It will definitely improve the safety of the pedestrian situation there,” she said.
The crossing with flashing beacons is expected to be completed mid-2021, and then Penninger said the sidewalk will take a little longer to design and complete. She said once it is complete, the school district will help educate parents and children in the area on proper use of the crossing.
Often Safe Routes to School grants go to cities to assist them in completing projects, but because the street is part of Highway 207, assistant city manager Mark Morgan said ODOT has taken on design and construction of the project.
He said the city’s application included letters of support from Mayor David Drotzmann, the Hermiston School District and the Hispanic Advisory Committee.
According to a news release from ODOT, the department awarded 43 of the 99 applications received this time, for a total of $28.3 million in projects designed to improve safety for children walking to school and other pedestrians.