Meeting tonight on the proposed changes to the parkway and as you can imagine the Liverpool residents are not happy about it
About 100 people came to ask state officials about a proposal to change Onondaga Lake Parkway. They left disappointed.
www.syracuse.com
"Liverpool, N.Y. – More than 100 people came to a public meeting tonight, many with the hopes of asking state transportation officials direct questions about proposed changes to Onondaga Lake Parkway.
Yet they left disappointed.
An official from the Department of Transportation gave a 45-minute presentation about the changes, which includes reducing parts of the parkway from four lanes to two. But Ed Rodriguez, a DOT assistant regional design engineer, declined to stay for a public hearing to address questions from village residents and business owners.
“To have him leave right now, that’s not an interactive meeting,” said Bill Storm, a Liverpool resident for more than three decades. “It seems like it’s a one-sided initiative.”
During a 90-minute public hearing that followed, no one spoke in favor of the state’s proposal to take the two-mile parkway from four lanes to two. Instead, they have other ideas they say could make the parkway better:
- Impose high fines for trucks that try to slip under a low-height railroad bridge that’s the source of some accidents.
- Add an even shorter overhead pedestrian bridge connecting Onondaga Lake Park with Heid’s, another obvious barrier that would keep taller vehicles off the road.
- Enforce the current speed limit, especially at night.
- Ban all commercial vehicles from the parkway.
Liverpool Mayor Gary White told the crowd he wasn’t surprised. “That’s what happened at the last meeting as well,” White said.
The DOT is proposing to change the parkway and two other major intersections in the village. The $8.6 million project is needed, DOT officials say, to make the parkway safer. Currently, it has fatality rates 10 times higher than other similar roads, state officials say."