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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023-10-24; City Council; ; Report on Traffic Safety in Carlsbad, Including Trends, Improvements Completed and Next Steps Following the Traffic Safety EmergencyCA Review CKM Meeting Date: Oct. 24, 2023 To: Mayor and City Council From: Scott Chadwick, City Manager Staff Contact: Geoff Patnoe, Assistant City Manager geoff.patnoe@carlsbadca.gov, 442-339-2820 Subject: Report on Traffic Safety in Carlsbad, Including Trends, Improvements Completed and Next Steps Following the Traffic Safety Emergency Districts: All Recommended Action Receive a report on traffic safety in Carlsbad, including trends, improvements completed and next steps, following the conclusion of the local traffic safety emergency proclaimed Aug. 23, 2022. Executive Summary The City of Carlsbad proclaimed a local emergency on traffic safety Aug. 23, 2022, to address a more than 200% increase in collisions involving bikes and e-bikes since 2019. Under an emergency proclamation, a city can more easily redeploy staff and resources, expedite projects and increase engagement with community partners to address conditions threatening the community’s safety. When ratifying the emergency proclamation on Aug. 30, 2022, the City Council approved emergency funding of $2 million to immediately launch education, engineering and enforcement actions to enhance traffic safety in Carlsbad. In addition to these immediate actions, the City Council approved a comprehensive Safer Streets Together Plan on Sept. 27, 2022, which included dozens of short- and long-term traffic safety-related programs and initiatives. Although the emergency proclamation ended Sept. 8, 2023, traffic safety remains a top city priority. This report highlights: • Data regarding what was accomplished as a result of the traffic safety emergency • Projects currently underway • Work that will continue as a part of day-to-day city operations to ensure city streets are safe for all users Explanation & Analysis City staff have initiated a wide variety of programs, projects and initiatives to enhance the safe use of city streets. Some could be completed immediately while others are longer term in nature. All are described in the Safer Streets Together Plan that was approved by the City Council. Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 1 of 10 Decreases in injury collisions Data on injury collisions has informed the emergency proclamation, the Safer Streets Together Plan and the actions by the city to improve the safe use of local roads. City staff analyzed injury collision data from Sept. 1, 2022, to Aug. 31, 2023, the 12-month period between the beginning and end of the emergency proclamation. The analysis found Carlsbad saw a measurable reduction in injury collisions over this time period: •13% decrease in injury collisions across all modes of travel. •20% decrease in injury collisions involving bikes and e-bikes. •22% decrease in injury collisions involving pedal bikes. •18% decrease in injury collisions involving e-bikes. Program overview The city has achieved these results through a comprehensive program focused on the “three Es” of traffic safety, education, engineering and enforcement: Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 2 of 10 The city has made significant progress in each of these areas by focusing on the actions approved by the City Council in the Safer Streets Together Plan, as well as expediting existing traffic safety related projects and initiatives. The following sections provide a summary of the city’s efforts in the 12-month period from Aug. 23, 2022, to Aug. 22, 2023. 12-month progress at a glance Nearly all of the initiatives approved as part of the Safer Streets Together Plan have been completed, with others in progress. All 3 Es Status Adopt a Vision Zero resolution Education Status Safer Streets Together roll out Community commitment campaign School collaboration Business, non-profit partnership program Mobility organization partnership program Video public service announcements Carlsbad Village Faire outreach Police officer Smart Cycling instructor program Engineering Status Bike lane enhancements In progress Digital roadway messaging Upgrade high-pedestrian signal locations Expanded street resurfacing and restriping In progress Tamarack Avenue traffic calming Reconfigure arterials In progress Expanded street resurfacing and restriping (Palomar Airport Road, Rancho Santa Fe/Olivenhain Road) In progress Review citywide speed limits for potential reduction Ongoing Enforcement Status Enhanced enforcement Ongoing Legislative advocacy for e-bike licensing requirement In progress School e-bike certification/permit program Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 3 of 10 The following sections are highlights from each of the key areas covering the period from Aug. 23, 2022, to Aug. 22, 2023: Program Highlights | Education City staff developed and implemented a multimedia public education and behavior change campaign that included partnering with local schools, businesses, faith-based groups and mobility organizations. To date, nearly 12,000 residents have made a public commitment to do their part to keep Carlsbad’s streets safe for everyone, and these public commitments have helped create a new social norm around traffic safety in Carlsbad. Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 4 of 10 Traffic safety outreach will remain a high priority for city staff, focusing on key times of year and events when traffic safety is top of mind. Staff will also continue to work with the partners developed through this campaign to share information and collaborate on traffic safety events. Program Highlights | Engineering Expanded green bike lane treatments Green paint or bike lane improvements have been added at the following 43 locations to highlight the areas where bicycle and vehicle traffic may conflict: • Carlsbad Boulevard at 16 intersections • State Street and Laguna Drive • Rancho Santa Fe Road at 14 intersections • La Costa Avenue and Levante Street • Poinsettia Lane and Avenida Encinas • Palomar Airport Road and Paseo Del Norte • College Boulevard and Cannon Road/Bobcat Boulevard • El Camino Real and Faraday Avenue • Poinsettia Lane and Cassia Road • College Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue • Carlsbad Village Drive and Celinda Drive/Rising Glen Way • Harding Street and Oak Avenue • Tamarack Avenue and Jefferson Street • Chestnut Avenue and Madison Street • Southbound Carlsbad Boulevard, from Manzano Drive to Island Way • Jefferson Street, between Las Flores Drive and the I-5 overpass Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 5 of 10 The first green paint applications at the beginning of the emergency declaration last year have faded and are planned to be repainted by the end of November 2023. Review of citywide speed limits The city has started its study of citywide speed limits after Caltrans released the recent update of the California Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices based on Assembly Bill AB 43, legislation which gives cities additional flexibility in determining how speed limits can be set. The consultant study is expected to be complete by the first quarter of 2024 with recommendations to begin enacting changes by summer of 2024. Approved a Vision Zero resolution On March 21, 2023, the City Council approved a Vision Zero resolution, affirming the city’s commitment to traffic safety. City staff will use existing City Council-approved plans and strategies to work toward the Vision Zero goal of zero serious injuries and deaths on city roadways by 2035, the target year established by the state of California’s Vision Zero plan. Restriped southbound Carlsbad Boulevard from Manzano Drive to Island Way The project is completed and helped address speeding while creating more space for pedestrians and cyclists. The restriped lanes created: • A shoulder on the west side of Carlsbad Boulevard that can be used by pedestrians • One vehicle lane and a buffered bike lane between Solamar Drive and Island Way • Space for bicycle parking and up to 13 new vehicle parking spots The restriping included new green paint to highlight potential conflict points between cars and bikes at intersections along with other bike lane improvements. As a result from the changes to the roadway and the associated lower speeds, the City Council was able to approve a reduction in the speed limit along this road segment from 50 mph to 45 mph last month. Upgraded high-pedestrian signal locations The city has reduced vehicle-pedestrian conflicts by allowing pedestrians to begin crossing while vehicles still face a red signal. Countdowns display the pedestrian crossing times to reduce confusion and ambiguity. Thirty-two locations have been upgraded, and staff will continue to evaluate whether additional locations are candidates for this phased timing. Expanded street resurfacing and restriping, reconfiguring arterial streets The City Council approved a plan to resurface and reconfigure the lanes on Carlsbad’s major streets, called arterial streets, on Feb. 7, 2023. The project will seal the roadways to improve pavement condition as part of the city’s pavement management program and improve conditions for all users on the roads. Several sections of these streets will be reconfigured, with the number of vehicle lanes reduced and lane widths made more appropriate for the roadways to help manage speeds, improve the line of sight and access conditions for side street users and further improve conditions for bicyclists and pedestrians. This project will also reduce the city’s long-term pavement maintenance costs. Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 6 of 10 This program will be completed in phases. The construction contract for the first phase was awarded in June 2023, and construction began in July 2023. This phase focuses on 16 miles worth of improvements on six of the city’s east/west arterial corridors: • Olivenhain Road - from the Encinitas city limits to Rancho Santa Fe Road intersection • La Costa Avenue - from the Encinitas city limits near Interstate 5 to Fairway Lane • Poinsettia Lane - from Carlsbad Boulevard to Melrose Drive, including a reconfigured section between Avenida Encinas and Carlsbad Boulevard • Cannon Road - from Avenida Encinas to Faraday Avenue • Tamarack Avenue - from Carlsbad Boulevard to Carlsbad Village Drive including a reconfigured section between Carlsbad Village Drive and Skyline Drive • Carlsbad Village Drive - from I-5 to College Boulevard, including an improved line of sight for side street users An example of a roadway reconfiguration was completed this spring on southbound Carlsbad Boulevard. The reconfiguration is designed to improve the balance of the roadway for all users while not causing any additional delay for vehicles. This is achieved by keeping the vehicle lanes essentially the same at the intersections. While it helps address the speeding along the segment, the reconfiguration also greatly improves the conditions for pedestrians and bicyclists along this heavily travelled coastal route. The other arterial streets to be reconfigured as part of this project are: • Carlsbad Boulevard - from Pine Avenue to the southern border near La Costa Avenue • El Fuerte Street - from Faraday Avenue to the existing one vehicle lane in each direction south of Rancho Pancho, excluding the segments approaching Loker Avenue to Bressi Ranch Way • Grand Avenue - from Ocean Street to Hope Way. This would implement the first phase of the Grand Avenue Promenade Project to provide short-term benefits until the final promenade improvements are completed. • Cannon Road - from Avenida Encinas to El Arbol Drive Two other arterial streets will be resurfaced and restriped in a subsequent phase: • Palomar Airport Road - from Avenida Encinas to the eastern city border • Rancho Santa Fe Road/Olivenhain Road - from the eastern city border to the western city border The schedules for the work on those two remaining project road segments are being developed; the projects are still being designed and will warrant additional public vetting. On several of the segments, the work will require coastal development permits, or coordination with utility projects that require trenching planned within the foreseeable future, before the work can begin. These projects will be reviewed by the Traffic & Mobility Commission later this year. Tamarack Avenue traffic calming New speed tables and raised crosswalks (raised portions of a roadway) between Skyline Drive and Adams Street were completed in August. Following unanticipated delays in supplies and contracting, the installation of the additional new rectangular rapid flashing beacons was completed in September. Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 7 of 10 Planned projects In addition to our work on the actions described above, city staff continue to make progress on over 100 other traffic and mobility related projects already planned over the next 15 years, estimated at a cost of over $350 million. Program Highlights | Enforcement Stepped-up enforcement The Police Department has continued its enhanced enforcement of traffic laws, with a focus on high collision areas, reported areas of concern for residents, as well as times where heavier than usual traffic is expected, such as holidays. School e-bike safety training and permit program At the outset of the emergency proclamation, the city sought input from the community on ideas and priorities to improve traffic safety. The top response was to create more accountability and regulation for e-bikes. Since that time, the city has actively engaged with state lawmakers (as detailed below) and collaborated with local schools to develop an e-bike permit program. Working with all school districts serving Carlsbad, the Police Department explored ways to help schools establish programs in which students riding e-bikes must complete a tailored safety course. The department arranged for several officers to become certified American League of Bicyclists safety instructors, who have since conducted 22 training courses reaching over 1,000 students, coinciding with the start of the fall 2023 semester. The Carlsbad Unified School District has implemented an on-campus e-bike parking permit, contingent on students completing the safety training, and other districts have promoted the safety training classes to their students. These school programs are ongoing. Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 8 of 10 Electronic citation program expanded The department is purchasing the printers and installing the software needed to enable all officers to issue citations electronically, using their assigned mobile phones, rather than writing them by hand. With this change, the department will no longer have to manually collate hand-written citations to record and track traffic enforcement data. Modernizing the citation process will make it more efficient, reduce the potential for errors and create a single database of citations for easier data extraction, which will help the department in its data-driven decision making and statistical reporting. Legislative advocacy for e-bike licensing The city worked with its state lobbyists and elected representatives to advocate for legislation that would address concerns about e-bikes. The legislature considered two bills related to e-bike safety this year, and one of the bills completed the legislative process: • Assembly Bill 1188 by Assemblymember Tasha Boerner, which would direct the California State Transportation Agency to develop and distribute, on or before Sept. 1, 2024, the Bike Smart Handbook, a bicyclist and e-bike safety handbook based on evidence-based practices and emerging trends. This bill did not pass out of the Assembly Appropriations Committee and will not be moving forward this year. The bill may be reconsidered when the Legislature reconvenes in January 2024. • Senate Bill 381 by Senator Dave Min, which would require the Mineta Transportation Institute at San Jose State University to conduct a study on electric bicycles to inform efforts to improve the safety of riders and pedestrians, on or before January 1, 2026. This bill passed out of the Legislature and is awaiting a signature, or veto, from Governor Newsom. The city’s Intergovernmental Affairs Director will continue to monitor opportunities to promote legislative actions to address local concerns about e-bike safety. Fiscal Analysis No additional funding is required related to the actions in this report. On Aug. 30, 2022, the City Council authorized the Deputy City Manager of Administrative Services to appropriate $2 million from unspent funds from the fiscal year 2021-22 General Fund budget to address the traffic safety emergency. To date, nearly 75% of this amount has been allocated to the city’s emergency response: $1,238,663 has been spent, and $214,524 is currently encumbered, meaning it has been dedicated to a specific contract to complete planned work, leaving $546,813 available to fund continued implementation of the Safer Streets Together Plan. The total available budget was approved as part of the budget carryforward report on Sept. 26, 2023, and may be expended for appropriate uses.1 Next Steps Although the emergency proclamation has ended, traffic safety remains core to the city’s mission. Staff will continue to carry out programs and initiatives identified in the Safer Streets Together Plan, as directed by the City Council. 1 Carryforward budget items carry unspent funds budgeted to have been spent in one fiscal year into the budget for the following fiscal year. Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 9 of 10 Environmental Evaluation In keeping with California Public Resources Code Section 21065, the receipt of this report does not qualify as a project within the meaning of the California Environmental Quality Act in that it has no potential to cause either a direct physical change in the environment, or a reasonably foreseeable indirect physical change in the environment, and therefore does not require environmental review. Any future direction to undertake individual projects will undergo a separate evaluation. Exhibit None. Oct. 24, 2023 Item #5 Page 10 of 10 Oct. 24, 2023 RECOMMENDED ACTION 1.Receive a report on traffic safety in Carlsbad, including trends, improvements completed and next steps, following the conclusion of the local traffic safety emergency proclaimed Aug. 23, 2022 2 TONIGHT’S PRESENTATION 1.End of the local emergency proclamation 2.Recap what has been accomplished 3.How traffic safety will continue to be prioritized 3 BIKE + E-BIKE COLLISIONS 4 PAST ACTIONS •Carlsbad specific e-bike safety laws •Public education program •Increases in spot enforcement 5 BACK TO SCHOOL 6 EMERGENCY PROCLAMATION Government Code Section 8630 Carlsbad Municipal Code Chapter 6.04 7 “actual or threatened existence of conditions of extreme peril to the public safety within our city.” 8 Activate the Emergency Operations Center Immediately redeploy resources Streamline procurement and other processes Increase focus and collaboration among our residents, businesses, other agencies and our business community Emergency Proclamation 9 10 11 AC T I O N S T O D A T E Safer Streets Together Plan 12 Three Es of Traffic Safety 13 14 RE S U L T S T O D A T E 15 RE S U L T S T O D A T E 2022 2023 Emergency proclamation INJURY COLLISIONS: BIKES AND E-BIKES 16 AC T I O N S T O D A T E Safer Streets Together Plan 17 AC T I O N S T O D A T E Safer Streets Together Plan 18 AC T I O N S T O D A T E Safer Streets Together Plan 19 EDUCATION 20 ENGINEERING 21 ENGINEERING 22 ENFORCEMENT 23 SCHOOL PARTNERSHIPS 24 trainings1,000+ students 24 AB 1188 Statewide Bike Smart Handbook SB 381 Study on e-bikes and efforts to improve safety E-bike licensing Potential statewide training and licensing E-BIKE LEGISLATION 25 CARLSBAD AND BEYOND Regional Safe Streets and Vision Zero Award Statewide Outreach & Education Campaign National Outreach & Education Campaign Plan 26 CARLSBAD AND BEYOND 27 ONGOING PRIORITY Safer Streets Together comprehensive plan continues to be implemented •100+ major road projects planned over next 5 years •Ongoing education and outreach •Continued enforcement •Strategic plan 28 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS •City Council •Traffic Safety & Mobility Commission •Community members •Partners •City staff 29 30 31 TAMARACK AVENUE •Traffic calming from Skyline Drive to Adams Street •Evaluation of Tamarack Avenue and Valley Street pedestrian signal •Tamarack Avenue Complete Streets Plan NEXT STEPS •Complete restriping and collect data as part of the Tamarack Avenue Complete Streets Plan •Begin public outreach effort mid-2024 on the Tamarack Avenue Complete Streets Plan •Evaluate speed limits COMPLETE STREET CONCEPTS •Wide straight streets promote high speeds •Speed correlates to fatality of collisions •City Mobility Element focuses on providing livable streets that improve mobility and connectivity for all users 36