[Winona Online Democracy]

Forwarded from Terri Hyle:
----------------
I'll try once more to make the point I wanted to on this thread.  The original
issue was whether how to make the increased numbers of visitors to Winona during
special events safe and positive for all (at least, I assumed that visitors were
included in the wishes for safety and positive experiences).   Please note that
I know the law about yielding to traffic to the right, knew it when I originally
posted, and have since seen it discussed exhaustively.  What I think we need to
consider is the following:
1. Are visitors, including those from out of state, immediately aware of
uncontrolled intersections and how to safely navigate streets without controlled
intersections?
2.  If visitors are unaware or simply unexperienced at driving on streets with
uncontrolled intersections, how does this affect the safety of all drivers and
pedestrians (including native Winonans)?
3.  If there are safety concerns, how does this affect the success of special
events and the ability of Winona to continue to attract visitors and dollars to
our city?
4.  How should we best address any of these concerns?
My observations for 1 and 2 above is that visitors (and I would wager a native
Winonan or two) do not know or understand the rule about uncontrolled
intersections, and that the safety of all, visitor and local alike is affected.
Please note that this includes pedestrians and children playing on sidewalks and
in yards in quiet residential areas.

Terri Hyle

>From: "Clay Templeton"
>To: "'Winona Online Democracy'"
>Subject: Re: [Winona] Tourists driving in Winona - to protect or neglect?
>Date: Sat, 25 Jan 2003 07:48:31 -0600
>
>The people on this group are intelligent, observant, thinking people, and so
many of us have learned the traffic rules just by reading these e-mails. Randy &
Steve, we may have just saved a life here. ;) But if we were ignorant, so are
much of the rest of the population and the tourists. What you don't know can
hurt you, and in this case can hurt others. I had been told by more than one
Winona native that streets going parallel to the river have the right-of-way,
and that's how they drive. Although I know that the driver's test covered
meeting someone at a 4-way stop at the same time, I have no memory of it
covering rights of way at uncontrolled intersections. Maybe I got that one
wrong.
>
>I appreciated cnelson's comments about the intersections around Watkins. I was
in an accident there last year; both of us were on wide, main roads, and on that
_gray_ day with the _gray_ streets, neither of us saw the other's _gray_ car
until we were already at the intersection going 30 mph. She thought that the
other direction had stop signs, and so did I. Maybe we should have been going 15
mph so that we could look for the _gray_ back sides of the stop signs instead.
They're pretty hard to see from the back side on most of our winter days.
>
>To anyone who expects everyone else to be observant about whether or not *you*
have a stop sign, I wish those gamblers good luck. It seems like removing that
uncertainty on busy streets would be a good thing for most of the population.
>
>Clay Templeton
>
>----- Original Message -----



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