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Clark County presents neighborhood traffic-management program, eyes extension of application window
Summary
Clark County transportation staff introduced a Neighborhood Traffic Management Program, said applications opened Jan. 15 with a March 1 deadline (staff proposed extending it one month), and described a data-driven process to rank local streets for traffic-calming measures funded at about $250,000 a year.
Clark County public works staff on Monday introduced a revived Neighborhood Traffic Management Program that will accept resident requests for traffic-calming measures on local streets.
"We rolled out our neighborhood traffic management program in the second week of January," said David Jardine, the countytraffic engineering section manager, who told the Sunnyside Neighborhood Association that applications opened Jan. 15. Jardine said the posted application deadline is March 1 but that staff planned to extend it by about one month to build a larger pool of candidates.
The program is aimed at neighborhood streets — those with on-street parking and without a center line — rather than collectors or arterials, Jardine said. County examples included 88th Street (collector), 94th Avenue (arterial) and 99th Street (arterial), which are generally excluded because of…
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