Boone County weighs four‑way stop, rumble strips or roundabout after residents plead for safety at Caledonia–North intersection
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Following multiple public pleas — including from schoolchildren — county highway staff recommended long‑term roundabout treatment but the board discussed placing a four‑way stop and adding rumble strips and flashing beacons as near‑term measures; the matter will be scheduled for formal action.
Residents and board members pressed Boone County officials on March 5 to act at the Caledonia and North Road intersection after repeated crashes and two recent fatal or severe collisions were cited in public testimony. A sixth‑grader, Mikayla Tizza, told the committee she crosses the intersection to get to school and urged a four‑way stop “even if it’s temporary” to reduce confusion and collisions.
Justin, the county highway engineer, told the committee that the department had already taken interim steps — brush removal that improved sight lines and installation of a flashing beacon — and that data from speed signs will be shared with the sheriff for enforcement. He said high‑friction pavement treatment and rumble strips are available and that a roundabout remains the statistically safest long‑term solution, but acknowledged constraints including a high‑pressure gas main under one corner of the intersection, topography, property acquisition and project cost.
Several board members argued for placing a four‑way stop as an interim fix while pursuing grant funding and engineering for a roundabout, and asked staff to place a referral or recommendation on the full board agenda for formal action. The committee discussed using additional measures — a reduced speed limit approaching the intersection, rumble strips and flashing beacons — combined with targeted enforcement by the sheriff’s office at peak hours identified from speed‑sign data.
Board members emphasized follow‑through: if a four‑way stop is installed, staff would be expected to provide advance signage and a public information campaign and to monitor crash data to determine whether the measure reduces collisions or if a roundabout remains necessary. Justin said the county can add flashing beacons and high‑friction surface treatment within a modest portion of its budget and that some pavement work could be bundled with countywide overlay projects to reduce cost.
The committee did not make a final, binding infrastructure decision at the meeting but moved to put the topic on the board agenda and to pursue near‑term measures and a study of longer‑term roundabout funding and design.
Next steps: staff to present cost estimates, traffic study data and a timeline for a potential temporary four‑way stop (with signage and flashing beacons), rumble strip placement and a funding plan for a roundabout; sheriff to be given timing data for targeted enforcement.
