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Commissioners press staff on bike-lane safety, construction signage and Village parking
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Summary
Commissioners praised recent bike-lane improvements, urged city staff to adopt clearer temporary-signage procedures to avoid placing signs in bike lanes, raised local parking concerns in the Village and discussed procurement and signal-maintenance processes with staff.
Commissioners used the growth-management discussion to press staff on practical safety and operational issues: temporary construction signage that blocks bike lanes, roadside hazards on Carlsbad Boulevard, and limited parking in Village areas.
Vice Chair Pensier and other commissioners described instances where "bike lane closed" signage was placed in the bike lane itself, creating a hazard for cyclists. One commissioner recounted a recent ride where a sign was placed in a narrow bike lane on Carlsbad Boulevard and cited a friend’s relative who was injured hitting a sign. Commissioners asked staff to develop or tighten a standard operating procedure for construction signage to avoid blocking bike and pedestrian space.
Staff responses and next steps: John Kim (S4), city traffic engineer, and Tom Frank (S5) said crews and contractors try to place temporary signs in buffer zones or medians when feasible and that staff would consider developing a formal SOP for construction signage and bike-specific treatments. Frank said where buffers exist staff will place signs there and that a simple SOP could be developed as capacity allows.
Parking and other operational items: Commissioners asked about Village parking options and Pine Park/Pine Avenue proposals; Kim said Grand Avenue diagonal parking and other Village parking analyses are going to City Council on March 10, and Pine Avenue parking is in final design and will be brought back to the commission before council award. A commissioner also asked about LED signal bulbs; Kim said a contractor performs routine signal maintenance and staff would check whether bulbs are being replaced proactively before burnout.
Context: commissioners largely praised recent bike-lane corrections (Cannon, Poinsettia, La Costa) but emphasized that construction practices and temporary signage should not create new hazards for cyclists and pedestrians.
