CC 2019-03-26_08g Supplemental No. 1
MEMORANDUM
TO: CITY COUNCIL
FROM: TERESA McCLISH, COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR
SUBJECT: SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION
AGENDA ITEM 8.g. – MARCH 26, 2019 CITY COUNCIL MEETING
CONSIDERATION OF COMMENT LETTER TO THE SAN LUIS OBISPO
COUNCIL OF GOVERNMENTS REGARDING THE EL CAMPO
ROAD/SOUTH COUNTY HIGHWAY ACCESS MODIFICATIONS –
TRAFFIC DIVERSIONS ASSESSMENT
DATE: MARCH 26, 2019
Attached is a response letter from Five Cities Fire (FCFA) Chief, Steve Lieberman and
correspondence received regarding the above referenced item.
cc: City Manager
City Attorney
City Clerk
FCFA Chief
Public Review Binder
From:James Grant
To:Keith Storton; Jim Bergman; Jessica Matson
Cc:nipomoflutes; Suzie; Janice Reid; Jimmy Paulding; Jimmy Paulding
Subject:Draft AG Comment Letter Errors
Date:Monday, March 25, 2019 10:29:00 AM
Attachments:Comparison Analysis - Fire Authority Attachment - AG Draft Comment Letter to Draft Step 2 Traffic Analysis.docx
Keith,
I am Jordan Grant's father. I support the changes to El Campo as currently proposed by the
Traffic Assessment. I also support an overpass and/or other changes that improve traffic flow
and increase overall net public safety.
However, I do have issues with how the draft AG comment letter is written. I would suggest at
a minimum a cover letter similar to your email be put with any comment letter that ultimately
gets approved, as the current AG comment letter can be interpreted as opposing the current
recommendations for left turn restrictions - which brings strong opposition from everyone in
our group that have been working to see these safety changes made.
Also, at the core of our issue with the draft is that it is filled with errors and inaccuracies, and
does not properly reflect a considered response to what the Assessment actually says. This
causes the comment letter to be misleading - but as you know misleading information can lead
to unnecessary delays and confusion.
I have attached my analysis of just one part of the comment letter, the Fire Authority
attachment, to provide concrete examples of how the draft is improperly written. I encourage
the draft to be rewritten in the tone of your email below with balanced and factual
considerations of the concrete funding and service gaps introduced by the left turn
restrictions, putting each in context of the actual load (frequency, resources consumed) on the
various systems of the type of matter being discussed. I believe if you do so (and remove the
errors) AG will be more successful in getting SLOCOG and Caltrans consideration of your
request.
Finally, Becky and I are comfortable committing a gift of up to $50,000 to AG for incremental
funding gaps introduced by the left hand turn restrictions. We would just need to be shown the
incremental expenses resulting from the restrictions and can fund after review, accordingly.
Acknowledged, this will not get an overpass. However, I have started to form a working group
of landowners and interested parties that will begin a plan for private contributions to making
a public/private partnership to build an overpass in the mid-term feasible. I have committed to
this group to fund $100,000 for this effort as long as they join me in such a cooperative effort
with similar contributions committed by them (and of course stop interfering with immediate
public safety matters at El Campo).
Please consider correcting the bias and errors in the current draft, and provide a fair and
balanced comment letter (in the tone of your email) that still asks for shared funding of costs
for those parties and still asks for an overpass. I also think the comment letter should describe
how an overpass would allow self regulating traffic (the large number of people that refuse to
use El Campo due to danger) and other traffic to shift to the overpass as a more natural route
and would thereby further increase net public safety at the impacted areas in AG and
elsewhere.
Best regards,
Jordan's dad
James
Comparison of draft AG Letter to draft consultants Traffic Diversion Assessment
FIVE CITIES FIRE AUTHORITY Attachment
Dated March 18, 2019
v 1.0 prepared by Jordan Grant's dad
Comparison Analysis Traffic Diversion Assessment AG Comment Letter & Attachments
Q. When were the portions of the AG letter(s)
written and were they written before the
draft Traffic Diversion Assessment was
available?
Fire Authority letter dated March 18.
However, draft Step 2 was only posted on
website on March 18 according to GHD
consulting engineers....
When did the Fire Authority obtain and read
the report? Was the Attachment written
before that was done? If so, how can the
Attachment be a meaningful and accurate
comment letter as it would be based on AG
assumptions, many of which will not be true.
The AG attachment statement is directly
contradictory to the Assessments conclusion.
The Assessments conclusion is based on data
and approximately 900 pages of supporting
analysis. The AG attachment has zero support
and zero analysis supporting its contradictory
statement.
It states:
Based on the spatial distribution of emergency
first responders in the study area, the only
incident locations that will experience an
increase in response times are those on US
101 itself. For each scenario evaluated, the
nearest response station effectively maintains
a 10 minute or less emergency response time
(Platinum 10 Minute Emergency Response).
It states:
The closures of these surface level ramps will
increase emergency vehicle response
times to the areas such as Falcon Crest, Coast
View Drive, Brady Lane, El Campo
Road, Los Berros Road, and the surrounding
neighborhoods within the El Campo area.
The AG statement is unsupported and false.
South bound turns off of 101 will remain
unchanged therefore there is no change for
response times from locations in the five cities
to the north down to the El Campo area.
These types of egregious errors indicate this
letter was written BEFORE the Step II report
was released and evaluated.
It states:
The California Highway Patrol (CHP) has
indicated that a “soft” at-grade access will be
maintained on US 101 within the study area at
a location yet to be determined. The “soft”
access will allow law enforcement, fire/medical
emergency responders, and Caltrans
maintenance vehicles to cross and
access US 101 from either direction of travel.
The access will not likely be located at any of
the current at-grade access points. With
provision of a “soft” access, no compromise
in emergency response times is anticipated
resulting from the closure scenarios
evaluated.
It states:
Emergency vehicles responding from Arroyo
Grande and north along Highway 101;
such as Pismo Beach, Shell Beach, Avila
Beach, San Luis City and northern San Luis
Ambulance stations, will experience an
increase of response times because these
emergency vehicles will have to travel through
the City of Arroyo Grande to reach the El
Campo area. Traveling through the City of
Arroyo Grande will also have an impact to
the safety to citizens within the City of Arroyo
Grande and increase wear of the
roadways within the City.
Q. Does the AG Fire Authority attachment
consider the reduction in workload and calls
from severe broad side collisions from left
hand turns at El Campo and other such
crossings - going to zero? A net decrease in
risk means a net decrease in fire and medical
responses required!!!!
At Jordan Grant's accident there were
multiple Five Cities fire trucks at the scene for
many hours. Suzie Smiths accident at El
Campo seven weeks before was probably
similar in emergency time commitments.
The elimination of these severe accident
emergency trips and commitments should
reduce TOTAL response times and increase
availability for more timely response to other
emergencies in AG!
It states:
As such, it can be concluded that the
rerouted traffic will result in a net decrease
in risk to the motoring public.
There is no analysis of trip and cost savings
from the safety improvements of the at grade
crossings. Such an egregious oversight shows
the letter is prepared with bias and
intentional error, and seeks to find excuses
for justifying a request for an overpass at El
Campo from Caltrans ("to provide a properly
designed, safe use, on and off ramps, for the
area of El Campo").
Since the letter is prepared with bias, the
question is who is directing the cities
departments in how to prepare these
arguments and what conclusions to support?
What were the instructions given to the
Battalion Chief from the City Manager and
elected officials prior to writing this
attachment?
The Fire Authority attachment is intentionally
misleading with regards to Emergency
Response times. The letter selects fire
responses from Nipomo which has not been
and is not expected to be the source of
response.
Jordan's accident was serviced from AG and
not Nipomo. The entire critique of response
times appears to be false and/or misleading,
and appears to be made due to the original
bias/instructions from the City
Manager/Mayor to reach a predetermined
conclusion to argue that an overpass is
needed.
It states:
Fire and Emergency services along
southbound US 101 south of Arroyo Grande
are dispatched from the City, as they are faster
than the Nipomo locations. Currently, the
response time for an incident on US 101
southbound south of Hemi Road is estimated
to be 5.5 min for emergency
medical and 5 minutes for a fire incident. With
partial closure (median closure) of the at-grade
intersections on US 101, the emergency
response times are not anticipated to be
affected, as emergency services for incidents
along southbound US 101 will be dispatched
from Arroyo Grande.
No acknowledgment of this in the AG
attachment whatsoever.
AG attachment fails to identify this issue is
limited to "if dispatched from Nipomo" and
that, generally, currently dispatches are from
AG as "they are faster"
Again the Assessment states:
"the emergency response times are not
anticipated to be affected,"
It states:
If the need for emergency services to be
dispatched from Nipomo occurs, the median
closure would have negative implications on
the response times, adding 9.7 minutes for a
fire incident, and 9.6 minutes for a medical
emergency incident.
It states:
The added estimated increase of response
time of 9. 7 minutes to a structure fire, will
allow the structure fire to double in size
compounding every four (4) minutes. The San
Luis Obispo County fire stations only has two
people on duty every day, and with the
OSHA laws, if there is no known rescue, the
fire crews cannot make fire attack until a
second unit arrives at the scene to provide
what is known as 2 in / 2 out. Meaning as
two firefighters go interior to fight the fire, two
firefighters shall remain outside and be
ready to rescue the two that went interior.
Therefore, the 9.7 minutes' increase in
response time to a structure fire within El
Campo area will have a significant impact to
the citizens who live within those areas.
The AG attachment fails to recognize that this
is only in context of if dispatch from Nipomo.
It does not acknowledge that most dispatch is
from AG since IT IS CLOSER.
The attachment creates a straw case of a
Nipomo dispatch with an AG second engine. It
is impossible to match this to the Assessment
or weight this hypothetical in context of what
typically happens (i.e. AG dispatch as it is
closer).
It states:
If the need for emergency services to be
dispatched from Nipomo occurs, the median
closure would have negative implications on
the response times, adding 9.7 minutes for a
fire incident, and 9.6 minutes for a medical
emergency incident.
It states:
Also the report states there will be an
estimated increase of response time of 9.6
minutes to medical emergencies....The
increase...of 9.6 minutes will significantly
reduce the ability of a heart attack victim
survival.
The Assessment from its very objective, seeks
to maintain right-in and right-out access - so
this agrees with the Fire Authorities minimum
recommendation (meaning if no overpass).
With regard to restricted left turns the
Assessment provides for emergency (Fire,
Emergency, CHP) left turn access. So again it
agrees with the minimum recommendation of
the Fire Authority.
So the entire letter is a bunch of smoke to
cloud the SLOCOG decision on April...but no
fire or substance to the arguments - as many
are just false or at best misleading.
It states:
...(SLOCOG) Governing Board is considering a
request to Caltrans to implement turn
movement restrictions (right-in and right-out
only access implemented via concrete median
barriers along the inside shoulders of US 101).
and
Based on the spatial distribution of emergency
first responders in the study area, the only
incident locations that will experience an
increase in response times are those on US
101 itself. For each scenario evaluated, the
nearest response station effectively
maintains a 10 minute or less emergency
response time (Platinum 10 Minute
Emergency Response).
It states:
...recommendation...Or at a minimum maintain
and allow emergency vehicles to continue to
utilize the surface exits as they currently
exist...
Victor Lund, Arroyo Grande Resident
The study commissioned by SLOCOG is unsatisfactory and biased. A review of the study indicates that the data presented in
the study was crafted to support the Cal Trans goal of closing the three crossings rather than nominating the most effective
mitigation to promote safety, efficient traffic operations, and increase capacity.
An unbiased review of the study indicates the following.
Figure 3.1 - the shortest and fastest alternative route for northbound 101 traffic goes by the Highschool - an area already over
the LOS thresholds. This is not pointed out in the study because they did not look at any intersections that have stop signs.
This shortest route adds 8.4 miles of travel! At the IRS Rate of $.545, that equates to $4.63 per trip. The July 2018 National
Household Travel Survey estimates the daily trips per household to be 5.11 - so impacted households would be paying $23.67
dollars more per day or $8,640.31 more per year! At the IRS vehicle mileage reimbursement rate, the increase in costs to the
impacted vehicles exceeds $4 Million per year!
The proposed closure produces an increase of 250% more emissions.
The proposed closure produces a travel time increase of 250%.
This the study concludes that this adds between 8,975,050 and 8,976,390 additional miles traveled per year – all on local roads
which the study concludes are already over the LOS threshold.
The study states tries to conceal the emissions impact by highlighting that the emissions along the 101 will be lowered, but
fails to state that the emissions impact in the town and village of Arroyo Grande – especially near our high school will be
increased.
They say in the report that U-Turn Intersections and Merge lanes was considered - but rejected - Why were they rejected? That
is not in the report. There is plenty of room to allow northbound vehicles from El campo to turn right on 101 - (hopefully with
an acceleration lane) - travel down the road a bit and make a u-turn to get to 101 north. This would eliminate all impact on
Village Roads.
The report states that all of these impacts would we offset if a new overpass to US 101 is implemented, but that somehow did
not become the recommendation from the report. 1500 local area residents signed a peititon in favor of an overpass to replace
the El Campo road crossing! This overpass has been in the long range plan since 1999 and is already approved!
The study was a spot study and only looked at the traffic signals. They did not look at any of the stop signs. The traffic in
Arroyo Grande along the alternative routes is already impacted. The study finds that Fair Oaks/101, Fair Oaks Traffic Way, Fair
Oaks and West Branch and East Grand Ave currently exceed LOS thresholds. No mitigation is scheduled currently. It is in the
long range plan that they estimate to be completed in 25 years. As a note - the overpass at El Campo has been planed for 20
years already (since 1999) and there is still no funding.
Collision Data used in the report only looked at signaled intersections - the village has massive problems with collisions and
spill back stacking by the Highschool at stop signs. Not studied by the report.
Study was performed in September and December when the vacation and dunes traffic along Grand Ave is at its lowest.
The study was a spot check - weekdays between 7 and 9 am and only for 15 minutes. If they looked at Halcyon at 7:30 am, they
would see something very different than if they looked at 8 am. - Highschool traffic is gone. In the afternoon, they looked at
traffic between 4 pm and 6 PM - completely missing the Highschool peek traffic time. The report notes that they collected the
data when school is in session, not during the commute times.
The benchmark data used to forecast the 2035 traffic was based upon data taken in 2014, published in 2015 - which
significantly underestimated the traffic along the 101 corridor today. We are already at the 2035 forecast rates.
The study only looked at the traffic rates at El Campo road during the peek hours- 7 am to 9 am, and 4 pm to 6 pm. Locals do
not use this crossing at those peek times because there they know that the traffic on the 101 is too heavy. Locals use that
intersection at off peek times. The study did not look at the flow for a full day and basis the estimates on the impact to the
local system of roads upon redirecting the lowest number of vehicles.
Los Berros Road at El Campo and Falcon Ridge is a blind access point with high speed traffic - the report does show that these
access points to Los Berros Road are already dangerous and the recommendation does not suggest any mitigation. As a result,
the safety is simply being moved from one pinch point to another.
The methodology in the report indicates that they only studied these intersections for 15 minutes, but they extrapolate the
data out to hours and days. During the afternoon peak hour, 5% of southbound 101 traffic exits at El Campo road. That is the
volume that should be considered at a minimum. The difference between counting 4 trips and 143 trips in the estimated
impact to our system of roads is enormous.
The study does not propose an acceleration lane onto highway 101 south for a safe merger - which is required by CalTrans for
any new construction.
The study does not indicate that the current configuration of the overpasses at Grand Ave and Halcyon roads that would
become the primary northbound entrance points do not meet current Cal Trans design requirements and would not be
approved by todays Cal Trans standards.
There was no study of the safety impact of adding street lighting or other safety enhancements to highway 101 at the el
campo interchange
There was no study of the safety impact of reducing the speed on highway 101.
There was no study of adding a traffic signal to highway 101.
Reference for daily traffic trips per household: https://nhts.ornl.gov/assets/2017_nhts_summary_travel_trends.pdf
On Mar 24, 2019, at 10:47 PM, Cheryl Storton <> wrote:
I have been getting calls from concerned citizens about
the proposed El Campo Road Closure. Everyone is in favor
of closing the left turn lane. I was surprised to see that
the A.G. City Manager has signed a letter opposing this and
that it is on the agenda for the Tuesday meeting. This
should be a simple no brainer! No one has suggested closing
the entire exit. I read the letter to the San Luis Council of
Governments and the attached letter from the fire
department. I find some conclusions confusing:
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->Why would anyone heading
north on 101 take the Traffic Way exit only to make
“abrupt U-turn at the northbound Traffic Way off-ramp where
there is a high likelihood of rear- end collisions” and use the
Mobile station “as a route to reenter the southbound Traffic
Way on-ramp?”
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->If the southbound exit lane
is still open, why would emergency response times be
lengthened. In fact, times might likely be shortened
if the left turn lane is closed because there would be
less traffic and congestion at El Campo.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->I believe that most people
who live in Arroyo Grande, avoid El Campo because
they know it is a dangerous left turn. I doubt very
much if the closure of the left turn lane would
increase traffic significantly. Only a small group of
residents who live in the El Campo area may be
inconvenienced.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->The cost of closing the left
turn lane is basically nothing. If it can save even one
life, we can surely put up with a little more traffic
and inconvenience.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->The letter seems to be
projecting problems that will likely not materialize.
Let’s try closing the LEFT TURN LANE and see what
happens.
<!--[if !supportLists]-->· <!--[endif]-->The letter is concerned
about “Deteriorated conditions at City intersections”
Really? Really? Why isn’t the City manager, Teresa
McClish, and the Five Cities Fire Authority,
concerned about the horrible traffic problems that
will be created by the projects at Halcyon and
Fairoaks? Or the project on the Loomis property in
the Village? Or the impact of a new hotel in the
Village? Or the Cherry Lane project?? All these will
surely result more deterioration of our City
intersections and roads than closing the left hand
turn lane at El Campo. And with more congestion from
these projects, emergency response times will
certainly increase.
Please do not sign and send this letter to SLOCOG.
Sincerely,
Cheryl Storton