Animas View Drive residents’ concerns about speeding were exacerbated in fall 2023 when a woman was struck by a vehicle and killed while walking along the road. Now, residents are concerned that temporary speed cushions installed on the road are only making things worse.

The city of Durango installed five temporary speed cushions – devices similar to speed humps, except wider, less steep and containing cutouts for emergency vehicles to pass through, according to the city – on Animas View Drive earlier this year to test if they would be effective at lowering speeds.

Residents didn’t distinguish between speed cushions and speed humps, but said at the Tuesday City Council meeting the features are going to get someone killed.

“This was an ill-conceived concept,” resident Karola Hanks said.

She said drivers will swerve around the speed cushions, driving into the dirt path where people walk adjacent to the road, and speed up in the stretches of road between speed cushions.

“Now we have this weaving, swerving process with people bailing to get away from cars,” she said. “Secondly, cars are now speeding between the speed humps. Including city staff vehicles. Including public transportation from the city.”

Resident Mike Olsen said he is a civil engineer with experience in transportation design and engineering. He compared speed humps to potholes – hazards on the road.

He said Animas View Drive is not equipped for the amount of traffic it receives, citing transportation engineering manuals and average trips per day metrics for single family residence neighborhoods.

Oxbow Park is the biggest traffic generator on Animas View Drive, he said, and speed humps or speed cushions are not adequate for the amount of traffic on the road.

“The city is obligated like any developer to fix the problem before it gets started,” he said. “Well, now we have a problem. And the problem cannot be fixed with speed humps. Those need to be removed.”

Hanks said Animas View Drive residents welcome speed enforcement cameras and a ticketing program to reduce speeding. Instead, it got speed humps – or speed cushions.

“This was not well thought out. This has decreased safety,” she said. “And please remember, we want to be that test. We said it in a public hearing. We want to be there. But those speed bumps need to go away before somebody gets killed.”

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