Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Burbank

Some Good News from Tuesday: Verdugo Avenue Bike Lane and Road Diet Lives (For Now)

The new Verdugo.  Photo: ##http://lacbc.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/verdugoafter2.jpg##LACBC Blog##
The new Verdugo. Photo: ##http://lacbc.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/verdugoafter2.jpg##LACBC Blog##

Last week, Streetsblog warned that car drivers who use Verdugo Avenue were organizing a petition to fight the Avenue's Road Diet.  However, when the City Council gathered to decide whether or not to continue the diet, the opposition to the traffic calmed street was in the minority in the room and on the dais.  Instead of a packed room of car drivers presenting their petition, it was dozen of community and bicycle activists presenting 450 signatures in support of the diet that ruled the evening Tuesday night.

As a result, the Burbank City Council directed their planning department to keep three lane configuration of Verdugo Avenue in plan for another six months.  During that time the city will continue collecting the data and analyzing the operations of the corridor.

When the Council originally voted to create the diet, they set aside money to return to the old four lane configuration should the diet prove unsuccessful.  On Tuesday, they spent that money towards additional intersection improvements along the corridor to fix some of the  problems at intersections we outlined last week.

After the next six months, the Council will vote, presumably for the final time, on whether to keep the configuration permanently.  The politics look good as two of the five Council Members, including the Mayor, were ready to make it permanent now.  Another two thought it was working, but weren't 100% ready to commit permanently.  Another good sign?  Staff was also been directed to pursue other funding for expansion of the bike lanes and further pedestrian improvements throughout the city.

Public comments and Council Discussion can be heard on the city's official website.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

SGV Connect 129: Looking at Measures A and G

Both ballot measures need a simple majority to pass. SGV Connect will be back after the election to review what voters decided locally, regionally and across the state.

October 16, 2024

Metro Weekday Ridership Surpasses One Million

Metro ridership is at 86 percent of pre-pandemic levels, well ahead of the nationwide average of 76 percent

October 16, 2024

This Week In Livable Streets

Metro 405 Freeway widening meeting, weekend Metro A Line closures (Duarte to Azusa), Metro Rail to Rail path construction, and more

October 15, 2024

CicLAvia Heart of L.A. 2024 – Open Thread

Sunday's Heart of L.A. event was the 56th iteration of Los Angeles' popular open streets festival, CicLAvia

October 15, 2024
See all posts