“What we love about this is being able to create a plan and then potentially having the opportunity to fund actionable items in our own community to make it more accessible for our pedestrians and bikes,” said Judy Trombetta, vice president of the Haverford Township Board of Commissioners.
Trombetta said the township wasn’t built to accommodate the number of vehicles currently on the roadways.
Like many of its neighboring townships in the Main Line, Haverford doesn’t have universal sidewalk coverage. Additionally, Burman said several of the township’s neighborhoods are separated by busy state roads such as Haverford Road, West Chester Pike and Township Line Road.
“We have these neighborhoods that, in many cases, are not linked safely for pedestrians and bicycles,” Burman said.
Additionally, Burman said Haverford Township experiences a lot of “cut-through traffic” — drivers seeking shortcuts through residential neighborhoods to avoid more congested streets. He said fixing these problems could involve installing bump-outs at intersections, raised crosswalks and push buttons for pedestrians. Burman stressed the need for more data points.
CH Planning’s preliminary analysis of 2022 vehicle crash data already uncovered issues with Haverford Road and Eagle Road, according to Managing Associate Olivia Foster. Pedestrian crash data from 2018 to 2023 share similarities.
“The development of this plan is not only an analysis of the places of greatest need in terms of the most dangerous roads in the township statistically, [it is] also based on the input that we’re getting from you all — from community members, from residents, from other community stakeholders, because you all know your community best,” Foster said during Thursday’s virtual meeting.