Gripp said no arrests have been made so far. The vast majority of tickets — 54 — were for speeding, but police also issued several tickets for expired inspections, improper child restraints, windshield obstructions and other offenses.
Joy Huertas, a spokesperson for the Streets Department said the agency was cooperating with the police initiative, but acknowledged that “enforcement alone is not an efficient or effective way to ensure a safe roadway network.”
“Behavior and compliance with the rules of the road network are important —for cyclists, drivers, and pedestrians,” she said. “And at the same time, we endeavor to design a roadway system that reduces the likelihood of noncompliance as our main priority.”
Huertas said the city’s Streets Department and the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation were “discussing” more permanent traffic-calming measures, pointing to the recent $4.7 million installation of high-friction resurfacing along the curbs of a portion of Kelly Drive, a surface asphalt treatment designed to reduce skidding and hydroplaning.
The city drew criticism after it moved to reopen Martin Luther King Drive — a parallel roadway along the western bank of the Schuylkill River — to vehicular traffic after a long pandemic-driven closure. LoBasso said efforts like asphalt treatments or speeding tickets would do little to address the larger structural issues along Kelly Drive.
“As far as … the police presence on the drive, it’s not clear that it’s a good solution or a long-term solution that actually ends the problem,” he said.
MLK Drive will reopen to vehicular traffic Wednesday, Aug. 4 at 5 p.m. The road will remain closed to cars south of Sweetbriar Drive because of repairs needed on MLK Bridge after an inspection found some damage on its underside. The closure will stay in place until repairs of the bridge are complete in 2024. Pedestrians and bicyclists will still be able to use the bridge while repairs are ongoing.