This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Politics & Government

Complete Streets Plan Takes Step Forward in Oakland County

The initiative to make roads more accessible to walkers, bicyclists and mass transit programs soon could be adopted countywide.

Advocates say Oakland County roadways would be made more accommodating to nonmotorized forms of transportation – andΒ to mass transit – under a proposal tentatively approved Monday by a County Commission committee.

The Complete Streets plan would requireΒ future county road projects to take into account the needs ofΒ pedestrians, bicyclistsΒ and people with disabilities, as well asΒ mass transit services.

"This is really a nationwide program," County Commissioner Craig Covey, D-Ferndale, said. "We'd like to see Oakland County get on at the head of the train rather than being the caboose."

Find out what's happening in Ferndalefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Covey was mayor of Ferndale when the .

Covey joined withΒ Democrat Dave Woodward of Royal Oak in promoting the plan to fellow commissioners. However, the commission has little direct say over road projects. County roadways not maintained by the state or local municipalities areΒ administered by the Road Commission for Oakland County, an independent agency.

Find out what's happening in Ferndalefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"What we're saying is we'd like to work with the Road Commission on a Complete Streets plan," Woodward said.

What's next

Road commissioners would be given 6 months to draft a plan outlining how Complete Streets objectives could be met in Oakland County communities.

Several communities including Berkley, Clawson, Novi, Oxford and Oakland Township, have adopted Complete Streets resolutions of their own, Covey said, as has the state of Michigan. With Ferndale passing an ordinance in 2010.

TheΒ Oakland County proposal cleared a preliminary hurdle Monday morning withΒ approvalΒ by the County Commission's general government committee. It now goes before the full commission for a full, final vote at 9:30 a.m. Aug. 18.

Despite being pleased with Monday's vote, CoveyΒ acknowledged its narrow 5-4 margin indicates the plan faces an uncertain future before the 25-member commission.

"We will be sending out information to all commissioners and, hopefully, we'll be picking up some votes along the way," Covey said.

Questions remain

Virtually all commissioners who spoke at Monday's hearing said they favored the plan – at least in concept. SomeΒ called it compatible with the county's own Main Street road enhancement plan, already under way in a dozen communities, including Ferndale and Rochester. Several commissioners, however, said the Complete Streets plan, as proposed, lacks specifics.

"Does this mean bikepaths or wheelchair lanes down Woodward (Avenue)?" askedΒ CommissionerΒ John Scott, R-Waterford. "I'm not sure what I'm voting on here."

Fellow CommissionerΒ Jeff Matis, R-Rochester, wondered whether the plan would add unnecessary cost to future road projects.

"I have spoken with the Road Commission on some other projects and the one thing they mention is cost," he said.

Complete Streets, Woodward said, mandates nothing but calls on road construction plans toΒ add items such as curb cuts, ramps, pathways and crosswalks wherever feasible. Such improvements wouldn'tΒ beΒ initiated in and of themselves but wouldΒ be linked to future road reconstruction projectsΒ involving county roads.Β 

The plan has been adopted in rural as well as urban communities across the country.

Monday's discussion comes at a time when leaders from several southern Oakland communities, have indicated renewed interest in a Woodward Avenue mass transit plan,Β possibly augmenting the light rail plan proposed for Detroit.

But, for Complete Streets, "the primary goal is safety," Covey said.

The Ferndale Environmental Sustainability Commission will hold a free public discussion on bringing Complete Streets to Oakland County from 6:30-8 p.m. Tuesday at the Ferndale Public Library. Click here for more information.

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?