Indeed, Crosswalk Signal Has Been Out Across From Intersection Of Recent Pedestrian Death On Main Street

A woman was struck and killed by a car at the opposite side of this intersection - Teller Avenue and Main Street. Pictured here is the opposite side of the street - Fishkill Avenue and Main Street, where readers of ALBB have reported that they have noticed the crosswalk sign being out for at least a week, perhaps longer.

UPDATE 12/12/2021 3:30pm: The red hand STOP light seems to be out. However, the white WALK person does turn on *if* you press the crosswalk button. But the button for this location is not at the corner as it is at other corners. To access this signal button, one must back up quite a few feet if they walked past it. So, if a person doesn’t know to back up and press that button, the crosswalk WALK won’t turn on. Thus, the red countdown numbers won’t turn on, if they only initiate when the white WALK signal is showing. Read the update here and see the video of how the signal is behaving.

After the woman died of her injuries while crossing Teller Avenue near the Yankee Clipper Diner in accordance with the crosswalk signal after being hit by a Jeep Wrangler turning left from Main Street onto Teller Avenue, readers wrote into A Little Beacon Blog via public Instagram comments that the crosswalk signal on the opposite side of Main Street, which would be Fishkill Avenue near the Valero gas station, has been out for some time. Their comments were made 5 days ago, and still the light is out, with no markings or indications that it is broken.

Additionally, the audio crosswalk signal sign that accompanies this signal - which speaks “Wait!” and names the road that the person is signaled to cross - indicates that the pedestrian is signaled to cross Teller Avenue. However, on that side of Main Street, the road is called Fishkill Avenue. The green street sign says Fishkill Avenue. A pedestrian unfamiliar with this nuance and common renaming of a road seemingly arbitrarily all over Beacon might be confused if they are relying on the audio call-out of a street name, if they knew they were standing at Fishkill Avenue and Main Street. ALBB has not tested the audio in the past, if this sign indeed speaks Teller or Fishkill. In writing, the white signal sign says Teller.

Who Is Responsible For Identifying A Broken Crosswalk Signal?

Often times, when items that need attention are brought up during public City Council Meetings, after months or years of neglect, councilmembers are known to say: “You must tell us, or we don’t know.”

They City of Beacon has what is called a Traffic Safety Committee. According to the city’s website: “The City of Beacon Traffic Safety Committee studies traffic conditions on streets and highways within the City. The Committee analyzes reports of accidents and recommends to the appropriate legislative bodies, departments or commissions such changes in roles, orders, regulations and existing law as the Committee may deem advisable.”

Who serves on that committee? According to the City’s website: “The Committee is comprised of five members: the Chief of Police, a Planning Board representative and three members appointed by the Mayor.”

According to Minutes posted for the monthly meetings of the Traffic Safety Committee, the following people make repeat appearances as attendees of the meeting:

Fire Chief Gary VanVoorhis
Police Lieutenant Jason Walden
Superintendent of Streets Michael “Mickey” Manzi (this is the Highway Department)
Planning Board Representative Jill Reynolds (an artist who is a glassblower)
Beacon Resident Carolyn Glauda Bennett (a resident who wanted to be on the Traffic Safety Committee after witnessing at least 2 pedestrian accidents)
Traffic Safety Committee Secretary Collin Milone (this is the executive assistant to the Mayor)

Members of the public who have been approved to discuss a request that they made may be invited to present their case to the committee. A recent attendee has also been Stowe Boyde, representative of the Main Street Access Advisory Committee.

The Highway Department drives around on the streets of Beacon often, and is at times tasked with installing street signs, paving, clearing debris from storms, installing LED lights into city-owned light poles, etc. The Highway Department is led by Michael (Mickey) Manzi, in the position title known as Superintendent of Streets.

A person could try the following contact avenues to report in a signal outage:

Superintendent of Streets: mmanzi@beaconny.gov
Beacon’s current City Administrator Chris White: cwhite@beaconny.gov
Your Ward Representative: To find out which City Council Member represents you, click here.

Once you report something to any of these contacts, do keep a paper trail of it so that you can see if your message was relayed, and what was done. For instance, if you tell your City Councilmember about a traffic issue, the City Councilmember may report it to the Traffic Safety Committee, which may then be indicated in the meeting notes posted here. At that point, it is up to the Traffic Safety Committee to discuss it, and if appropriate, make a recommendation to the City Council to then discuss it and implement it.

Additionally, different roads are owned by different government entities. New York State may own a part of a road, the City of Beacon may own a part of a road, the Town of Fishkill may own part of a road. At times, a seemingly simple request can be tossed around like a hot potato.

Or a bad “how many ___ does it take to change a light bulb?” joke.

Bottom line: the signal is out, and someone died on the opposite corner while crossing the street for a signal that worked.

Agenda Posted For The 6/14/2021 City Council Workshop Meeeting

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Beacon’s City Council meets tonight to discuss the following issues that are on the agenda. During a Workshop meeting, the public can listen, but not participate. The purpose of these meetings is to workshop a concept before bringing it formally before the public for a vote, if it reaches that point. Topics that have already made it to the public are sometimes brought back to Workshops status to be further discussed, after receiving feedback from the public.

Click here for the agenda at the City’s website.

ALBB publishes the agenda here, plus the video when it is released. All meetings are published here in ALBB’s Easy Access Local Government section.

1. Notice of Change in Meeting Location June 14, 2021

2. Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act Presentation by City Attorney

3. Proposed Local Law to Create Chapter 155, Article III of the Code of the City of Beacon to Prohibit Smoking in City Parks

4. Participatory Budgeting Discussion

5. Recommendations from the Parking and Traffic Safety Committee

6. Police Advisory Committee

7. Proposed Historic Property Nominations Pursuant to the Historic District Landmark Overlay (HDLO) Zone

8. Proposed Abandonment of City Paper Streets: Morse Street, Be Vier Avenue, and Ryans Avenue