Smooth traffic flow reported on St Thomas leg of South Coast Highway
ON the first day of the 2023/24 academic year residents of St Thomas had smooth traffic flow on sections of the Southern Coastal Highway Improvement Project (SCHIP) in the parish.
A roving JIS news team observed road users on several segments of the highway — between Yallahs Bridge and Harbour View — on Monday during the peak hours of 6:00 am and 9:00 am.
Among some of the notable new features was the opening of a stretch of paved road at Mezgar Gardens, which replaced the narrow, unpaved section that was being used up to Saturday. This eliminated traffic pile-up in that area.
The National Works Agency (NWA) said provision of a two-lane roadway was put in place between Eight Miles in Bull Bay and Harbour View, by St Benedicts Primary School in Kingston, thus motorists heading into Kingston occupied both lanes on the left of the road and motorists bound for St Thomas occupied a single lane on the opposite side.
Several signs were also observed to indicate where a detour is to be made, and flag persons along some sections of the road were on hand as well..
Not to be missed was the presence of the police at different points on the commute as they gave a watchful eye over the movement of traffic.
Inspector Ian Parker of the Public Safety and Traffic Enforcement Branch (PSTEB) told JIS News, “It was a smooth flow in both directions,” adding that “some work [was] done on the road over the weekend to facilitate this”.
He pointed out that two service units from PSTEB were stationed at the foot of Bull River bridge while a unit from the Kingston East Police Division was patrolling the stretch of road in both directions.
The inspector said those teams were supported by a unit from the St Thomas Division, whose members “came along to see what [was] happening”.
The reason for the area being so “well-policed” was “to ensure that delays were as minimal as possible, and to allow each person to get to wherever they are going without any major delay”.
Inspector Parker further indicated that any slowdown of traffic occured only in areas where the road surface is not smooth and still under construction.
This was, however, hardly noticed as the majority of the road is now complete or nearing completion.
Motorists with whom JIS interacted spoke highly of the measures implemented that have ensured the smooth flow of traffic for the back-to-school period.
“I can’t complain this morning. We got a free flow and there was no traffic at all,” said bus operator Kevin Hibbert who plies the Morant Bay to Kingston route.
“I reached Kingston on time. From about a week or two now, it’s not so bad as before. Sometimes it used to take me nearly three hours to get into Kingston. and now it is taking me an hour and a half. It’s a good look,” he said.
Albion resident Adrian Samuels, who took his son to school in the Corporate Area on Monday, similarly indicated that the commute was seamless, while pointing out that the SCHIP is making progress in the parish of his birth.
“Normally for back-to-school you would expect some delays, but this morning that was not the case. This not only shows that the road project is progressing, but that it is improving [on] the driving experience that existed before,” Samuels said. Monday.