10News.com

10 In The Community
The Law TV
Show Your Love
Sustain San Diego
10 News Leadership Award
The Cool TV
10News Team - Joe Little
Related To Story

Santee Officials Look At Ways To Make SR-125 Safer

POSTED: 6:29 pm PDT September 21, 2009
UPDATED: 7:31 pm PDT September 21, 2009

Two separate fatal crashes could change the way a busy intersection in the East County looks, 10News reported.

There have been a total of 44 accidents in the last four years -- less than one per month -- at the intersection of northbound State Route 125 and Mission Gorge Road in Santee, according to Caltrans officials.

Caltrans said they will try and warn drivers about the intersection before they get there.

On August 28, four people were killed after the car's accelerator apparently became stuck and plowed through the intersection, into an SUV and burst into flames.

On Sunday, a woman was killed and another person critically injured after their trucks collided at the same intersection.

"We have had over the last four years 44 traffic collisions at that intersection," said Lt. Mike Munsey of the San Diego County Sheriff's Department.

Caltrans spokesman Edward Cartagena said a high number of accidents don't necessarily mean an intersection's design should be investigated. Instead, Caltrans studies trends, including what types of accidents occur, what times and where.

Capt. Patricia Duke of the San Diego County Sheriff's Department said, "We're not seeing a pattern. We are seeing some accidents as we do in every intersection. However, we are not seeing any identified pattern."

The incidents caught the attention of Santee city officials, but one problem with the intersection is northbound SR-125 is a four-lane highway with a 65 mph speed limit. As the highway enters Santee, it heads downhill. The only warning that the highway is about to end comes a half-mile before a stoplight at Mission Gorge Road, and there are no other warnings.

On the other side of Santee is State Route 67, a two-lane roadway. As SR-67 enters Lakeside there are flashing lights and a warning for a decreased speed limit. Santee officials said they asked Caltrans to install similar signs on SR-125, and Caltrans said it should only take a couple of weeks to have them in place.

Santee's Deputy City Manager Pedro Orso-Delgado said the road might need more safety measures, including rumble strips.

"It would give you an audible alert while you're driving and coming to the end of the freeway," said Orso-Delgado.

Caltrans said they were planning to add the new warnings later next year and are asking the contractor to do it ahead of schedule.

"Now, would the signage have prevented the accidents? I don't know," said Orso-Delgado.
The following are comments from our users. Opinions expressed are neither created nor endorsed by 10News.com. By posting a comment you agree to accept our Terms of Use. Comments are moderated by the community. To report an offensive or otherwise inappropriate comment, click the "Flag" link that appears beneath that comment. Comments that are flagged by a set number of users will be automatically removed.

Advertiser Links

Sponsored Links

Sponsored Links