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DOT to Build Jones Beach Bike Path Buffer

As critics grow louder, state takes more time on guardrail proposal


By Barbara Baez and Timothy Bolger

Even more pressure is being put on the New York State Department of Transportation (DOT) to install a guardrail on the bike path from Cedar Creek Park to Jones Beach—this time from Town of Hempstead officials—just as the state prepares to start dealing with the issue of how to protect the path’s estimated 1,000 daily users from high-speed traffic.

“It is outrageous that the state Department of Transportation would allow a trail of death and injury to remain unaddressed,” Hempstead Supervisor Kate Murray said Thursday. “What’s more troubling is the fact that state officials want to extend this dangerous trail and expose more cyclists to hazardous conditions without making the existing bike path safe for use,” she added, referring to plans to extend the path north to Eisenhower Park.


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The memorial for Matthew Scarpati, a college student who was killed by an allegedly drunk driver last month on Island Creek Bridge.
The memorial for Matthew Scarpati, a college student who was killed by an alleged drunken driver last month, on Island Creek Bridge.

The DOT has been criticized about the lack of a protetive barrier between the bike path and the northbound side of the Wantagh State Parkway since 19-year-old Matthew Scarpati, a bicyclist from Dix Hills, was killed at the south side of Island Creek Bridge when a motorcyclist struck him while the teen was changing a flat tire in July. As first reported in the Long Island Press, the agency had already considered the proposal but dropped it and New York State Sen. Charles Fuschillo (R-Merrick) met the victim’s family and DOT officials to discuss reviving the guardrail idea this month. At the meeting, Fuchillo presented the DOT with a pro-guardrail petition signed by more than 3,000 people.

Two lawsuits, one active and one from 2002 that has been resolved, surfaced since the guardrail issue has gained groundswell—each involving people who have been struck by vehicles while using the path. In the first suit, a judge ruled in the DOT’s favor and said that there is no need for a guardrail. But the state agency is preparing a bike path barrier plan now.

“We will further separate the bike path from the parkway’s vehicular traffic by closing the outside, right travel lane on the parkway for four miles,” DOT Acting Commissioner Stanley Gee said in a statement Friday. Extensive pavement striping in the soon-to-be-closed right lane will increase the space between parkway traffic and the bike path that will vary from 20 feet to 41 feet wide.

Also, the DOT will install a rumble strip at the edge of the new right lane of the parkway in order to alert motorists with a warning if they drift off the road. After that, this fall the agency will install flexible, three-foot-high tubular posts along the edge of the parkway where it curves at the approaches to the Goose Creek Bridge and the Island Creek Bridge. The work will begin on Sept. 1.

As for the guardrail, the DOT is “in the midst of reviewing additional safety measures, including the use of guiderail,” Gee said, adding that the DOT will reach out to the community for input.

Critics were not appeased. “Rumble strips and reflective striping could be helpful as an additional safety measure, but will not be an adequate substitute for guardrails,” Murray said.

As for the bike path extension, that proposal is in the “very early preliminary stages,” said Ilene Peters, spokeswoman for the DOT’s Long Island region. “The future of that project will not be determined until after a public hearing,” she said. Another DOT spokeswoman said guardrails are also being considered in that proposal.

Meanwhile, concerns have also been raised over the current jogging path that extends from Park Avenue to Brush Hollow Road on the northbound side of the Wantagh parkway, where a teenager was killed in 1982, in addition to the Mill Pond County Park path on the southbound side of the parkway near Merrick Road in Wantagh where a fatal car crash claimed three last month. None of those killed in that early morning crash were pedestrians on the path.

Richard Schary, a Long Island environmentalist who voiced the concerns about the Jones Beach bike path and the Mill Pond path, said: “They have to realize that it’s an off-road and multi-use recreational trail and thousands of joggers, bicyclists and rollerbladers and families who are pushing baby strollers should have a reasonable expectation of safety when they use this trail.”

More articles filed under Long Island News,News


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9 Responses to “DOT to Build Jones Beach Bike Path Buffer”

  1. marla Kiss says:

    I recently purchased a awesome CBR but had a small accident! I tried to slow down with the brake consistently with the forward brake but the wheel basically instantly fell out under me! I have often been on the back of a bike with a friend a few times who has brought the rear bike into the air by braking very hard with the front brake! How does he do it that it works better? Im confused!!

  2. Rainman says:

    The same people who have been paying for the Bridges to Jones Beach to be constructed, deconstructed and constructed again for the past 30 years. Taxpayers. For a little bit a safety , is it that difficult to budget some money to build a guard rail? I would like to see more access for bikes throughout Long Island.

  3. Matt says:

    How about mandating a new speed limit and enforce it? 30 mph? Let the law enforcement agencies really do their thing. mandatory fines, say 1000.00 for speeding.
    Still better, let’s make all cars and motor vehicles travel no faster than 40 mph, do not allow smoking, drinking of beverages , using navigation equipment etc etc illegal.
    Why stop there? Ban cars altogether, make people walk to the beach. Or float a bond for a massive project, build an elevated train line, like the aero-thing at JFK to transport people.
    Get with it folks, this is a mixed use area. Put up a guardrail and be done with it. Enforce the traffic laws. Be adultss don’t drink and drive, don’t speed.

  4. Joe says:

    I think that we should place guardrails on every street in NYC, Sunrise Highway and Hempstead Turnpike. This is a parkway first not a bike path. Close the bike path if it is so unsafe. Shrinking the parkway to two lanes and I am sure the speed limit will be reduced as well, will only frustrate the frustrated drivers on Long Island more thereby causing more vehicle accidents. This is all emotional politics like the installing of useless stop signs on town roads and improperly timed lights on state roads that just frustrate drivers thereby causing reckless driving. Think about it – When one feels controlled one attacks out.

    I agree with the other commentator. Who is going to pay for it ? The taxpayers !!! I will add – who is going to pay for the cost to maintain it ? The more you have the more you must maintain the more you get use to it the more it will be replaced when it fails.

    We need to make priorities for the country otherwise we will tax ourselves to death and thereby become a weak country in which the world will miss.

    P.S. When the stupid wasteful money for the Ocean Parkway Bike Path is built are we going to spend millions to build a guardrail then ?

  5. what?? says:

    Close it??? are you a numbskull?

  6. Guest says:

    Cause we don’t want to end up fat beer drinking slobs watching the
    o’ Reilly factor every night at 8 like you.

  7. Timultuous says:

    Who’s going to pay for it?

  8. Stop the Assault on Capitalism says:

    If it is so dangerous, close it! Why are we maintaining places to WALK? If yoiu want to walk/bike/jog 5 miles, go around your block 20 times. End of story!

  9. Gina Russo says:

    I originally advocated for guard rails back in February and presented Senator
    Fuschillo with 3300 signatures at the meeting on August 19 with the Scarpati family , not 1500 as you have stated.
    But we still need more. To sign a petition, please visit http://www.LIFun4Kids.com and click on the petition sheet link, complete and mail back to me asap.
    Also, my facebook group link can be found there called “Guard Rail for Wantagh Parkway Bike Path”. Previous to the fatal accident in February, my group had 60 members, but now has 2140 members and counting.
    Thank you for your help and support.