MDOT plans Hub City railroad crossing changes

Written by jrood

February 14, 2001 The Rev. Brian Davis quips that he may have to change the name of his church, Bay Street Presbyterian, to "Can't Get Here From There" if the Mississippi Department of Transportation permanently shuts down the railroad crossing near an intersection to the church, the Hattiesburg American reports.

The pastor says the steep
crossing has served as the main traffic artery for his Hattiesburg congregation
for the 100 years the church has been at that location.

"For our longtime
members, it will be an inconvenience but not a great hardship," Davis
said. "They know how to get around town. The difficulty for us will be
guests – people who are visiting for worship or concerts that we’re
hosting."

In January, MDOT hosted a
public hearing where plans to modify 29 railroad crossings in Hattiesburg over
the next few years were revealed. Among the railway changes were 10 closures to
vehicle traffic. MDOT officials said the project has been under extensive
engineering and planning review for more than four years.

"This project was
proposed to MDOT by the Illinois Central/Canadian National Railway in line with
the … suggestion to eliminate 25 percent of existing highway-rail grade
crossings in the country," Monica Ramsey, MDOT’s intermodal transportation
planner, said in an e-mail.

Ramsey said the project
would make the "motoring public safer by eliminating redundant crossings
and having active warning devices that will give citizens better notice of an
approaching train."

At the hearing, officials
said the plans weren’t set in stone and that public comments and concerns would
be considered, but city officials have indicated even they have very little
power to stop any of the closings.

"I’m very sensitive
to the concerns about the railroad closings and have sought legal advice,"
Councilman Dave Ware said. "And the advice of the city attorney was that
MDOT has the authority to force closure and crossings they deem with a
particular hazard."

Ramsey said although
there haven’t been any accidents at the crossing near Bay Street Presbyterian,
there have been several "near misses."

"We try to be
proactive to prevent accidents from happening," Ramsey said. "If we
had to rate the crossings in the city from one to 10 (with 10 being the most
dangerous), that one would have been ranked 10 for potential accidents. With
that hump back and steep crossing, you can’t get two vehicles across it."

Davis said he has
witnessed a number of commercial trucks getting stuck on the crossing as well.

"I know that it is a
real hazard," Davis said. "But it’s difficult to accept that the
church will be hindered in ministry because there are those that don’t obey the
already posted traffic laws."

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