The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is reporting, “The St. Louis Fire Department has denied the Cardinals permission for further construction of their new stadium because of safety concerns, namely the proximity of the stadium to the highway.”
I’m not sure what good the objection will do at this point. While I’m not thrilled about losing the current Busch Stadium for a new “retro” stadium and the promised “ballpark village” I also think we need to get it done as quickly as possible.
But, back to the issue of the fire department. I know in other cities the unions require a certain number of firemen per truck – not sure about in the City of St. Louis. Whatever the reason, most fire departments are buying bigger and bigger equipment. This requires bigger and bigger streets. Any transportation engineer will tell you, the wider the street the faster the traffic will go – regardless of the posted speed limit.
In making cities more pedestrian & bicycle friendly we try to slow down traffic. In fact, a bit of congestion is a good thing.
Consider this from “Suburban Nation: The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream” by Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, and Jeff Speck:
When fire departments are allowed to usurp the role of town planner, they generally commit two errors. First, they put more weight on fire rescue than on the prevention of injury in general; they try to minimize emergency response time, without considering that the resulting wide streets lead to an increased number of traffic accidents, since people drive faster on them. Fire departments have yet to acknowledge that fire safety is but a small part of a much larger picture that others refer to as life safety. The biggest threat to life safety is not fires but car accidents, by a tremendous margin. Since the vast majority of fire department emergencies involve car accidents, it is surprising that fire chiefs have not begun to reconsider response time in this light; if they did, narrow streets would logically become the norm in residential areas. In the meantime, the wider streets that fire departments require are indeed quite effective at providing them with the quick access to the accidents they help cause.”
They continue on this subject…
“The second mistake fire departments make is purchasing oversized trucks, vehicles that have trouble maneuvering through anything but the widest of streets. Sometimes these trucks are required by outdatad union regulations, but often they are simply the result of a town’s desire to have the most effective machinery it can afford.* Unfortunately, a part of a truck’s effectiveness is its abillity to reach the fire in the first place. Once purchased, the truck turns from servant to master, making all but the most wasteful and unpleasant steet spaces impossible.”
In the footnotes the authors basically say these big trucks may be due to fire marshalls comparing “the size of their trucks” at conventions.
I’m guessing this issue with the stadium will get resolved with a nice donation to the fire department’s retirement fund.