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Drivers should slow down on Sunnyside - Frank Petkovich

Sunnyside Road on Long Lake is not a super highway. It is not even a secondary highway, nor even a regional road. It is in fact a hilly winding treacherous city street.
Sunnyside Road on Long Lake is not a super highway. It is not even a secondary highway, nor even a regional road. It is in fact a hilly winding treacherous city street. At the same time it is a scenic enjoyable lake side trail for walkers or drivers who have their heads screwed on properly. Mind you, the walkers must be young and agile in order to avoid getting clobbered by speeding drivers.

The speed limit on this treacherous, poorly engineered city street is 50 km/hr as on all city streets. Why then do so many drivers take the unnecessary risk of driving at 30 or 40 kilometres above the speed limit?

It appears there is a contagious addiction here where even the school buses that should be the driving role models, substantially exceed the speed limits and jeopardize the safety of themselves and their young passengers around these winding curves and up and down the many hills.

Perhaps we need more speed signs or more police surveillance. I use the road daily at least once and have seen a police cruiser only twice in the last two years.

What possesses drivers to drive as if they were affected by road rage? Is it the thrill of a possible devastating accident that drives them? Or is it the desire to get to their destination a few seconds ahead of their estimated time? Perhaps they are thrilled by scaring others out of their wits.

Frank Petkovich
Sunnyside Road
Sudbury