We started by going door to door following Dude's accident, bruises, scrapes and all, and got signatures on a petition to do SOMETHING to slow things down. He had a little speech that he wrote and we took Squirt with so that she could see that you can turn really scary situations into something really good. This was essential for her after witnessing her brother fly off that windshield. She experienced just as much trauma that day as Dude did. Naturally, everyone signed our petition (how could you say no?).
We filled out the city petition, included all the signatures and I called the city rep to explain our case. He very frankly informed me that it's next to impossible to get these things to go through given how many requests they receive each year. I frankly told him that I wasn't going away and if they wanted a law suit on their hands, they could feel free to ignore yet one more application from our street. I didn't feel like he took any of that very seriously, so I got copies of all the applications submitted by various residents on our street over the years and highlighted the one that mentioned that "if they didn't do something, a child would soon be struck." We attached photos of Dude. We also included a photo of the car that was recently WRECKED by a careless driver and put our threat of a lawsuit in writing. We then took the liberty of ccing the Mayor and our local council person.
What do you know, our application was approved shortly after and we became the city's NUMBER ONE priority on the list of traffic calming measures. Just like that. Community meetings were organized and I'll admit, they were not pretty. In fact, when you get a community of random neighbors together who don't know each other well and have different ideas on what the calming measures should be, it gets downright ugly. But we forged through, risked hurting some feelings and ended up in agreement that speed humps and bike lanes would be our most effective measure. It took a year to get there, but we did reach success.
One of the three humps in in front of our picture window. There's also a "Hump" sign in our yard, which I find to be amusing.
The city rep told us that he has never seen this high of a percentage of neighbors coming together to make a plan and they've never had speed humps pass with the support we saw in our vote. They're now using our street as an example of what can happen when a community bans together for the betterment of their street.
Over the past couple weeks, we've been jumping for joy over the noise and ruckus happening outside our house. It's the most beautiful construction we've ever laid eyes on and our kids feel like an integral part of the end result. Now that motorists are getting used to the humps and are no longer losing bumpers and performing epic bottom outs that brought in inappropriate amount of joy to us, they're now avoiding our street and driving half the speeds they were before. It's an amazingly beautiful thing. Worth every annoyed city representative, every hostile phone call, every hour spent filling our paperwork and also worth the handshakes and smiles I shared with those same city representatives as the humps were installed and I told them they wouldn't have to deal with me from that day forward.
Success might be slow and tedious at times, but slow and tedious ended up winning the race this go round.
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