38°F
weather icon Mostly Clear

LETTER: Kyle Canyon Road and safety hazards

Reading the recent Review-Journal article regarding the city of Las Vegas’s new master plan (“Las Vegas has big plans for ‘fast-growing’ Kyle Canyon area”) a reader might think this to be good news to the residents of Kyle Canyon. Nothing could be further from the truth.

The city has allowed the developer to sell these newly developed homes without repairing Kyle Canyon Road to its former rough, but serviceable, condition and without completing off-site or right-of-way improvements. Now, it has the new residents merging onto the 55 mph traffic that is the normal speed for this stretch of road. On the weekends, when recreational use of Kyle Canyon is most popular, the speeds are higher.

Many of the new residents merging onto Kyle Canyon Road prefer to get a running start and don’t even stop at the stop sign. Hard braking to avoid them is a daily occurrence. Near misses are the norm.

Heaven forbid that the city of Las Vegas would actually put citizen safety above developer dollars and require that the safe operation of roadways should always remain a top priority.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: Donald Trump’s histrionics

Are retired military and government personnel who criticize this administration now considered “seditionists”?

LETTER: Las Vegas and Oakland sports teams

We’ve already been burned once. I hope this Oakland team doesn’t turn out to be a bait and switch scheme.

LETTER: Universal mail ballot an invitation to fraud

Monday’s Review-Journal headline about the pending Supreme Court case on mail-in voting should be a call to action for all Nevadans and American citizens throughout the country.

LETTER: A story about grade inflation

Mike Obstgarten’s “Academic fraud: Grade inflation is a scourge that must be eradicated” reminded me of a midterm grade I received my first semester in college.

LETTER: American needs universal health care. Put it on the ballot

Universal health care has been debated in the US for more than 40 years, but it is never voted on because both parties accept campaign donations from the for-profit insurance companies to maintain the status quo.

MORE STORIES