LOS ANGELES -- "Carmageddon II" -- the
sequel -- is coming to one of the most crowded U.S. freeways, and
authorities are hoping its subtitle won't be "The Traffic Strikes Back."
Transportation
officials say what they would like to see during the last weekend of
September is a rerun of last year's two-day closure, when hundreds of
thousands of motorists dodged doomsday predictions by staying away until
the busy, 10-mile (16-kilometer) stretch of Interstate 405 reopened. It
was one of the lightest freeway traffic weekends anyone in Los Angeles
could remember.
Hopes are high that next
weekend will have the same happy result, as businesses and residents
prepare to avoid the roadway that must close again so work can be
completed on a bridge.
At Ronald Reagan UCLA
Medical Center, just outside the Carmageddon Zone, officials plan to
house as many as 300 doctors, nurses and other staff members in dorms at
nearby hotels so nobody will have trouble getting to work.
Some
patients, including women in the latter stages of complicated
pregnancies, are being encouraged to check in before the freeway closes
at 12:01 a.m. Sept. 29.
"Everybody, including
myself, will be here to man the entire event, just to make sure
everything goes safely for our patients and staff," says Shannon
O'Kelley, the hospital's chief operations officer.
A
group of art enthusiasts, meanwhile, formed "Artmageddon," featuring
activities at dozens of museums and art-house theaters and listing them
on the website artmageddonla.com. People are encouraged to walk or bike.
The
UCLA campus, with about 41,000 students, has emergency traffic
diversion plans in place. In Santa Monica, just down the road, a new
emergency operations center opened last month. Authorities say every
major transit, law enforcement and emergency services agency in the area
has been cooperating in making contingency plans.
In
the meantime, just what should people do over the weekend when they
will hopefully be too afraid to pull out of their driveways?
"Eat,
Shop and Play Locally," advises the Los Angeles Metropolitan
Transportation Authority, reciting its official Carmageddon II slogan.
The
agency is partnering with hundreds of restaurants, tourist attractions
and other venues to offer discounts to people who can show they used
mass transit to get there.
If thousands of
people hadn't stayed home on a mid-July weekend last year, authorities
say they might have caused a traffic backup so massive it could have
spread to connecting freeways, gridlocking the entire city highway
system. The result, "Carmageddon," would have been miles and miles of
idling cars filled with thousands and thousands of angry people.
"The
risk factors are exactly the same as they were last year, so nothing
has changed in terms of the heartburn that traffic agency people are
feeling right now," says Dave Sotero, a spokesman for the transportation
authority.
It's not just any freeway being
shut down, but one that even on weekends, when traffic is relatively
light, can carry a half-million vehicles. It's also the one that links
the city's San Fernando Valley, where 1.7 million people live, to its
dense, urbanized West Side and its beaches.
As
they did for the first Carmageddon, officials have been posting
flashing freeway signs for weeks warning people all over the state to
stay away. On Labor Day weekend in early September, people driving in
and out of the desert resort of Palm Springs, 100 miles (160 kilometers)
to the east, began seeing the signs.
The freeway is scheduled to reopen at 5 a.m. Monday, Oct. 1, just before the morning rush hour.
Last year it opened 17 hours early, but Sotero says not to expect that again because there's more work this time.
When
all the work in the area is completed toward the end of next year,
there will be a new, wider and seismically safer bridge crossing the
freeway at the city's scenic Mulholland Drive.
If the freeway doesn't reopen on time, that's when Carmageddon will really kick in.
While they insist they don't expect that to happen, officials say they will be ready if it does.
Associated Press