Waukesha County owns and maintains certain main arterial roads in Brookfield, including North Avenue (county highway M) and Barker Road (county highway Y). The county is now proposing a major upgrade to the intersection of North and Barker. Their budget accommodates either a traditional traffic signal with turn lanes or a roundabout. No decision has been made yet on that choice. The Brookfield City Council has limited power over this decision. You are encouraged to contact the county's engineering representative directly:
Craig Donze, P.E.
One Source Consulting
(262) 784-9005
cdonze@one sourceconsult.com
CTH Y/CTH M Intersection Reconstruction - Brookfield, WI
The ultimate decision rests with a simple majority vote by the Waukesha County Board of Supervisors. The area with the intersection is County Supervisor District 9 and you are welcome to contact the supervisor for that district, former Brookfield 6th District Alderman Jim Heinrich:
District 9 County Supervisor Jim Heinrich
262-796-1814
jheinrich@waukeshacounty.gov
You may see the contact information for all 25 supervisors along with their contact information at WAUKESHA COUNTY SUPERVISOR BOARD MEMBERS
The City of Brookfield is included in supervisory districts 6 (northeast, Janel Brandtjen), 7 (north-central Patricia A. Haukohl), 8 (south-central Tom Schellinger), and 9 (west Jim Heinrich). As far as I know, none of the supervisors have made a public statement selecting one choice over the other and all of them welcome public comment.
And, of course, your aldermen are very interested in your opinions as well. The County Supervisors want to do the right thing and will consider the aldermen's comments on your behalf. So, let me know what you think about the proposal!
For some general background on the topic, see the following articles from the local media:
Brookfield News
August 12, 2008 - Is Brookfield ready for a roundabout? Council rejected idea in 2002, but county controls roads now
Online forum with your comments
PDF with map of proposed roundabout
PDF with map of proposed signalized intersection
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel
August 7, 2008 - Brookfield considers roundabout again to ease rush-hour traffic
July 19, 2008 - Editorial - Editorial: 'Round, 'round we go, Roundabouts are safer and easier on gas consumption than traditional intersections. So why are they controversial?
July 19, 2008 - McIlhern Editorial - Details foul a decent idea (quotes from Ald. Steve Ponto)
July 14, 2008 - Let’s all gather ’round for roundabouts (Laurel Walker opinion)
July 13, 2008 - What’s coming ’round the bend, Drivers can expect more roundabouts
November 10, 2007 - County's first roundabout ready to open in Caledonia
When this topic was voted on by the Brookfield Common Council on May 21, 2002, it was a city only project. Voting for the roundabout were Ald. Brunner, Garvens, Schulz and Mahkorn. Voting against were Ald. Steinke, Waffenschmidt, Wolff, Shaw, Ponto, Berg, Clappier, Heinrich (now Supervisor Heinrich), Schellinger (now Supervisor Schellinger), and Franz.
My web site at the time included this statement about why I opposed the roundabout:
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The neighbors didn't like it. Once in a while, there is such a compelling public good at stake that elected officials decide to go against popular opinion. For example, buying a fire truck is expensive and may cause taxes to go up which is never popular, but fire trucks are important for the safety of the whole city. Roundabouts are not as important as fire trucks.
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Ownership of Barker Road will be transferred to Waukesha County in September, 2002. North Avenue will be transferred in 2004. The expensive improvements will barely be completed before they are given away. Alderman Berg believes Brookfield residents are already giving enough of their tax money away.
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There are other reasonable and widely accepted alternatives, including traffic lights and turn lanes. There are even residents who drive through that intersection frequently and state the delays are minimal. Why fix what isn't broke?
Reason 2 is a moot point since the county now owns the roads and it is their responsibility. Since the county tax base is much larger the just the City of Brookfield, the portion being paid by city taxpayers is much smaller than it would have been in 2002. Points 1 and 3 are as valid as ever.
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel - 2002 Roundabout Proposal
February 15, 2002 - City going in circles over roundabout Brookfield plan moving ahead despite objections
February 16, 2002 - (Ald. Ponto letter to editor) The Morning Mail Traffic circle won't solve problems
February 20, 2002 - Council puts stop to plan for roundabout Dozens in Brookfield oppose intersection plan
February 22, 2002 - Roundabout may come back around again
February 22, 2002 - Waukesha supervisors give roundabout idea a spin, County taking over Barker Road, North Ave. intersection in Brookfield
North Avenue Widening
A couple of people have asked me if either North Avenue or Barker Road will be widened as part of this project. Specifically, Brookfield blogger Cindy Kilkenny claimed in a blog response entry of August 13, 2008 at 6:32 a.m. that "With the widening of North Avenue imminent ..." That is not true - there is no plan to widen North Avenue anytime soon.
This is an email from Waukesha County Director of Public Works Rich Bolte in response to my query:
From: Bolte, Rich [mailto:RBolte@waukeshacounty.gov]
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 8:45 AM
To: 'scott@scottberg.com'
Cc: Evans, Gary
Subject: RE: North Avenue, Brookfield Widening
Scott, the County acknowledges that CTH M (North Ave) in Brookfield should be widened to 4 travel lanes. Current traffic volumes indicate that it already meets the County standard of 13,000 vehicles per day. However, the project is NOT included in either the County’s Adopted 5 Year Capital Plan http://www.waukeshacounty.gov/uploadedFiles/Media/PDF/Administration/Budget/2008_Adopted_Budget/Capital_Projects/05_cap_five_LIST08(1).pdf nor is it included in our new draft plan to be released in September. From where I sit, it appears highly unlikely that the project will be undertaken in the next 10 years. The 10 year horizon could change based upon requests from the City or other circumstances I can’t predict now. Absent something like that, it’s at least 10 years away. Hope this helps explain things.
Rich
So, the county manager most responsible for this project makes an assurance that any such widening is 10+ years away and that claim is supported by the official county capital project planning budget. Any credible journalist would have at least contacted the county (as I did) for confirmation before making such an inflammatory claim. A responsible and skilled investigator could even have performed an anonymous investigation by looking at the county budget page Waukesha County 2008 Adopted Budget and would have found the page Mr. Bolte linked to. Do you think the blogger in question possesses such web page search skills? Could there be an agenda of embitterment clouding the blogger's objectivity and sense of responsibility, or was this merely lazy incompetence? And I don't know why anyone should be surprised, since inflammatory blunders are a common occurrence in the Kilkenny blog.
The really sad thing is that Brookfield residents like "BrkfldDad" have been completely played for fools by that inaccurate (careless? manipulative?) entry and may be spreading the mis-information, risking their own personal credibility on a falsehood. I wonder if they will go around retracting that rumor now that it's clearly shown as false, or if they will dodge their responsibility?