UPDATED Saturday 12/2: Streaming video of the entire workshop is now online from Coastsider
Tuesday November 21, the Half Moon Bay City Council considered a draft environmental impact report for the Terrace Avenue stoplight [Background and draft EIR]. You can download a PDF of the PowerPoint presentation made to the city council by its consultants.
The plan would involve adding a traffic signal at Terrace, realignment and widening Highway 1, stop signs, retaining walls, a barricade at Silver Avenue, and pavement removal. Click on the photo for a larger view.
The residents of Terrace Avenue have been fighting this plan for some time. As a result of numerous requests from Terrace Avenue residents, council members Bonnie McClung, Marina Fraser, and Naomi Patridge supported the exploration of what came to be known in the meeting as the “no light alternative”. The city council voted unanimously to ask the City staff to explore the implications of putting no light at the intersection of Terrace Avenue and Highway 1. One of the more complex issues is that the proposed light would be paid for by Ailanto Properties, the developers of Pacific Ridge, which would use Terrace Avenue to connect to Highway 1.
The public still has until the December 15 deadline to comment on the draft Environmental Impact Report.


It’s a misnomer to call it the “no-light” alternative when they are considering “no-project” at all as the alternative. McClung, Patridge and Fraser appear ready to abandon widening Highway 1 to four lanes north of Main to Grandview despite the traffic studies showing that this substantially improves the overall flow of city traffic during commute hours, and especially despite the fact that the developer pays for all infrastructure improvements.
Passing up a chance to improve the commute experience for locals for free while serving the interests of those following us later in this century seems like the kind of nonpartisan idea that most folks here on the Coastside readily endorse. Maybe my memory isn’t working, but didn’t McClung and Patridge run promising to improve local infrastructure? How will adding 63 new homes near downtown, not to mention the County’s unrelenting (hear Bolero playing?) 2% addition of homes each year, with no change to road capacity help traffic?
Answer please. It doesn’t, does it?