Members of the Highway 12 Safety Coalition have pushed for improvements to make it safer for drivers who travel along a deadly stretch of Hwy. 12 in the west metro, and on Friday they learned that they will get one of their requests in the form of a concrete center median.
The Minnesota Department of Transportation has allocated about $2.3 million for the barrier that will be built in September from Interstate 394 in Wayzata to County Road 6 in Orono. The barrier will separate traffic on the 3½-mile segment of the two-lane highway that has seen several fatal and serious injury crashes over the past five years, including three in three days last August.
In November, the coalition kicked off a campaign to go 12 months without a fatal crash. Since then, there have been three, or one every 45 days, along with several near-misses.
"It's fantastic to get one of the many projects that are needed to protect lives along Hwy. 12," said Gary Kroells, West Hennepin Public Safety director and a member of the coalition. "It's a step forward to fix the problem with head-on collisions."
The median was one the upgrades that was part of a $15 million line item in the state bonding bill. Legislators failed to pass the bill leaving MnDOT with no funding to pay for the wall.
A MnDOT spokeswoman confirmed that the agency will pay for the barrier with $2.3 million that the Federal Highway Administration withholds annually from MnDOT due to Minnesota's comparatively less stringent DWI laws.
Kroells said he hopes legislators will not forget about two other safety improvements on Hwy. 12 that had been included in the 2016 bonding bill: a roundabout at County Road 90 and realigning the intersection of County Road 92 in Independence.
"We're glad we got the concrete median," Kroells said. "We still need to get the others. We desperately need them now."