JACKSONVILLE, Ala. (WBRC) – New upgrades happening in Jacksonville will make walking safer on the campus of Jacksonville State University.
The Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) and the city of Jacksonville are working together to help students as they navigate through busy state roads in the area.
“They’re putting medians in here, kind of buffers there for pedestrians in the middle of the road. Serves several purposes, the students and pedestrians must go to the crosswalk to cross but also kind of offers a kind of natural slow down for drivers,” said JSU’s Director of Strategic Communication Josh Underwood.
The push to slow drivers down on campus comes after 22-year-old Leah Tarvin, a JSU student, was struck and killed on SR-21 by a driver in November of 2022. Student Cameron Prothro says he wishes more of these safety measures were around for Leah.
“I was actually in class when it happened. It was actually wild because I had walked out of class and there was a bunch of cop cars, and I was just like what happened, and they said somebody got hit. I feel like it definitely needed the improvement anyways because it never really was safe when I first got here,” said Prothro.
Other enhancements from ALDOT will include a traffic light near SR-204 and a new sidewalk, something Robbie Matthews says he likes.
“Never really good to lose anybody on campus or anything like that but we appreciate it. I wish they would’ve did it during the summer so the traffic wouldn’t be so bad on the way back and forth to class but we definitely appreciate it,” said Matthews.
With construction currently going on, Underwood says October is the goal to have this portion of the project completed.
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