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Weigh in on the Future of the 34th Avenue Open Street at Virtual Meeting Wednesday

34th Avenue Open Street (DOT)

Dec. 1, 2020 By Allie Griffin

Jackson Heights residents will have a chance to weigh in on redesigning a stretch of 34th Avenue that has been turned over to pedestrians and cyclists as part of the city’s Open Streets program.

The Department of Transportation (DOT) is hosting a Zoom meeting on the 34th Avenue Open Street Wednesday from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and will be joined by Council Member Daniel Dromm, State Sen. Jessica Ramos and representatives from Queens Community Board 3.

The 34th Avenue Open Street, which runs from 69th Street to Junction Boulevard, is closed to cars and most vehicles from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day as part of the pandemic-age initiative. Vehicles are permitted to drive — at 5 MPH  — on the closed street for local and emergency purposes.

The Open Streets program, including 34th Avenue, was originally set to expire on Oct. 31.

However, local residents and elected officials have pushed the DOT to make the 1.3-mile stretch of 34th Avenue a permanent Open Street.

Last month, residents appeared to get their wish when a DOT spokesperson said the Open Streets program no longer has a set end date. Furthermore, department officials stated they would develop a “long-term” plan for the 34th Avenue.

Wednesday’s meeting is a step toward developing that plan.

DOT officials will provide a debrief on the street, discuss the department’s street improvement tools, gather community feedback and begin to outline a plan for the future of 34th Avenue.

Neighbors are invited to share their experience on the Open Street as well as their ideas for its future, the department said.

Those who wish to participate in the meeting should register in advance here.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

4 Comments

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SKANMAN

Nobody seems to care about the parking. It’s already a nightmare man. Who’s gonna casually walk on 34thave mid snowstorm? Tell me..

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Sara Ross

Enough with giving bicyclists freedom to ride everywhere without having to obey traffic laws and not getting tickets for going through red lights, going through stop signs, zig zagging in and out of traffic, riding on the drivers’ side doors so that the DRIVER has to look out for the bicyclists. Not to mention they don’t pay a dime to ride around this city. NYC is a walking and driving city. Now that worthless Polly is gone maybe now we can go back to what we were.

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James

Hey we want you to social distance but we’re gonna close these streets off so you can pretty much hangout with a bunch of other people who may or may not have the virus. And we’re also gonna screw up and create more traffic in the area.

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