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Traffic-Calming or Driver-Irritating? The "Road Diet" Explored

Geoffrey Riley/JPR

There are few middle-of-the-road (sorry) opinions about the concept known as "road diet."

This is the process of taking a four-lane road and turning it into a two-lane road with center turn lane and expanded bike lanes.  It's supposed to make more room for bicycles and calm traffic, but some drivers do not find it calming at all.

The experiment with a road diet on the town's main drag is now several months old, and the city is taking public comments on whether the diet should become a permanent thing. 

Credit Geoffrey Riley/JPR
Travel lanes merge at the north end of Ashland's road diet

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Geoffrey Riley is a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism and has hosted the ÀÏ·ò×Ó´«Ã½ Exchange on JPR since 2009. He's been a broadcaster in the Rogue Valley for more than 35 years, working in both television and radio.