Traffic class commences
I have just taken a master class designed to acquaint motorists such as me with what to expect in the Metroplex for the foreseeable future ... and beyond.
It is a class in patience associated with coping with highway construction.
I've known this class was on the books and that the hundreds of thousands of us who drive through the Dallas/Fort Worth area each day are aware of what we can expect. We're going to experience gridlock made famous in places like Los Angeles and New York City. I'll throw in some foreign cities with which I am acquainted. Traffic flow in places like Athens, Bangkok, Taipei and Mexico City is nothing to dismiss, either.
I saw construction sites with utilities -- water drainage pipes -- piled along the thoroughfares such as Texas Highway 5 and U.S. Highway 380 through Princeton. Motorists traveling past these construction sites are using good judgment and adhering to warnings that they would be fined extra if they sped through them. Following state police warnings, though, slows the traffic to a near crawl.
I drove to Addison to have lunch with a friend. We parted company just ahead of rush hour. My GPS said it would take me about 45 minutes to get home. It took well more than an hour! Yes, I grumbled and cursed when I approached Allen and Princeton, where I started noticing the utilities strewn along the roadway.
I had to remind myself that this is a temporary condition. State highway planners hope to relieve traffic along US 380 by building those freeway bypasses around Princeton, Farmersville, McKinney and other cities.
However, and this is a big deal ... I am 75 years of age and I might not be around when it's all done. So, I shall pray for continued good health and my ability to operate a motor vehicle. I want to see them pick up those ubiquitous orange construction cones for the final time.