Subscribe to our Newsletter!
East Sacramento Preservation
- 🌳 Volunteers Needed for McKinley Park Tree Planting!🌳 02/19/2025
- East Lawn Memorial Park Guided Historic Walking Tours 02/08/2025
- 20 Is Plenty Lawn Sign Available 02/04/2025
- 77 Volunteers, 16 Trees, and a Greener Future 02/03/2025
- Make a Date to Help the Tree Canopy 01/06/2025
Category Archives: Parks
East Sacramento Preservation Documents Weekday Bumper to Bumper Traffic Near Mercy Hospital and Sacred Heart School
When parents collect students at Sacred Heart, traffic comes to a stand still. It’s one of the worst traffic jams in East Sacramento and it’s caused by a school.
Sacred Heart Parish School was relocated to the west side of 39th Street between J and H Streets in 2010. The school is new and has 310 students. The campus was developed as part of Mercy Hospital’s expansion currently under construction in East Sacramento.
At three o’clock vehicles are often backed up all the way to J and sometimes to H Street, two major East Sacramento thoroughfares. The worst of the congestion only lasts for about 10 or 15 minutes during morning or afternoon student drop-off and pick-up.
There is a school monitor with a flag and vest assigned to manage the flow at the school entrance, but he often doesn’t appear until 3 pm. Cars begin to gather much earlier.
Theresa Sparks, Principal, Sacred Heart School stated that the school sends employees out to monitor the traffic. “… we do have all employees on deck at dismissal to get cars through our traffic loop in the most efficient manner we can. That means that after school there are about 20 employees keeping walkers, bike riders and cars safe and on the move.”
It’s clear the school does not have 20 employees directing traffic, and the people who do help, do not prevent parents from parking in red and hydrant zones, idling in cars or even leaving their cars parked illegally.
Parents regularly park or idle in the crosswalks or wait in the middle of the street to turn into the school property. They cannot wait on the campus because there is no room.
The photos accompanying this article were taken this week at 3 o’clock dismissal and clearly show the lack of traffic management.
Notice cars parked in red zones, the cars stopped in the middle of the street and the bike rider forced onto the sidewalk. You can also see the cars exiting the Mercy Hospital parking lot, which compounds the problem. Finally, note that there are not 20 Sacred Heart employees managing the problem.
The jam-up is a detriment to the neighborhood and it’s a clear safety problem. Fire Department and ambulance services cannot get through the street at this time.
Sacred Heart and Mercy Hospital need to work together to solve this problem. A traffic plan and management strategy must be created for the hospital area. There currently is none and this jam up is one of the area’s biggest traffic problems.
Posted in Parks, Traffic
6 Comments
East Sacramento Preservation notes Mercy Hospital prompt response
Pooling water and warmer weather is a recipe for mosquitoes. While the weather has not turned warm enough for egg laying to begin, Mercy Hospital responded promptly to neighborhood concerns about the growing pond on the East Sacramento Mercy Hospital construction site.
The construction of the new Mercy cardiac center was a hotly contested issue in the East Sacramento neighborhood. Ground broke last year and on February 17th the hospital celebrated the placement of the final steel beam on the new building.
Carmine Faro of Catholic Healthcare West sent East Sacramento Preservation the following email.
Sacramento Area Mosquito and Vector Control (SAMVC) visited our site today, and they believe our on-going efforts to filter and drain water will go a long way towards ensuring there are no issues.
(SAMVC) indicated that, notwithstanding the recent ‘warm spell,’ mosquito breeding/hatching isn’t a problem until late May/early June. Moreover, there is no vegetation in the area of the (formerly) standing water, and without vegetation, there is neither food nor hiding places for the bugs to grow. It is more likely that the City catch basins are haven for the breeding than our site, according to (SAMVC).
Regardless, CHW/CRE will monitor the area and take the necessary steps to ensure we do what we can.
On this issue Mercy Hospital, successfully addressed neighborhood concerns. The water is being drained and SAMVC was brought out to survey the site. This is a great help to the neighborhood.
Posted in Parks
Comments Off on East Sacramento Preservation notes Mercy Hospital prompt response