Fredericton latest Canadian city to grapple with drive-thru woes
The City of Fredericton will spend $40,000 to direct motorists around a busy Tim Hortons in the latest move by a Canadian municipality to curb traffic headaches and other concerns caused by restaurant drive-thrus.
At a transportation committee meeting this week, councillors approved the plan to construct a “traffic circle” at the end of the city’s Wallace Avenue and to introduce a bylaw banning left turns into the restaurant’s drive-thru.
“There are significant impacts on traffic flow on this major northside arterial as well as traffic and pedestrian safety concerns as frustrated drivers start making unpredictable movements to avoid queued vehicles,” the administrative report on the proposed changes says.
The New Brunswick capital is the latest Atlantic Canada municipality forced to consider the tension between public safety concerns and motorists’ convenient access to a quick coffee or lunch.