Mike Blume

Open Issues: 707 Closed Issues: 15,097 Acknowledged Issues: 11,047
Watching issues created after: 2021-01-13

Notified About

  • 16035 Broadway Terr Oakland CA 94611, United States - Merriwood
    Large pothole that was patched shoddily and is now falling apart again. It's about 50 feet up the hill from the intersection with Gwin. Stupid app requires an exact address but there are no homes on Broadway terrace here.
  • 14050 Broadway Terr Oakland CA 94611, United States - Glen Highlands
    Several potholes forming in deteriorating roadway.
  • 12005 Broadway Terr Oakland CA 94611, United States - Merriwood
    Last 20 feet of Uranus where it merges with Broadway Terrace is more pothole than asphalt at this point. One large 2x3 ft pothole and numerous small ones
  • 13095 Broadway Terr Oakland CA 94611, United States - Glen Highlands
    Edge of road disintegrating. Forces traffic into oncoming lane around blind curve.
  • 9098 Broadway Terr Oakland CA 94611, United States - Glen Highlands
    Large and deep pothole. The type that will destroy wheels. In center of road which often forces traffic dangerously into other lane around curve. There is also a second hole by the storm drain. Together they make the downhill lane nearly impassable .
  • 9001 Broadway Terr Oakland CA 94611, United States - Glen Highlands
    Two potholes in center of road.
  • 9009 Broadway Terr Oakland CA 94611, United States - Glen Highlands
    Large and deep pothole in middle of road. Part of overall deteriorating street.
  • E 22nd St Oakland, CA, 94606, USA - Ivy Hill
    The area adjacent to Park Blvd Plaza needs a crosswalk, physical traffic calming, and a 20 mph speed zone. The redesign left a long stretch between crosswalks at Newton and Van Dyke, where vehicles tend to pick up a lot of speed in both directions. Speeds on Park Blvd are still too fast, even after the road diet. This is a park for the area with a lot of pedestrians, a bus stop, and a wide span, and should be a priority for traffic calming. There should be at a minimum a high visibility crosswalk at E 22nd and mid-street signs directing vehicles to stop for people in crosswalks
  • 4401 39th Ave Oakland, CA, 94619, USA - Redwood Heights
    There is a new pickup and drop off procedure at Redwood Heights Elementary School and due to COVID safety parents are driving to deliver their kids. The problem is that people are parking in the drop off lane as well as making U turns on 39th Ave which is dangerous. The drop off lane's paint has deteriorated and hard to see and there aren't any official signs to tell drivers that they cannot park int he drop off lane. One of the street sign poles is so loose that it is leaning out into the lane and can be spun by hand so that the signs posted on it do not face the oncoming traffic. We need to have the drop off lane repainted, no parking or drop off lane signs posted as well as No U Turn signs posted.
  • Moraga Ave & Estates Dr Oakland, CA, 94611, USA - Oakland

    There are a few problems here:
    - Offramp from 13S has no visibility to pedestrians who are trying to cross the offramp until it's too late, making this a frightening street to cross
    - Drivers from Northbound Moraga often are making U-Turns onto the 13S ramp. Technically, these U-Turners have the right of way vs. someone turning right off of Estates, but nobody seems to know what to do. The only way to know whose turn it is, is to make eye contact with the other driver and issue some hand signals before someone feels comfortable to go.
    - In the meantime, southbound traffic from Moraga is coming up over the hill and there's no visibility to who's coming. So after you're done hand-signaling with the U-turners and you're ready to make a go of it, you kind of have to pray no one is coming up over Moraga. (This is the accident I witnessed today -- a U-turner was t-boned by someone coming up from Moraga.)
    - People who are trying to turn left onto Estates often pass each other because they think the person in front of them isn't turning left, but rather waiting to make a U-Turn. So you'll be waiting to turn left, and just as you're making the turn another car will pull around you and make the same left turn, nearly colliding into you.

    A couple years ago after lots of complaints to the traffic department, the solution was to put in a bunch of neon cones on Moraga (not pictured) to help with visibility for pedestrians. Well, not sure if these actually help the pedestrians (I certainly don't feel safer when I try to cross Moraga) but what they do instead is block visibility of the traffic coming up over the hill on Moraga, so there's even less visibility now.

    My neighbors and I have been asking for help for years, with no response. In fact, one of my neighbors was told by a city worker that until someone dies in an accident here, something like this won't be prioritized.

    So who is going to die? Me? My kids? Someone else's kids?

  • Terrace Ave Playground Oakland, CA, USA - Redwood Heights

    I write to you with an inquiry and proposal for a sidewalk safety project in our Oakland neighborhood of Redwood Heights, surrounding the site of the city of Oakland's Avenue Terrace Playground Park.

    The Avenue Terrace Playground is surrounded by three streets; Jordan Road, Bennett Place and Guido Street. Two of those streets immediately surrounding the park, on Bennett Place and Guido Street, do not have sidewalks. Instead of a sidewalk there is a space (about 6 feet wide) with a dirt shoulder that surrounds the outside of the park fence along Guido Street and Bennett Place. This dirt shoulder is where I would like to propose the installation of a sidewalk that would link the existing sidewalks on Guido Street and Jordan Road.

    A sidewalk would provide increased pedestrian safety. Currently, with no sidewalk in this area, pedestrians most commonly traverse the area surrounding the back and side of the park by walking directly in the street. The street is most often used due to the trash, overgrowth, mud, broken glass or other items that litter the shoulder. The shoulder is also often blocked by parked cars pulling off of the street. This neighborhood is heavy with pedestrian traffic, both from residents as well as park visitors. The neighborhood is also populated with many families that have young children. Those children do not have a reliably safe way to navigate the park’s surrounding streets of Bennett and Guido. The installation of a sidewalk along the outside of the park fence would tremendously improve a safe route for all pedestrians who are accessing the park or simply walking in the neighborhood. The sidewalk would also provide additional pedestrian safety for families using strollers and small children using scooters. Without a safe paved route all strollers, scooters and anything with wheels use the street.

    There are two crosswalks at the intersection of Bennett at Guido, but the crosswalks lead into the dirt shoulder and do not offer a secure pedestrian connection to a sidewalk. First, this feels like a route that was either poorly designed or never completed. Second, the crosswalks can often be blocked by parked cars that use the shoulder as off street parking. It would make sense to revisit the crosswalk design and enable them to connect to a sidewalk to provide a complete route since there is space in the shoulder that can be used for this purpose.

    Another reason for this sidewalk proposal is to help provide increased neighborhood safety by developing this shoulder area surrounding the park.

    Lastly, we believe this would be a welcome improvement to our neighborhood and the Avenue Terrace Park facility. The Avenue Terrace Park would provide increased accessibility with the addition of sidewalks in the existing shoulder. The neighborhood residents would be able to enjoy the use of a sidewalk on this heavily trafficked walking route.

  • Antioch Ct & Mountain Blvd Oakland, CA, 94611, USA - Montclair Business

    The new Village Plaza in Montclair Village was designed to require cars traveling on Antioch Court to continue straight onto Mountain Blvd (north) rather than give them the option to turn left onto Mountain (south) as they were able to in the past.

    However, there is currently no signage to notify drivers that left turns are not allowed. Drivers are continuing to turn left onto Mountain, posing a serious threat to pedestrians, cyclists, and other motorists.

    We need to add a NO LEFT TURN sign to clarify the change in traffic requirements that came with the new plaza design.