Traffic news
Police buckle down on East Dallas roadway north of White Rock Lake
Dallas city officials are on a campaign against speeding, with a focus on one particular trouble zone in East Dallas.
The zone in question is Peavy Road as it turns into Mockingbird Lane, on the north edge of White Rock Lake, which has been identified as seeing excessive speeding by the Dallas Police Department.
According to a release, it's one of a number of corridors where police have bolstered their presence since December 2023 to address speeding.
Within a single month, the Dallas Police Department issued 300 citations along Peavy and Mockingbird, with more than half - 160-plus citations - issued for speeding.
That stretch is prone for a couple of reasons:
- It's one of the only two routes to get from the east side of White Rock Lake to the west side of White Rock Lake (Garland Road to Gaston on the south edge of White Rock Lake is the second)
- It frequently has three lanes on each side, which practically begs for a little extra pressure on the gas pedal. I can offer first-hand testimony, having sped on that passageway to weekly appointments at my acupuncturist.
That strip of road falls in District 9, which covers Lakewood and parts of East Dallas, White Rock Lake, and Casa View (but only parts of Casa View because of the idiotic redrawing of districts in 2022 that re-assigned some of Casa View into District 2 - in this map, it's the ugly yellow boomerang in the center).
District 9 faces a unique situation because multiple state highways cross East Dallas. Originally constructed as thoroughfares for commuting to and from Dallas and surrounding suburbs, these highways - SH Loop 12/Buckner Boulevard, SH 78/Garland Road - now run through well-populated communities in East Dallas.
District 9 Dallas City Councilwoman Paula Blackmon, The Dallas Police Department, and Police Chief Eddie Garcia released a PSA video to encourage safe driving in East Dallas and across the city.
“The men and women of the Dallas Police Department are doing what they can by educating drivers about our traffic laws and enforcing them. But we need the public’s help too,” Garcia says.