|
|
||
Signs for safety, and a traffic signal in Spotsylvania Date published: 5/1/2006
THE EVERYDAY Honda Accord, circa 1996, was the car most likely to be stolen Its utilitarian sibling, the 1994 Honda Civic, was the second-most-stolen car during 2005. The National Insurance Crime Bureau studies vehicle theft rates, and computes an annual Top 10 list for each state. There are no luxury cars on Virginia's list. Instead, the most-stolen cars were typically domestic ones sold in large numbers. Third-most-stolen was the 1990 Toyota Camry. Next, in descending order: 1994 Dodge Caravan, 1996 Jeep Cherokee/Grand Cherokee, 1997 Ford Taurus, 1994 Plymouth Voyager, 1997 Ford Explorer, 2003 Toyota Corolla, 1994 Ford Taurus, 2004 Chevrolet Cavalier and 2004 Ford F150 series. QThe end of Mountain View Road in Stafford, off U.S. 1, My 17-year-old daughter was severely injured after the minivan she was riding in slammed into the dead end's guardrail. She lost five front teeth and her jaw was dislocated. I'm afraid that somebody else is going to go around the corner speeding and end up in worse shape than she is. --Jeanie Stallard, Stafford AThere are "No Outlet" signs posted at both ends of Mountain View Road, said Eddie Buckle, a VDOT transportation operations manager. However, after speaking with traffic engineers, Buckle said VDOT has decided to install reflectors on the guardrail. "When oncoming traffic sees QAre there any plans to put in --Michelle Turner, Spotsylvania AGood news--a traffic signal
1. Be respectful. No personal attacks.
|
|
||||||||||||