Thanks Cynthia!
In case anyone is interested... my comments were basically:
1) remove one of the Westbound travel lanes on Langston and use it to widen and buffer the multi-use trail. Langston is already narrower and slower a little further west. There's no reason to preserve such a wide segment.
2) don't make the trail "jog" to try to make a safer crossing. There will be crashes because of it. It'll cause conflicts between cyclists/pedestrians, etc. Making travel harder for trail users is not the way to increase mode shift! This safety buffer can be accomplished by removing one travel lane on Langston.
3) Make Oak street a "right in/right out ONLY" intersection and remove the counterflow lane. This allows you to widen the bike lane and simplify the signal. If needed, establish an access road between Oak and Nash (through the former Marriott site) so cars can access the light at Nash. (possibly remove Oak street intersection completely with proper rerouting to Nash intersection).
4) If you won't build a pedestrian/cycling bridge over Lynn as is needed, then at least make a raised crossing table across Lynn. Signal separation is an improvement, but not enough.
Aaron
"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana"