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Archive for the Category "Coronado Bridge"

Another Coronado Bridge Suicide Attempt Jun 22

The Coronado Bridge from the Coronado Golf Course

Even as I posted Coronado Bridge Desperation, there was yet another anguished person making their way towards the bridge.

This suicide attempt was heavily reported in the news since the bridge was closed in both directions for almost six hours as negotiators talked to a distraught young man.

Not knowing anything about what was going on, I was startled to see a steady stream of cars going in either direction on Glorietta Blvd when I walked down to the Coronado Golf Course to meet friends.

As I got closer, I saw the red lights of the police cars at the end of the boulevard and realized that cars were being diverted. From the golf course, I looked upon an empty bridge. It is an eerie sight to see the bridge empty of cars in the light of day.

In the clubhouse, there was a lot of talk about the suicide attempt. Many golfers had seen the bridge being closed, the helicopter circling and all of the police activity. There were already reports that the person had skate boarded onto the bridge.

As darkness fell on the first day of summer, the lights from the Harbor Patrol boats flashed and reflected off the water on either side of the bridge.

We left before the bridge re-opened and didn’t find out until morning that the young man was quietly taken into custody at 11:50 pm and cars once again flowed across the bridge.

You can read about the incident in the news report Coronado Bridge standoff ends with surrender.

Coronado Bridge Desperation Jun 19

Coronado Bridge

With the rise of social media and the technological progress of cell phones, news that would otherwise go untold is broadcast across the Internet instantaneously.

As we’ve discussed in the past, only attempted suicides by jumping off of the Coronado Bridge are officially reported. When people do actually jump to their deaths, no report is given to the public.

Sadly, we had one of each yesterday…

In the early morning hours, a man was seen contemplating jumping off of the bridge. After several hours of talking with a negotiator, he was quietly taken into custody and “saved”.

Later that day, a woman followed in his footsteps, only she was successful in her attempt. This may or may not have been told to the public but for a Coronado resident who witnessed the jump and spread his experience over the web. It was also later reported that her body was found floating in the bay.

It makes me wonder just how many suicides the bridge experiences each year. And are they are the rise?

What we have seen is that this act has no boundaries – it happens with people of all ages, it has no gender preference, or any other preferences that are clear. It is purely an act of desperate people.

Desperate people that leave devastated loved ones behind questioning, agonizing, filled in many cased with the guilt of “What if… or If only…”

I have lived in Coronado for over 14 years now and one of the many things I love about it is the sense of community and if you look beyond all of the tourists, its small town feel.

The suicide of a member of this community is jarring. Are we as a community missing something or have we lost something that we have so many members of our community wanting to end their lives?

I look at the bridge as a thing of beauty whether gazing at it from land or crossing it looking at Coronado nestled between the ocean and the bay with Pt. Loma standing guard. It is hard for me to think that so many think of it as an instrument of death.

Our thoughts, prayers and healing energy go out to those who have lost a loved one by their jumping off of the bridge.

Coronado Bridge Traffic Feb 03

Unless you commute across the Coronado Bridge regularly, you may not realize how many traffic issues there are due to accidents. Even though I work primarily from home, I get out enough to have seen a number of accidents on the bridge myself.

Coronado Bridge

The other day, we were driving back into Coronado from downtown and could see from the surface street below the bridge on-ramp that there was something going on.

“How long do you think it will take us to get across the bridge?” Bob asked.

“I’m not sure. I can’t tell which side the problem is on.”

Both West bound and East bound lanes looked clogged from our vantage point. As we merged onto the bridge it was quickly apparent what had happened. The East bound lanes were stopped because of a multi vehicle accident including a motor cycle down on its side – always a heart stopper.

The West bound lanes were moving slowly because of bottle-necking due to rubber-necking. (A very East Coast term used frequently during the rush hour traffic reports).

A couple of days later, I was leaving the island to go to a client’s office and the traffic going across the bridge was heavy and so the going was slow. All of a sudden a guy on a motor cycle comes up fast, weaving in and out of the two out going lanes, narrowly missing rear-ending a lumbering truck.

Obviously I don’t have a radar gun, but he looked to be traveling at a speed of at least 70mph – in a 50pmh zone, in heavy traffic, in and out of lanes.

And you wonder why there are accidents…and some that include serious injuries and fatalities.

I’m not singling out motor cycles – cars frequently speed across the bridge changing lanes rapidly cutting other vehicles off. When I see them coming up fast in my rear view mirror, I say a little prayer and try to stay out of their way.

I guess I’m glad that I don’t commute every day – the bridge can be a dangerous place.

To all using the Coronado Bridge – slow down and have a safe crossing!

The Coronado Cookie

Coronado Bridge Documentary Jul 21
Coronado Bridge

Coronado Bridge

As many of you know, this year is the 40th anniversary of the Coronado Bridge (aka the San Diego Coronado Bay Bridge).

In honor of the anniversary, documentary producers Village Videography, created “San Diego-Coronado Bay Bridge”. In this film they cover the bridge debate which started in the 1920’s and continued until 1967 when ground was broken to start the bridge construction.

Even then, as you can see from the film, not everyone was in agreement with the erection of the bridge.

The production also covers the construction, the bridge inauguration in 1969, the creation of Chicano Park beneath the bridge landing, and the bridge’s intense maintenance program.

The film debuted last year on June 10, 2009 at the City of Coronado’s 40th Anniversary Bridge Celebration.

You can see the film for yourself on August 2nd and 3rd on Coronado’s Time Warner Channel 19. It will be broadcast at 3:00pm each day and again at 8:0pm.

You can also purchase a copy of your own from Village Videography or in Coronado at the Coronado Historical Association Museum Store or at Bay Books.

A huge thank you to Patrice Makovic and Arturo Sbicca for this wonderful glimpse into history!

The Coronado Cookie

Coronado Bridge Suicide May 07

I apologize ahead of time for writing about such a depressing topic. But it too is a part of living in Coronado and I always feel so sad for the victims and their family and friends…


Coronado Bridge

Coronado Bridge

Coronado Bridge is such a beautiful bridge. I love driving across and looking out over the bay. Either direction brings a beautiful vista – Coronado itself, Point Loma and the ocean to the west and Cowles Mountain and other ranges to the east.

But, the Coronado Bridge has a dark side. It is tragically a popular spot for suicide. In fact, it has the third highest number of suicides of any bridge in the country.

As of the beginning of December 2009, 236 people had died in suicidal falls from this two-mile-long stretch.

But you won’t hear about most of them in the news. You’ll hear about them in the grocery store line, on Twitter, from friends and neighbors. Or sometimes you will horrifyingly witness them yourself.

Such was the case last year as my husband and I were driving east on the bridge heading out of town for the week.

And such was the case yesterday when yet another desperate person plunged to their death after leaping over the side of the bridge.

Last year I frantically texted and twittered friends and acquaintances to find out if the person had by any miracle survived. I had a friend who had seen the young woman stop her car mid-span and thought it odd because there didn’t seem to be anything wrong with the car. She too was horrified to learn that the woman had jumped.

After a day and a half I learned from someone who talked to inside sources who wished to remain anonymous that the woman had died. I also learned that if a person jumps into the water and survives, the case comes under the jurisdiction of the Coronado or San Diego Police department depending on who responds and which side of the bridge the person is taken off. These cases appear in the news.

However, if a person jumps into the San Diego Bay and dies, the case comes under the jurisdiction of the San Diego Harbor Police. The Harbor Police have a strict non-disclosure rule about suicides and so these cases never appear in the news.

Kevin Caruso of Suicide.org says that in his interactions with people who have survived a jump from a bridge, their experiences are eerily similar.

Almost without exception — immediately after they jumped, they wanted to survive.

He goes on to say that over 90 percent of the people who die by suicide have a mental illness at the time of their death.

And because depression is the most common mental illness, untreated depression is the number one cause for suicide, and depression and other mental illnesses are highly treatable.

Some of the other “suicide bridges” around the country have erected barriers and others have approved future barriers. Back in the 1980’s when the suicide toll was the highest; most everyone backed a plan for a barrier on the Coronado Bridge. Everyone that is but Caltrans.

Do you think a barrier should be put up on the Coronado Bridge?