To the editor:

At some point, we have to acknowledge what’s right in front of us.

The continued study of a roundabout solution — despite clear and consistent public resistance — risks becoming an exercise in spending time and grant dollars on something our community neither wants nor believes will solve the problem. On Sanibel, every car eventually funnels to a single point: the causeway. No roundabout changes that reality.

Instead of continuing down that path, I urge the city to redirect its focus — and funding — toward modern, real-time traffic management solutions that actually address our unique constraint.

Today’s technology allows for something far more effective than static infrastructure: dynamic traffic control powered by real-time data and AI-assisted decision-making.

Imagine a system that:

– Monitors, in real time, the number of vehicles queued at each of the three primary egress points leading to the causeway

– Continuously evaluates traffic density, wait times and flow rates

– Provides clear, actionable guidance to our police officers and traffic personnel on how many vehicles to release from each point

– Rotates traffic flow efficiently between egress points based on actual conditions — not guesswork

This is not theoretical. These systems are being deployed in cities and constrained corridors across the country right now.

Suggested framework for implementation:

1) Real-time monitoring

– Install traffic cameras and/or sensor systems at key intersections and egress points

– Use AI-enabled software to count vehicles, measure queue lengths and track flow rates

2) Centralized traffic dashboard

– Create a simple, visual command interface accessible to on-duty officers and dispatch

– Display live data: queue length, estimated wait time and recommended release volume per location

3) Actionable guidance for officers

– Provide clear instructions such as:

“Release 150 vehicles from Periwinkle Way”
“Release 40 vehicles from Lindgren Boulevard”
“Shift priority to Donax Street — queue exceeding threshold”

4) Communication system

– Equip officers with tablets or mobile devices synced to the system

– Use simple color-coded signals or alerts (green/yellow/red) for quick decisions in the field

– Maintain radio backup for redundancy

5) Adaptive rotation protocol

– Replace fixed timing with dynamic rotation based on real-time congestion levels

– Ensure no single egress point is over-prioritized while others gridlock

6) Data collection and continuous improvement

– Record traffic patterns over time to refine algorithms

– Use data to prepare for peak events, seasonality and emergencies

This approach does not require tearing up roads or forcing a one-size-fits-all solution onto a barrier island with a single exit constraint. It works with our reality instead of ignoring it.

More importantly, it gives our officers the tools they need to manage traffic proactively, fairly and efficiently — reducing frustration for residents, visitors and emergency services alike.

Sanibel has always prided itself on thoughtful, science-based decision-making. This is an opportunity to apply that same mindset to mobility — using modern tools to solve a very real, very local problem.

Let’s stop studying what won’t work — and start implementing what will.

Bob Brooks

Sanibel