Claire wrote:
(And thank you for the correct locals' spelling of "Munns" Road... people who drop the s are clearly outsiders... it's now evident your funny accent is just a clever disguise.)
I'm pretty sure local governments have the exclusive legal capacity to designate the names of roads that are not highways. And the District of Highlands posts several maps on their website which clearly mark it as "Munn Road". See the District's
"Address/Zoning" Map and their
Parks and Trails Map, for example. You'd also think the CRD's
Regional Map would be dependable—and it says "Munn Road" throughout.
However, if we next look at the
Province's Digital Road Atlas, which says it's "a single, authoritative source of road data for the Province of B.C.", we notice the problematic "s" appears.
These maps may be outdated, or they may not reflect the formal legal designation. But by jove, for the armchair debater, they offer some pretty darn convincing ammo for both camps.
If Claire hadn't made her assertion with such typical audacity, I probably wouldn't have given this further thought (or just wasted 15 minutes cutting and pasting hyperlinks.) But there's something about unsubstantiated smugness that draws me out every time.
So Claire: share your rationale, please. Or the misanthrope in me is likely to start referring to it with a plural possessive apostrophe—"Munns' Road"—just to ensure universal dissatisfaction.
p.s. To swing this thread back to its origin: I rode most of Prospect today north to south and it's got a bad case of end-of-winter road acne. It's good to know they'll be filling in some of the nastier holes.