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Law would increase pedestrian fatalities by emboldening people to -- horror! -- cross the street.


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New Jersey is becoming a safer place to walk and bike, new data shows. The state has seen an eight percent decline in traffic fatalities, according to preliminary crash statistics for the year, and the trend is particularly encouraging for pedestrians and cyclists, writes Michelle Ernst at Mobilizing the Region:

nj_sting.jpgA New Jersey police officer on a "crosswalk sting." Photo: Mobilizing the Region

What’s most striking about the statistics is the victim classification break down. A 25 percent decline in bicycle and pedestrian fatalities makes up the entire year-to-date reduction in statewide traffic fatalities.

While passenger and driver fatality rates are unchanged, bicyclist fatalities dropped from 10 to 7 and pedestrian fatalities dropped from 106 to 80, compared to the same period last year. Ernst discusses the role some statewide legal reforms may have played in the reduction:

Obviously there isn’t enough data to show causality between the decline in fatalities and New Jersey’s recently passed law requiring drivers to “stop and stay stopped” for pedestrians in crosswalks, or the ensuing crackdown on motorists who fail to yield. But the numbers certainly help allay concerns that the law would increase pedestrian fatalities by emboldening people to -- horror! -- cross the street.

Also on the Network, Grist explains how Ryan Rzepecki's "Social Bicycle" bike-sharing system works; Austin Two Wheels makes the case for bicycle infrastructure using data from New York City; and Dead Horse Times calls for "micro-routes" to help fill the void left by the elimination of a bus route in Portland.

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NYCDOT Releases Landmark Ped Safety Study, Will Pilot 20 MPH Zones


by Ben Fried

To make walking safer, New York City will re-engineer 60 miles of streets per year and pilot the use of neighborhood-scale 20 mph zones, the city's top electeds and transportation officials announced this morning. The commitments are among several street safety measures unveiled today, accompanying NYCDOT's release of a landmark report analyzing the causes of serious pedestrian injuries and deaths, which affect thousands of New Yorkers every year.
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[B'Spokes: And here in Maryland, pedestrains remember to use the crosswalk. After all we only have the 6th highest pedestrian fatality rate and New York's ranking is 19.]

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What? No charges pending full investigation?


Police said they charged a local woman Sunday night in a hit-and-run crash that injured a 17-year-old girl.

Police said Jodi L. Plevniak, 30, kept going after her sport utility vehicle hit the girl's bicycle at North College and F streets just before noon Thursday.

Witnesses followed Plevniak and gave police her description and license number, police said.

They said Plevniak was charged with leaving an accident scene and a stop sign violation.
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[B' Spokes: In MD it seems like they take every effort not to charge motorists, no mater what.]

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Houston METRO Expands Access By Removing Seats


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Sometimes expanding access to transit can be as easy as reexamining assumptions about riders’ needs. That may be the early lesson from a 30-day experiment Houston METRO is conducting on 11 trains. The transit authority has removed four benches -- or eight seats -- from cars on those trains in a bid to increase comfort for users who need extra space.

The move is a win for a diverse group of transit riders, from cyclists to wheelchair users to parents with young children, explains Dean Hall at NEOHouston:

This is a boon for bicyclists who can use the open space for their bike while holding on to the new overhead straps.  The open area can also be utilized by persons in wheelchairs.

However, I think the biggest gains will be for parents who transport their infants and toddlers in strollers.  Previously, only the smallest umbrella-style strollers could easily negotiate an LRT car’s narrow center aisle. I have a personal experience trying to manage one of the larger style strollers and I received looks from other passengers who had to make room for me and the stroller that was convenient for me, but an imposition to those around me...

So, thank you, METRO. By taking something away, you’ve improved options for three types of riders.

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Delaware Governor signs Vulnerable Road Users Bill into law


[B' Spokes: Note that the Maryland legislator and MDOT is very opposed to "special" privileges unless of course you are a road worker. I guess that's different because they have ligament reasons to be in the road and we don't.]
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Today Delaware Governor signed SB 269 into law. The bill, modeled after an Oregon law, enhances the penalty for drivers convicted of careless or inattentive drivers who cause serious physical injury to cyclists, pedestrians and other vulnerable road users. The new law includes sentencing guidelines such as:

  • completion of a traffic safety course
  • perform up to 100 hours of community service related to driver improvement and providing public education on traffic safety
  • fines up to $550
  • suspension of driving privileges

In response to the bill signing, League President Andy Clarke said “We’re excited that Delaware is becoming the third state in the nation to pass such a Vulnerable Road Users law that offers additional protection to cyclists and other non-motorized users of our shared roadways. It is this sort of leadership that has propelled them to 10th in our annual state rankings and garnered them a Bronze Level Bicycle Friendly State designation. We look forward to Delaware’s continued progressing in making their state a great place for bicyclists.”

If you live in Delaware please be sure to thank bill sponsors Senator Sokola and Representative Barbieri and co-sponsors Sen. Bunting and Reps. Bennett, Carson, Hudson, Jaques, Miro, Schooley, D. Short, Walls & Brady. Thanks also to Bike Delaware, Delaware Bicycle Council and Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia for their work in advocating for this law.

~Jeff Peel
State & Local Advocacy Coordinator

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Pedestrian safety issue hits close to home


from Welcome to the Fast Lane: The Official Blog of the U.S. Secretary of Transportation by Ray LaHood

Early Wednesday afternoon, a Department employee was struck by a dump truck while crossing the street near DOT Headquarters and taken to a nearby hospital with life-threatening injuries.

She was in the crosswalk.

Sadly, she was not the first pedestrian coming to or from our building to be hit by a car. In late April, Amy Polk, a DOT contractor and mother of two young children, was killed.
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And I am really, really worried about our employees' safety.

So I met this morning with DC Police Chief Cathy Lanier, DC Transportation Director Gabe Klein, and staff from the Metropolitan Police Department and the DC DOT to see if we could brainstorm some ways to prevent future pedestrian injuries.

We agreed to work on a plan that attempts to solve this problem from a variety of angles. Some ideas under consideration include:

* Extended crossing-guard hours
* Stepped-up pedestrian and vehicle enforcement
* Pedestrian training and education
* Speed trailers (the roadside digital signs that display a driver's speed)
* Prohibiting "right turn on red" in the Southeast Federal Center area
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[B' Spokes: Say what? No targeting just j-walking pedestrains or billboards showing distracted pedestrains getting hit by cars? Come on let Balamore show you how it's done without these practical and might actually work type solutions. (And we wounder why DC's ped fatality rate is lower then the whole State of Maryland.)]

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New traffic signals make it safer for pedestrians


[B' Spokes: Again something I don't think we will see in Maryland as it seems to be the "best" engineering practice here that fast traffic needs to go even faster and cannot be delayed in the slightest, while slower traffic does not mind at all going even slower, suffering long delays and/or long detours. When are we going to realize that people are people and they need to be accommodated irregardless of mode of transpiration and that faster modes of travel can make up small delays while the slower modes cannot. Remember we have the sixth highest pedestrian traffic fatality rate for a reason.]
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A new kind of traffic signal in Delaware, the High-intensity Activated Cross Walk, or HAWK, became active Friday and will make crossing Delaware 72 safer for students beginning this semester, state transportation officials say.
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Delaware joins a growing number of states and cities around the country, including Georgia, Minnesota, Virginia and Arizona [but not Maryland], with HAWK signals that allow people to cross a busy road, either at an intersection without a standard traffic signal or in the middle of a long stretch of road.
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The solid red light is followed by flashing red lights, allowing drivers to proceed if the crosswalk is clear. The signal then goes dark again and traffic flows freely. Researchers with the Texas Transportation Institute at Texas A&M University last year compared before-and-after accident data at 21 HAWK sites in Tucson and found a 13% to 29% reduction in all crashes and a 50% drop in pedestrian accidents.
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Man charged with murder after hit-and-run


SOUTH MIAMI-DADE, Fla. (WSVN) -- A man was killed after being struck by another vehicle while riding his bicycle.

The accident occurred in the area of Southwest 287th Street and 152nd Avenue at around 7 p.m., Saturday. The victim, 31-year-old Daniel Martinez, was hit by a car; the driver then fled the scene.

Miami-Dade Fire Rescue reported to the scene and pronounced Martinez dead.

Police eventually caught up with the hit-and-run driver, 24-year-old Jorge Lugo, in a vehicle that may have been involved in the accident.

Lugo has been charged with first degree murder.

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Bait bikes: the way to beat theft gangs


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The pilot schemes seemed to show bait bikes are a significant deterrent. Bikes thefts dropped by 45% at Cambridge rail station when British Transport Police tested the method. Even in the UK's bike theft capital, London, rates dropped by around a third in one local trial.
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There are two main deterrents to cycling: road safety and theft. Gangs of young kids often steal the bikes and pass them on to criminals who store them in lock ups and garages before selling them. The advantage of using bait bikes is that it enables you to track the stolen bike back to the organised gang lock up, rather than just arresting the young bike thieves... You've got to get the gangs. You've got to find out where they keep the bikes.

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