Crash Count for Manhattan CB1
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 3,060
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 1,046
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 319
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 18
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 3
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025
Carnage in CB 101
Killed 3
Crush Injuries 2
Lower arm/hand 1
Severe Bleeding 4
Head 2
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Whole body 1
Severe Lacerations 11
Face 4
Lower arm/hand 3
Lower leg/foot 2
Head 1
Concussion 10
Head 9
+4
Eye 1
Whiplash 33
Neck 19
+14
Back 8
+3
Head 7
+2
Lower arm/hand 2
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Chest 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Whole body 1
Contusion/Bruise 94
Lower leg/foot 39
+34
Lower arm/hand 16
+11
Shoulder/upper arm 12
+7
Head 9
+4
Hip/upper leg 6
+1
Back 3
Face 3
Whole body 3
Abdomen/pelvis 2
Chest 2
Neck 1
Abrasion 48
Lower leg/foot 17
+12
Lower arm/hand 14
+9
Head 7
+2
Hip/upper leg 5
Face 3
Chest 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Pain/Nausea 21
Back 5
Shoulder/upper arm 5
Head 4
Neck 3
Lower arm/hand 2
Lower leg/foot 2
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Hip/upper leg 1
Whole body 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Manhattan CB1?

Preventable Speeding in CB 101 School Zones

(since 2022)

Caught Speeding Recently in CB 101

Vehicles – Caught Speeding in NYC (12 months)
  1. 2023 Black Toyota Sedan (LHW5598) – 256 times • 1 in last 90d here
  2. 2022 Gray Ford Pickup (KXM7078) – 215 times • 2 in last 90d here
  3. 2022 Whbk Me/Be Suburban (LTJ3931) – 144 times • 2 in last 90d here
  4. 2024 Black Toyota Sedan (LHW6494) – 135 times • 1 in last 90d here
  5. 2023 Gray Toyota Sedan (LHW5596) – 135 times • 1 in last 90d here
Blood on the Crosswalk: Manhattan’s Streets Still Kill

Blood on the Crosswalk: Manhattan’s Streets Still Kill

Manhattan CB1: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 27, 2025

The Toll in the Streets

A man steps off the curb. A car does not stop. The numbers pile up. In the last twelve months, 243 people were injured in traffic crashes in Manhattan CB1. Six were seriously hurt. One did not survive. The dead do not speak. The wounded carry scars.

Just last month, a cyclist was left with severe head wounds after a crash at Canal and Lafayette. A sedan struck an 88-year-old man crossing Centre Street. He bled from the head. He survived, but the street did not forgive. These are not rare events. They are the city’s heartbeat.

Who Pays the Price

Cars and trucks did the most harm. They killed one, seriously injured three, and left 150 more with lesser wounds. Motorcycles and mopeds hurt ten. Bikes injured twenty-four. The numbers do not lie. The pain is not shared equally. The old, the young, the ones on foot or on two wheels—they pay the price.

What Leaders Have Done—and Not Done

Local leaders have taken some steps. Council Member Christopher Marte voted to legalize jaywalking, ending a law that punished the desperate and the distracted. He co-sponsored bills to ban parking near crosswalks and require protected bike lanes. These are good steps. But the pace is slow. The streets do not wait.

“A 43 year-old Bronx resident…died on June 18 after flying from an e-bike and striking his head on the curb,” reported West Side Spirit. The city investigates. The family grieves. The crosswalk stays the same.

The Work Ahead

Every crash is a policy failure. Every delay is a risk. The city has the power to lower speed limits, redesign streets, and enforce the law. The council can act. The mayor can act. The time for waiting is over.

Call your council member. Demand safer speeds. Demand protected crossings. Demand action. The next victim is only a step away.

Citations

Citations

Other Representatives

Grace Lee
Assembly Member Grace Lee
District 65
District Office:
Room 302, 64 Fulton St., New York, NY 10038
Legislative Office:
Room 429, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Christopher Marte
Council Member Christopher Marte
District 1
District Office:
65 East Broadway, New York, NY 10002
212-587-3159
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1815, New York, NY 10007
212-587-3159
Brian Kavanagh
State Senator Brian Kavanagh
District 27
District Office:
Room 2011, 250 Broadway, New York, NY 10007
Legislative Office:
Room 512, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies

Manhattan CB1 Manhattan Community Board 1 sits in Manhattan, Precinct 1, District 1, AD 65, SD 27.

It contains Financial District-Battery Park City, Tribeca-Civic Center, The Battery-Governors Island-Ellis Island-Liberty Island.

See also
Boroughs
City Council Districts
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Manhattan Community Board 1

17
A 1637 Glick co-sponsors bill adding surcharge for safer, clearer bike lanes.

Jan 17 - Assembly bill A 1637 targets drivers who block bike lanes. It adds a mandatory surcharge for violators. Money goes straight to the court. Cyclists get a clear lane. Law aims to keep cars out.

Assembly bill A 1637 was introduced on January 17, 2023, and is in the sponsorship stage. The bill, titled 'Relates to violations and a mandatory surcharge for parking in a bicycle lane,' would require drivers who park in bike lanes to pay an extra fee to the court that finds them liable. Jo Anne Simon (District 52) sponsored the bill, joined by Deborah Glick (District 66) and Tony Simone (District 75) as co-sponsors. The measure seeks to deter illegal parking in bike lanes by hitting violators in the wallet. No safety analyst note was provided.


14
Pedestrian Injured by SUV Left Turn Manhattan

Jan 14 - A 61-year-old woman was struck at an intersection on West Street by an SUV making a left turn. She suffered an eye injury and concussion. The driver showed no damage to the vehicle. The pedestrian was conscious after the impact.

According to the police report, a 61-year-old female pedestrian was injured at the intersection of West Street and Albany Street in Manhattan. The crash involved a 2021 SUV making a left turn, which struck the pedestrian on the left front quarter panel. The pedestrian sustained an eye injury and concussion but remained conscious. The report lists the pedestrian's contributing factors as unspecified and does not identify any driver errors or contributing factors. The vehicle showed no damage, and the driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. The pedestrian's actions before the crash are unknown.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4601213 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
13
A 1280 Glick co-sponsors bill boosting street safety for all users.

Jan 13 - Assembly bill A 1280 pushes for streets built for all. Dozens of lawmakers back the plan. The bill demands roads that protect walkers, cyclists, and riders. It calls for design, not luck, to keep people safe.

Assembly bill A 1280, now in sponsorship, aims to 'enable safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles.' Introduced January 13, 2023, the bill sits with the Assembly. Jonathan Rivera leads as primary sponsor, joined by over 70 co-sponsors including Patrick Burke, Kenny Burgos, and Catalina Cruz. Their action signals strong legislative momentum. The bill’s focus: force planners to build streets for people, not just cars. No safety analyst note is available, but the intent is clear—systemic change for vulnerable road users. The bill’s progress can be tracked at the New York Assembly website.


9
Fall Criticizes Adams Administration for Harmful Bus Lane Failure

Jan 9 - The Adams administration built just 11.95 of 20 mandated bus lane miles in 2022. Riders wait. Buses crawl. The city shrugs. Council’s law goes unmet. Advocates demand urgency. Vulnerable New Yorkers pay the price for political inaction and empty promises.

In 2019, the City Council passed the Streets Plan, requiring 20 miles of new protected bus lanes in 2022. By January 9, 2023, the Adams administration had delivered only 11.95 miles—67 percent of the mandate. The Department of Transportation already signaled it cannot meet future targets. The matter title reads: 'Adams Administration’s Failure to Reach Bus Lane Requirement Angers Bus Riders.' Council members and advocates, including Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein, criticized the administration’s slow pace and lack of urgency. Bus riders like Holly and Frank voiced frustration at stagnant speeds and unmet promises. The Council has not set consequences for missing the requirement. The mayor’s office touts other safety efforts but sidesteps the bus lane shortfall. Riders and advocates demand real investment and action to protect vulnerable New Yorkers who rely on buses.


6
Sedan Hits E-Bike Turning on Canal Street

Jan 6 - A sedan struck a turning e-bike on Canal Street. The rider, a 47-year-old man, suffered bruises to his leg and foot. Police cite driver inexperience and traffic control disregard as causes.

According to the police report, a sedan traveling west on Canal Street struck the right side of an e-bike as the rider, a 47-year-old man, made a left turn. The bicyclist was injured, sustaining contusions and bruises to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inexperience and traffic control disregarded as contributing factors. The sedan driver was licensed and going straight. The e-bike rider was unlicensed and wore no safety equipment, but these are noted only after the driver errors. The impact damaged the right side of the e-bike and the front of the sedan.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4596937 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
30
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Grand Army Plaza Redesign

Dec 30 - Brooklynites want Grand Army Plaza to serve people, not cars. Hundreds called for car-free space, protected bike lanes, and safer crossings. The plaza’s chaotic traffic traps pedestrians. The city’s paint-and-plastic fixes have failed. Residents demand bold change. The city must listen.

On December 30, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) released survey results on the future of Grand Army Plaza. The public consultation, held in November, drew 1,270 in-person responses. The DOT summarized: 'the majority of respondents were interested in options to unify the public spaces.' Council members are not directly named, but city officials like Terra Ishee, DOT Pedestrian Unit Director, acknowledged the limits of past efforts: 'We really need to bump it up and make it a full blown capital project.' Brooklyn organizer Kathy Park-Price of Transportation Alternatives said, 'After decades of car-centric planning, it's time to return Grand Army Plaza to people.' Residents’ top demands: more protected pedestrian space, protected bike lanes, and overhauled traffic operations. The DOT plans a capital project design in fall 2023. The survey shows clear public support for bold, systemic safety improvements for vulnerable road users.


30
Charles Fall Supports Tougher Reckless Driving Enforcement and Transparency

Dec 30 - A reckless driver crashed an Audi SUV through a barrier onto LIRR tracks in Brooklyn. One man died. His passenger suffered critical injuries. The SUV had 13 speeding tickets. Police blamed a 'medical episode,' but witnesses saw a u-turn and high speed.

On December 30, 2022, a fatal crash occurred when a driver steered an Audi SUV from Vanderbilt Avenue onto the Long Island Rail Road tracks at Atlantic Avenue. The incident, reported by Streetsblog NYC, involved a 70-year-old man who died and a critically injured passenger. Witnesses described the SUV smashing through a concrete barrier and fence before falling onto the tracks, estimating speeds of 30 to 40 miles per hour. The NYPD initially suggested a 'medical episode' but later dropped this claim, despite a pattern of police blaming unexplained crashes on health issues. The vehicle’s license plate had 13 speeding violations since 2019, including four in the past year. No council bill or committee action is attached to this event. The case highlights systemic failures: weak enforcement against repeat reckless drivers, barriers that fail to protect, and police narratives that obscure driver responsibility.


28
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Hard Barriers and Accountability

Dec 28 - A pickup driver with 17 school-zone speeding tickets killed Gerardo Cielo Ahuatl on a Williamsburg corner known for danger. The truck, owned by JCDecaux, kept rolling despite 30 violations. No charges. Paint and plastic flappers offered no shield. Concrete came too late.

On December 28, 2022, in Brooklyn’s 34th Council District, a pickup truck driver with 17 school-zone speeding tickets fatally struck moped rider Gerardo Cielo Ahuatl at Grand Street and Graham Avenue. The truck, owned by JCDecaux, had racked up 30 violations since 2017. Despite this, the driver escaped charges, and the vehicle never triggered the city’s Dangerous Vehicle Abatement Program, which requires safety courses for drivers with repeated violations. The intersection had only paint and plastic flappers—ignored by drivers—until officials added some concrete barriers in the fall. Local council members had pushed for stronger protection. The DOT said it would review safety practices with JCDecaux. The 34th District has one of Brooklyn’s highest truck-related fatality rates. Vulnerable road users remain exposed by weak enforcement and flimsy infrastructure.


28
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Open Streets and Bike Lanes

Dec 28 - The Streetsie Awards spotlight films that show how cities can save lives. Eckerson’s camera finds danger and hope. Protected bike lanes, open streets, and car-free living get the focus. Jersey City and Hoboken show what’s possible: zero deaths. New York lags. The films demand better.

On December 28, 2022, Streetsblog launched the Streetsie Awards, inviting the public to vote for the year’s best Streetfilm. The event, titled 'The Streetsie Awards: Vote for Your Favorite Streetfilm of the Year!', showcases Clarence Eckerson Jr.’s work documenting the fight for safer streets. The films cover cargo bikes, school streets, women’s rides, and international comparisons. They highlight how protected bike lanes and open streets reduce danger for children and families. Jersey City and Hoboken, featured in one film, have reached zero road deaths by redesigning streets for people, not cars. Council action is not involved, but the advocacy is clear: safer infrastructure saves lives. The films make the case—New York can do better for its most vulnerable.


27
Charles Fall Criticizes DOT Shortfall Undermining Safety Boosting Lanes

Dec 27 - DOT failed to build required bike and bus lanes in 2022. Riders and advocates condemned the shortfall. Staff shortages fueled the lapse. City Council demanded action. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city’s promise to protect them remains unkept.

On December 27, 2022, the Department of Transportation confirmed it would not meet the legal mandate to build 30 miles of protected bike lanes and 20 miles of dedicated bus lanes, as required by the Streets Plan. The agency completed only 25 miles of bike lanes and 11.95 miles of bus lanes. The matter, titled 'DOT Will Not Reach Required Bike and Bus Lane Requirements This Year,' drew sharp criticism from Riders Alliance and Transportation Alternatives. Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance said, 'The Adams administration is many miles wide of the mark when it comes to complying with the Streets Plan and keeping the mayor's promise to millions of riders.' Danny Harris of Transportation Alternatives added, 'The city needs to meet these goals without delay or excuse and stop leaving New Yorkers who walk, bike, and bus behind.' A City Council spokesperson blamed staff shortages and unfilled vacancies, calling the situation 'unacceptable.' The Council urged the administration to fill key roles and meet legal requirements. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, bus riders—bear the brunt of these failures.


27
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful SUV Prevalence and Car Dependency

Dec 27 - Pedestrian deaths hit a forty-year high in 2021. SUVs kill more walkers, especially children. Vehicle-into-building crashes devastate. Autonomous cars fail to solve the crisis. Marginalized communities bear the brunt. The car culture’s toll grows. The numbers are grim. The danger is real.

The Streetsie Awards 2022, published December 27, 2022 by Streetsblog NYC, highlights the year’s worst setbacks for vulnerable road users. The commentary notes, 'the stats on 2021's pedestrian death crisis came out not too long ago, and they were awful. As in, the-worst-they-been-in-40-years awful.' No council bill or vote is attached, but the piece draws on federal data and expert analysis. It singles out SUVs as a main threat: drivers are four times more likely to strike pedestrians while turning, and children hit by SUVs are eight times more likely to die than if struck by smaller cars. The article also exposes the frequency and devastation of vehicle-into-building crashes and the false promise of autonomous vehicles. It underscores how car culture’s burdens fall hardest on marginalized communities. The message is clear: systemic danger persists, and the most vulnerable pay the price.


22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Active Transportation Funding

Dec 22 - Congress set aside $45 million for bike lanes, sidewalks, and trails. The sum falls short. Advocates wanted more. Only big projects qualify. Most communities see nothing. Lawmakers call it a start. The need is vast. The money is not.

The 2022 federal funding bill, part of the $1.7-trillion Consolidated Appropriations Act, allocates $45 million to the Active Transportation Infrastructure Investment Program. The bill awaits final passage to avoid a government shutdown. The measure aims to 'address gaps in bike lane, sidewalk, and multi-use trail networks.' Brandi Horton of Rails-to-Trails Conservancy called it 'a major victory' but stressed the need for more funding. Congress authorized up to $200 million per year, but only $45 million was delivered for 2023—less than 10 percent of what advocates requested. Projects must cost over $15 million to qualify, leaving most communities behind. A survey found $7 billion in unmet needs for active transportation. Lawmakers included $1.6 billion in transportation earmarks, but most funds still go to highways. Vulnerable road users remain underserved.


22
Fall Opposes Harmful Fare Hikes and Service Cuts

Dec 22 - MTA leaders warn: no new money, no full service. Peak hour cuts, longer waits. Riders and workers brace for frustration. Advocates and lawmakers push Albany to fill the gap. The board’s budget opens the door to fare hikes and more pain.

""In order to ensure New Yorkers have a transit system that works for them, we have to fill the MTA's financial shortfall and ensure against service cuts and or fare hikes. We have to fix the rot at the heart of the transit system, which means we have to pass the package of bills known as the 'Fix the MTA.'"" -- Charles Fall

On December 22, 2022, MTA leaders announced that without recurring state funding, service cuts are inevitable. The MTA Board approved a 2023 budget allowing fare hikes and service changes, pending Albany’s action. Chairman Janno Lieber said, "All good things can happen if people are willing to pay for them, or help figure out recurring funding sources, which is what MTA needs to achieve fiscal stability." New York City Transit President Richard Davey explained that peak hour service would be trimmed, with modest increases in wait times, while some weekend service would expand. Transit advocates and union leaders, including Richard Davis, condemned the cuts, warning of increased rider frustration and assaults on workers. Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani urged passage of bills to freeze fares and fill the MTA’s fiscal gap, stating, "We have to fix the rot at the heart of the transit system." No formal safety analyst assessment was provided, but the debate centers on the risk to riders and workers if service shrinks.


20
Fall Opposes Raids on Dedicated Transit Funds

Dec 20 - For decades, Albany has siphoned nearly $5 billion from the MTA. The state calls transit taxes its own contribution, shortchanging riders. Lawmakers and watchdogs demand an end to the shell game. The governor stalls. Riders pay the price in service and safety.

This state budgetary action, revealed December 20, 2022, exposes New York’s long-running diversion of dedicated transit funds from the MTA. Under the 1975 18-b law, the state must match local funding for public transit. Instead, since 1995, Albany has counted regional transit taxes as its own share, leaving a $4.9 billion shortfall. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli criticizes the practice: 'the state has used a portion of these resources... rather than using General Fund revenues as originally intended.' Assembly Member Amy Paulin, chair of the Corporations Committee, insists, 'we don’t have to justify funding the MTA adequately. It is very justified.' Rachael Fauss of Reinvent Albany calls for an end to 'raiding dedicated funds.' The governor’s office has not pledged to stop. The result: less money for transit, more danger for those who rely on it.


16
Distracted Driver Hits Pedestrian Crossing Pearl Street

Dec 16 - A 23-year-old woman was struck while crossing Pearl Street with the signal. The driver, traveling south, failed to pay attention. The pedestrian suffered hip and upper leg injuries and shock. The vehicle showed no damage despite the impact.

According to the police report, a pedestrian was injured at the intersection of Pearl Street and Wall Street in Manhattan. The 23-year-old woman was crossing with the signal when the vehicle, traveling straight south, struck her with its center front end. The pedestrian sustained abrasions and injuries to her hip and upper leg, resulting in shock. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The vehicle sustained no damage. The pedestrian was not at fault and was following traffic signals at the time of the crash.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4590696 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
15
71-Year-Old Pedestrian Hit on West Broadway

Dec 15 - A 71-year-old woman crossing West Broadway with the signal was struck by a southbound BMW sedan making a left turn. She suffered injuries to her entire body and minor bleeding. The driver showed no visible vehicle damage. The pedestrian was left in shock.

According to the police report, a 71-year-old female pedestrian was injured while crossing West Broadway at an intersection with the signal. The collision involved a southbound 2014 BMW sedan making a left turn. The point of impact was the vehicle's right front bumper. The pedestrian suffered injuries to her entire body and experienced minor bleeding, resulting in shock. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No specific driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were listed as contributing factors. The vehicle sustained no damage. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not assign fault to the pedestrian.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4591466 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
14
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Automated Enforcement Reforms

Dec 14 - Researchers urge cities to fix automated enforcement. Place cameras where crashes happen. Scale fines to income. Spend revenue on safer streets, not police. Use clear messaging. These steps cut danger for people walking and biking. Cameras alone are not enough.

This policy analysis, published December 14, 2022, reviews recommendations for automated enforcement programs. The study, titled "Four Ways To Build A Better Automated Enforcement Program," surveyed 1,500 U.S. adults about traffic cameras. Researchers, including Kelcie Ralph, urge cities to use data-driven camera placement, scale fines to income, and spend revenue on self-enforcing infrastructure like road narrowing. They warn against using cameras as cash cows or funding police and private contractors. The report states: "The purpose of [automated enforcement] is to improve safety, not catch unsuspecting drivers." Ralph adds, "They need to be in places with known safety risks, and it should be a data driven process." The analysis calls for shifting control to transportation departments and removing jail time for unpaid fines. These changes aim to protect vulnerable road users and make streets safer for all.


14
Fall Supports Citizen Reporting to Combat License Plate Obstruction

Dec 14 - Drivers hide plates. Cameras miss them. Streets stay dangerous. Senator Gounardes pushes a bill to pay citizens for reporting illegal plates. Police claim action, but advocates see little change. The bill sits in committee. Ghost cars keep rolling.

State Senator Andrew Gounardes introduced a bill in 2022 to reward citizens who report illegal license plates. The bill remains in committee. The measure would give whistleblowers 25% of the ticket, up to $75. The matter targets drivers who obscure or remove plates to dodge automated enforcement. As city and state agencies rely more on cameras to catch speeders and red-light runners, more drivers hide their plates. The Department of Transportation says cameras failed to ticket over 4% of violators last fall, up from 1% in 2019. Advocates accuse police of lax enforcement and even breaking the law themselves. Gounardes’s bill, still stalled, aims to close this loophole and put power in the hands of citizens. Vulnerable road users remain at risk while enforcement lags.


13
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Wellness Focus in Street Design

Dec 13 - The Public Design Commission calls for streets built for people, not cars. Their report highlights how open streets and community-led design boost health and reclaim space. The city’s past favored cars. The future, they say, must center wellness and equity.

On December 13, 2022, the New York City Public Design Commission released a policy advocacy statement titled, "Opinion: We Must Put Wellness at the Center of Public Space Design." The report, "Designing New York: Streetscapes for Wellness," urges a shift from car-centric planning to public spaces that serve people. The statement notes, "streets are arguably one of the city’s most readily accessed and underutilized public resources." The Commission, in collaboration with city agencies and advocacy groups, showcases case studies where open streets and community-driven design improved health and access. The report criticizes decades of planning that prioritized cars and blocked communities from vital spaces. It calls for equity, local engagement, and innovation in street design. No council member is named; this is a commission-led initiative. The statement supports reallocating street space and opposes car-first planning, pushing for a city where wellness and safety come first.


13
Fall Praises Roosevelt Island Bike Lane Safety Boost

Dec 13 - The Roosevelt Island Bridge bike lane now has a tough, weatherproof cover. Cyclists no longer risk slipping or punctured tires on metal grates. Council Member Julie Won joined DOT and others to push the project. Riders get a safer, smoother crossing.

"It was very important for people to have access to greenspace, especially during the pandemic this project will allow bikers to ride in ease and comfort, you no longer have to worry that you might slip off the bridge and fall into the river." -- Charles Fall

On December 13, 2022, Council Member Julie Won (District 26) joined city officials to mark the completion of a DOT pilot project covering the Roosevelt Island Bridge bike lane. The project, coordinated with Council Member Julie Menin, used fiber-reinforced polymer panels to shield riders from the bridge’s hazardous metal grating. The official matter: 'Roosevelt Island Bridge bike lane now covered for a safer, smoother ride.' Won praised the project’s quick finish and its promise of safer, more comfortable biking. DOT and community leaders noted the new surface prevents slips and flats, separating cyclists from traffic. The $100,000 upgrade, never before used in New York, aims to keep vulnerable road users out of harm’s way.