Crash Count for District 31
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 5,164
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 3,144
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 532
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 28
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 24
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Jun 7, 2025
Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in District 31?
SUVs/Cars 72 6 7 Trucks/Buses 8 0 2 Bikes 1 0 0 Motos/Mopeds 0 1 0
Eight Dead, a Thousand Broken—How Many More Before We Act?

Eight Dead, a Thousand Broken—How Many More Before We Act?

District 31: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 6, 2025

The Cost in Blood and Silence

Eight dead. Over a thousand injured. In the last year, District 31 has seen 1,015 people hurt and 8 killed in traffic crashes. The dead include the old and the young. A woman in her seventies, found unconscious in the back seat of a minivan, did not make it out alive. Three others, all seniors, were rushed to the hospital. The minivan veered off Brookville Boulevard and struck a tree. Police said, “A woman was killed and three other people were hospitalized when a trip from a Queens senior residential home turned deadly early Friday” (NY Daily News).

On the Belt Parkway, a 27-year-old woman died in a single-car crash. Police found both occupants outside the wreck. “Since both occupants were out of the car at the time of the crash, investigators haven’t figured out who was driving, police said” (NY Daily News).

SUVs, sedans, trucks. The machines keep moving. The bodies pile up. In the last twelve months, three people over 75 died. One person under 25. No one is spared.

What Has Been Done—and What Has Not

Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers has backed bills to clear parked cars from crosswalks, add speed humps, and expand lighting for pedestrians. She voted to legalize jaywalking, ending a law that punished the vulnerable for crossing the street (NYC Council – Legistar). She called out city agencies for failing to deliver on promised bike lanes and bus lanes, saying, “DOT gives us their word every hearing and we are not getting results” (Streetsblog NYC).

But the carnage continues. Bills sit in committee. Promises gather dust. The streets do not wait.

The Next Fight: Action, Not Excuses

Speed kills. Lowering the speed limit to 20 mph citywide is now possible. Cameras that catch speeders and red-light runners are proven to save lives, but their future is not guaranteed. Every day of delay means another family shattered.

Call your council member. Call the mayor. Demand safer streets. Join groups like Transportation Alternatives and Families for Safe Streets. Do not wait for another obituary. The blood on the road is not an accident. It is a choice.

Citations

Citations
Other Geographies

District 31 Council District 31 sits in Queens.

It contains Laurelton, Springfield Gardens (South)-Brookville, Rosedale, Montefiore Cemetery, Far Rockaway-Bayswater, Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere, Rockaway Community Park, John F. Kennedy International Airport, Jamaica Bay (East), Queens CB83.

See also
Boroughs
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Council District 31

Brooks-Powers Supports Increased Funding for Streets Master Plan

Council members and advocates rallied at City Hall. They demanded $3.1 billion for the Streets Master Plan. Traffic deaths surged 44 percent in early 2022. The mayor’s budget falls short. The city stalls. Streets remain deadly. The call: fund safety now.

On April 22, 2022, more than a dozen City Council members and advocates gathered at City Hall to demand full funding for the Streets Master Plan. The plan, passed in 2019, requires hundreds of miles of protected bike lanes, bus lanes, and safer sidewalks. Council Member Alexa Avilés led the call: "We want $3.1 billion, a little tiny fraction of the [nearly $100-billion] city budget, to make sure our streets belong to us, and to make sure New Yorkers are safe." Council Members Selvena Brooks-Powers, Carlina Rivera, Lincoln Restler, Sandy Nurse, Chi Ossé, Crystal Hudson, Shekar Krishnan, and Amanda Farías joined her. Traffic fatalities rose 44 percent in the first quarter of 2022, the deadliest start since Vision Zero began. The mayor’s proposed $98.5-billion budget did not allocate significant funds for the plan. Advocates say the city must act now to stem the bloodshed on its streets.


Brooks-Powers Admits Speeding Undermines Safety Efforts in School Zones

Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers sped through school zones 17 times in 11 months. She racked up 22 speed violations and one red light ticket. Her district sees high rates of pedestrian deaths. She pledges to do better. Tickets paid. No license impact.

Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the NYC Council's Transportation Committee, was cited for speeding in school zones 17 times in less than a year. The violations occurred between May 2020 and April 2022. Brooks-Powers represents Southeast Queens, an area plagued by pedestrian and motorist fatalities. The matter surfaced in April 2022, with Brooks-Powers admitting responsibility for most tickets. She stated, 'public safety is very important to me,' and pledged to improve. Under the Dangerous Vehicle Abatement Program, she must complete a safety course or risk car impoundment. Her tickets have been paid, so her car was not towed. Camera tickets do not affect her license. Brooks-Powers says she is working with advocates to address traffic violence and congestion, but her record highlights the ongoing danger for vulnerable road users in her district.


Brooks-Powers Demands Safety-Boosting Streets Master Plan Funding

City Council pushes Mayor Adams for $3.1 billion more for the Streets Master Plan. They want double the protected lanes and more pedestrian space. Advocates cheer. The mayor reviews. The fight is over money, but the stakes are lives.

On April 4, 2022, the City Council called on Mayor Adams to add $3.1 billion to the Streets Master Plan. The plan, passed in 2019, aims for 250 protected bike lanes and 150 bus lanes. The Council wants to double these targets: 500 miles each of protected bike and bus lanes, plus 38 million square feet of new pedestrian plazas. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said the goal is 'to make our thoroughfares safer and more accessible, while increasing New York's pedestrian plazas footprint.' The Council’s proposal comes as the mayor’s $98.5-billion budget lacks dedicated funding for these safety upgrades. Advocates for bus and bike infrastructure support the Council’s push. The mayor says he is reviewing the proposal and remains committed to street safety and transit improvements.


Box Truck Strikes Elderly Man at Central Avenue Intersection

A box truck hit a 73-year-old man at Central Avenue and Nameoke. He fell. Blood pooled. His breath faded. The truck rolled on, undamaged. The man died in the street. The system failed to protect him.

A 73-year-old pedestrian was killed when a northbound box truck struck him at the intersection of Central Avenue and Nameoke Avenue. According to the police report, 'A box truck moving north struck a 73-year-old man in the intersection. He fell, head bleeding, breath fading. The truck showed no damage. The man died where he lay.' The report lists the contributing factors as 'Unspecified' for both the driver and the pedestrian. The truck’s point of impact was the center front end, and the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead. No driver errors were specified in the data. The crash left one man dead and exposed the dangers faced by pedestrians at city intersections.


Brooks-Powers Champions Safety Boosting Equity and Accessible Transit

Councilmember Brooks-Powers called out deadly streets in Southeast Queens. She demanded safe roads and good transit for every neighborhood, not just the rich. She vowed to center equity, listen to the unheard, and fix danger where it hits hardest.

On March 8, 2022, Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers made a public statement on transportation equity. She declared, 'Equity in transportation means addressing the needs of neighborhoods that have suffered from long and dangerous commutes after decades of under-investment.' Brooks-Powers, representing Southeast Queens, highlighted high rates of pedestrian and motorist danger in her district. She pledged to shift the city's focus from transit-rich areas to those left behind, stressing the need for accessible streets, protection for children, and investment in minority and women-owned businesses. Brooks-Powers opposed enforcement-heavy approaches, promising instead to prioritize improvements and community input. Her leadership signals a push to measure DOT success by safety and access for all, especially the most vulnerable.


Res 0009-2022
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors resolution for accessible subways, improving safety for vulnerable riders.

Council called on the MTA to make every renovated subway station fully accessible. Only a fraction of stations have elevators. Lawmakers want no more half-measures. The resolution was filed at session’s end. Riders with disabilities remain stranded underground.

Resolution 0009-2022 was introduced on February 10, 2022, in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. It called on the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to ensure any subway station undergoing enhancement or renovation becomes fully accessible to people with disabilities. The matter title reads: 'Resolution calling upon the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to make any subway stations undergoing enhancement or renovation fully accessible to people with disabilities.' Council Member Darlene Mealy sponsored the resolution, joined by Brannan, Menin, Louis, Yeger, Hanif, Hudson, Marte, Joseph, Riley, and Brooks-Powers. The resolution was filed at the end of session on December 31, 2023. Only 117 out of 493 subway stations are accessible. The Council’s action highlights the city’s failure to guarantee safe, equal passage for all riders. Elevators and upgrades are overdue. The bill’s filing leaves vulnerable New Yorkers waiting.


Res 0002-2022
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors resolution to expand MTA on-demand paratransit pilot.

City Council calls for Albany to extend and expand the MTA On-Demand E-Hail Paratransit Pilot. The resolution demands fare parity, no ride caps, and equal service for disabled New Yorkers. Lawmakers say current limits are unjust and restrict mobility.

Resolution 0002-2022, filed at session's end, came before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on February 10, 2022. The measure urges passage of S.4037/A.5896, which would 'extend and expand the scope of the MTA On-Demand E-Hail Paratransit Pilot Program.' Council Member Justin L. Brannan led sponsorship, joined by Ayala, Menin, Louis, Hanif, Hudson, Bottcher, Farías, Brooks-Powers, and Brewer. The resolution slams service caps and fare surcharges, calling them 'inequitable and unjust.' It demands that paratransit users get the same fare, hours, and ride freedom as subway and bus riders. The bill would end rationing and financial barriers for disabled New Yorkers who rely on Access-A-Ride. The Council’s action highlights the systemic barriers faced by vulnerable road users and presses for equal, unrestricted access.


Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety

A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.

On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.


2
Mazda SUV Strikes Girl Off Roadway

A Mazda SUV hit a 10-year-old girl standing off Beach Channel Drive. The impact crushed her. She died on the spot. Another pedestrian suffered a broken leg. The driver, a permit holder, was inexperienced. Metal met flesh. The child never reached safety.

A 10-year-old girl was killed and another pedestrian was injured when a Mazda SUV struck them on Beach Channel Drive. According to the police report, the girl stood off the road when the SUV, driven by a permit holder, hit her head-on. She suffered crush injuries and died where she stood. Another pedestrian sustained a fractured leg. The driver, a 35-year-old woman, was listed as inexperienced. The police report cites 'Driver Inexperience' as a contributing factor. The child was not in the roadway and never reached the curb. No other contributing factors were listed.


Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures

Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.

A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.


Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Bike Lanes Ferry Expansion

Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.

On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.