Crash Count for District 31
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 5,705
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 3,477
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 600
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 31
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 24
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Jul 26, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in District 31?

No More Dead Neighbors: Demand Action on District 31’s Killing Streets

No More Dead Neighbors: Demand Action on District 31’s Killing Streets

District 31: Jan 1, 2022 - Jul 17, 2025

The Blood Price of Speed and Steel

Four dead. 658 injured. That is just this year so far in District 31. In the last twelve months, eight people have died and over a thousand have been hurt. The numbers do not flinch. They do not care about age. Children, elders, workers, mothers. They all bleed the same on the blacktop.

Last month, a sedan struck a cyclist on Beach 73 Street. In February, a minivan crash on South Conduit Avenue killed a 78-year-old woman and sent two others to the hospital. On the Belt Parkway, a BMW lost control, hit the median, and caught fire. Two dead, five hurt. The road does not forgive mistakes. It does not care who was right.

Leadership: Words, Bills, and the Waiting

Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers holds the gavel on the City Council’s Transportation Committee. She has called out the city’s failures: “DOT gives us their word every hearing and we are not getting results” Brooks-Powers said. She has backed bills to daylight intersections, lower speed limits, and expand greenways. She co-sponsored a law to ban parking near crosswalks, to keep sightlines clear for those on foot and bike. She has questioned crackdowns that target cyclists instead of the drivers who kill: Brooks-Powers asked why police are dragging cyclists into criminal court for minor infractions as reported.

But the deaths keep coming. Promises pile up. Streets stay the same. The city missed its own targets for new bike lanes and bus lanes. The bills are written. The bodies are real.

What Comes Next: No More Waiting

Every crash is preventable. Every death is a failure of will. The city has the power to lower speed limits, redesign deadly roads, and keep crosswalks clear. Residents must demand it. Call Council Member Brooks-Powers. Call the Mayor. Call the DOT. Do not let another year pass with more names carved into stone.

Contact your leaders. Demand action. Do not wait for another siren.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the New York City Council and how does it work?
The New York City Council is the city’s legislative body. It passes laws, oversees agencies, and represents the interests of New Yorkers in each district.
Where does District 31 sit politically?
It belongs to borough Queens, assembly district AD 23 and state senate district SD 10.
Which areas are in District 31?
What types of vehicles caused injuries and deaths to pedestrians in District 31?
Most harm comes from Cars and Trucks (9 deaths, 540+ injuries), followed by Motorcycles and Mopeds (no deaths, 3 injuries), and Bikes (no deaths, 5 injuries).
Are these crashes just accidents, or are they preventable?
Every crash is preventable. Lower speeds, safer street design, and clear crosswalks can save lives.
What can local politicians do to stop traffic violence?
They can lower speed limits, redesign dangerous roads, enforce daylighting at intersections, and ensure enforcement targets the most dangerous drivers—not the most vulnerable road users.
What is CrashCount?
We’re a tool for helping hold local politicians and other actors accountable for their failure to protect you when you’re walking or cycling in NYC. We update our site constantly to provide you with up to date information on what’s happening in your neighborhood.

Citations

Citations

Fix the Problem

Selvena N. Brooks-Powers
Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers
District 31
District Office:
1931 Mott Avenue, Suite 410, Far Rockaway, NY 11691
718-471-7014
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1865, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7216

Other Representatives

Stacey Pheffer Amato
Assembly Member Stacey Pheffer Amato
District 23
District Office:
159-53 102nd St., Howard Beach, NY 11414
Legislative Office:
Room 839, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
James Sanders
State Senator James Sanders
District 10
District Office:
142-01 Rockaway Blvd., South Ozone Park, NY 11436
Legislative Office:
Room 711, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies

District 31 Council District 31 sits in Queens, AD 23, SD 10.

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 CB13, Queens CB83, Queens CB14, Queens CB84.

See also
Boroughs
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Council District 31

Brooks-Powers Collaborates on Safety-Boosting Resident Traffic Enforcement Bill

Council Member Restler’s bill lets New Yorkers ticket drivers who block bike lanes, bus lanes, sidewalks, or hydrants near schools. Twenty-four council members back it. The bill targets driver impunity and NYPD inaction. Advocates say it protects cyclists and pedestrians.

Bill number not specified. Sponsored by Council Member Lincoln Restler, the bill is advancing in the City Council with 24 out of 51 members signed on as of November 7, 2022. It sits with the Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, who is working with Restler to streamline the complaint process. The bill’s summary: it allows residents to ticket drivers who block bike lanes, bus lanes, sidewalks, crosswalks, or fire hydrants within 1,320 feet of a school, creating a $175 fine and a civilian complaint protocol. Restler and Brooks-Powers are refining the process to avoid the pitfalls of the city’s anti-idling law, which discourages participation. The NYPD and DOT oppose the bill, citing concerns about neighbor conflict. Advocates support it, highlighting NYPD’s failure to protect vulnerable road users. The bill is seen as a major improvement over the ineffective 311 system.


Richards Supports Rezoning Despite Safety Concerns and Opposition

Queens Community Board 2 voted to block a new SUV dealership on Northern Boulevard. Local leaders demand housing, not more cars. They cite danger, pollution, and reckless driving. Council Member Julie Won and Assembly Member González-Rojas back the board. The fight moves to City Planning.

On November 7, 2022, Queens Community Board 2 passed a resolution rejecting a rezoning application for a Lincoln SUV dealership on Northern Boulevard, Woodside. The matter, described as a call for a moratorium on car-related development, pits housing needs against car infrastructure. Council Member Julie Won supported the board, stating, "It should be a neighborhood rezoning instead of spot rezoning... we need to make it safer and more liveable." Assembly Member Jessica González-Rojas also opposed the dealership, urging the space be used for affordable housing and highlighting dangerous driving by existing dealerships. Despite Borough President Donovan Richards' support for the rezoning, citing cycling and EV promotion, the application faces strong local resistance. The City Planning Commission now reviews the case, with a City Council vote possible. The board and electeds argue more cars mean more risk for pedestrians and cyclists on a deadly stretch.


Jeep and Nissan Run Light, Crash Hard in Queens

Two cars tore through a red light on Carson Street. Metal slammed metal. The Nissan driver’s head was crushed. Four others hurt. Sirens cut the dawn. The street lay still, marked by reckless speed and disregard.

A Jeep and a Nissan collided at Carson Street and 219th in Queens. Both vehicles ran the light, according to the police report: 'A Jeep slammed into a Nissan’s front. Both ran the light.' The Nissan’s driver, a 30-year-old man, suffered severe head injuries and was found unconscious. Four other occupants, aged 20 to 24, were also injured, with complaints of back pain and other trauma. The police report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for both drivers. The Nissan driver wore no seatbelt, but this detail follows the primary driver errors. The crash left the intersection scarred, a stark result of ignoring traffic signals and speeding.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4579105 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-04
Speeding Sedan Strikes Pedestrian in Queens

A sedan sped east on 144th Avenue. Steel hit a man’s head. Blood pooled on the street. The driver fled. The man, sixty-one, lay injured. The night swallowed the sound. Only silence remained.

A 61-year-old man was crossing near 225-06 144th Avenue in Queens when a sedan, traveling east, struck him. According to the police report, the sedan was moving at unsafe speed and the driver was inattentive or distracted. The impact hit the man’s head, causing severe lacerations. The driver did not stop. The police report lists 'Unsafe Speed' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as contributing factors. The pedestrian was not at an intersection and was crossing without a signal, but the report does not cite this as a contributing factor. The crash left the man conscious but badly hurt. The street was left silent after the driver fled.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4577367 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-04
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting NYC Greenway Master Plan

City Council passed a bill to map and expand greenways for cyclists and walkers. The plan targets neglected neighborhoods. It demands real infrastructure, not just paint. Advocates say it will open safe routes, cut danger, and connect the city.

On October 27, 2022, the City Council passed a bill requiring a comprehensive master plan for New York City's greenways. The legislation, championed by Council Member Carlina Rivera and supported by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), mandates the city to study, map, and expand greenways—'highways for cyclists and pedestrians, separated from motor vehicle traffic.' The bill focuses on low-income and underserved neighborhoods, with a final plan due by December 2024 and updates every five years. Rivera said, 'All of us are here today because we believe in a future where New Yorkers of all backgrounds... can safely access active transportation.' Brooks-Powers called it 'a real opportunity... to make a profound impact.' Advocates like Jon Orcutt of Bike New York praised the move, urging the city to build 'real infrastructure for cycling.' The bill passed nearly unanimously, signaling strong council support for safer, more equitable streets.


Lexus Plows Into Parked Nissan SUV in Queens

A Lexus smashed into a parked Nissan on Beach Channel Drive. The driver, a 41-year-old woman, was left unconscious and bloodied. Police cite driver distraction. Metal twisted. Sirens cut the air.

A westbound Lexus SUV struck a parked Nissan SUV on Beach Channel Drive near 69th Street in Queens. According to the police report, 'A westbound Lexus slammed into a parked Nissan. The SUV folded. Behind the wheel, a 41-year-old woman lay unconscious, her head bloodied, her body crushed beneath the wreckage.' The driver suffered severe head and crush injuries. Three children and another woman were also inside the Lexus; their injuries are not detailed. Police list 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor. The parked Nissan was empty. No helmet or signal use is mentioned. The crash left the Lexus demolished and the street scarred.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4575262 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-04
Brooks-Powers Supports DOT Accountability and Data Transparency

Council Member Gale Brewer challenges DOT’s street safety boasts. She questions claims of 750 redesigned intersections. Public data shows far less. Most fixes are signal timing, not real protection. Advocates want proof, not promises. Road deaths remain high. Brewer vows investigation.

On October 5, 2022, Council Member Gale Brewer, chair of the Council's oversight committee, announced plans to investigate the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) street safety claims. Brewer questioned DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez’s assertion that 750 of 1,000 intersections were redesigned, citing public data showing fewer than 400. Brewer said, “I love the idea of using her committee's investigatory power to explore whether the Adams administration has indeed redesigned 750 of the promised 1,000 intersections... or whether it done fewer than that, as the agency's own public data shows.” She confirmed her intent to use committee investigators and hold an oversight hearing. The matter, titled “City Council oversight inquiry into DOT street safety implementation and data transparency,” highlights DOT’s lack of documentation and reliance on signal retiming over physical improvements. Advocates and Brewer demand full transparency and real progress. Road deaths remain high, and the city lags on legal mandates for bus and bike lanes.


Richards Urges Balancing Transit Equity and QueensWay Park

Mayor Adams broke ground on QueensWay, a $35 million park project on old rail tracks. Supporters cheer new green space for 330,000 locals. Critics warn it kills hopes for restored train service. The fight pits open space against transit justice in Queens.

On September 16, 2022, Mayor Adams announced the start of the QueensWay project, a $35 million plan to turn a defunct LIRR branch in Queens into a linear park. The first phase includes $5 million for environmental review and $30 million for the Metropolitan Hub. The matter summary states: 'converting a defunct LIRR branch into a Highline-style park in Queens.' Council Member Lynn Schulman supports the park, calling it 'shovel-ready.' Borough President Donovan Richards and Assembly Members Jenifer Rajkumar and David Weprin back both the park and the QueensLink transit proposal. Richards said, 'We need to do both when it comes to making sure that we can enhance our public transportation and also ensuring that our communities have access to open space.' Transit advocates warn the park blocks future rail service, cutting off faster commutes and cleaner air for southern Queens. The MTA previously cited high costs for transit reactivation. The debate continues over whether the right-of-way should serve parks, transit, or both.


Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Queensboro Bridge Pedestrian Lane

Council Member Julie Won blasted DOT for stalling a promised pedestrian lane on the Queensboro Bridge. She called the agency’s excuses garbage. Cyclists and walkers remain squeezed into a narrow, dangerous path. DOT’s delays keep vulnerable road users at risk.

On September 15, 2022, Council Member Julie Won publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for delaying the conversion of the Queensboro Bridge’s south outer roadway into a pedestrian-only lane. The project, promised by the previous mayor for completion by the end of 2022, was pushed back at least a year. Won, whose district covers the bridge’s eastern approaches, led a walkthrough with DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez and staff from Council Members Julie Menin and Selvena Brooks-Powers. Won said, “They kept saying they can’t give the south outer roadway to pedestrians because there would be traffic. Well, I don’t care about the congestion!” She forced the commissioner to stand in the cramped lane, showing how unsafe it is for both cyclists and pedestrians. DOT offered only minor adjustments, like repainting lines, which Won dismissed as “missing the point.” The agency promised lawmakers data to justify keeping five car lanes, but Won insisted the delay puts lives at risk and called for immediate action.


Richards Supports Safety Boosting 34th Avenue Open Street

Opponents of the 34th Avenue Open Street hurled slurs and lies. Community Board 3 spread false claims. Volunteers faced homophobia and xenophobia. Officials condemned the hate. The city’s plan aims to cut car traffic and give space to people, not cars.

On September 13, 2022, Queens Community Board 3 and the Jackson Heights Coop Alliance opposed the Department of Transportation’s Paseo Park plan for 34th Avenue. The board circulated an email with misinformation about emergency access and parking. Jim Burke, the open street’s volunteer leader, was targeted with homophobic and xenophobic abuse. Council Member Shekar Krishnan and Borough President Donovan Richards condemned the hate, with Krishnan stating, 'Hate, homophobia, bigotry, threats have no place in our community.' Richards, a supporter of Paseo Park, said, 'We can disagree, but we need to be adults.' DOT spokesman Scott Gastel said the open street benefits the entire community, prioritizing pedestrians and children. The city’s plan removes curbside parking and adds plaza blocks, making streets safer for people.


Richards Supports Safety Boosting Summer Streets Expansion

Brooklyn and Queens leaders want car-free Summer Streets beyond Manhattan. They urge the city to open roads for people, not cars. Advocates back them. The city says it will review. Families, children, and communities stand to gain space and safety.

On September 12, 2022, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called for expanding the 'Summer Streets' program to their boroughs. They wrote to Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez, stating, 'Every year, we see how much New Yorkers enjoy the car-free street and associated activities, and we are writing to ask you to bring this beloved event to our respective boroughs in 2023.' The Department of Transportation said it would review the request. Advocates like Juan Restrepo and Jackson Chabot joined the call, demanding more hours and borough-wide access. Community groups stressed the benefits for families and children. The program is described as cost-effective, crime-free, and vital for community building. No formal council bill or vote yet, but the push is clear: open streets for all, not just Manhattan.


Richards Backs Safety Boosting Seagirt Boulevard Redesign

Seagirt Boulevard in Far Rockaway, once a six-lane speed trap, will shrink to two lanes. DOT will add a parking-protected bike lane and more space for people on foot. The redesign aims to slow drivers and shield those outside cars from harm.

On September 6, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a major safety redesign for Seagirt Boulevard, a notorious crash corridor in Far Rockaway. The project, not a council bill but a city action, follows years of neglect and repeated crashes. DOT will cut traffic lanes from six to two, add a parking-protected bike lane, and expand pedestrian space. The plan also includes daylighting at intersections and improved markings. According to DOT, 'the project will improve safety for all users, providing connections to existing bike infrastructure and the reduction of a vehicle lane encouraging safer speeds.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the move, saying, 'Far too many people are killed and injured on our city’s streets, especially people of color, who are disproportionately impacted by traffic violence.' Laura Shepard of Transportation Alternatives added, 'DOT's move to turn car space into protected bike lanes on Seagirt Boulevard, while shortening crossings and expanding median space, will prevent speeding and make it safer to walk, bike, and take transit.' The redesign targets a stretch with 222 crashes and 87 injuries since 2019, aiming to end the long-standing danger for vulnerable road users.


Aggressive Driver Kills Pedestrian Off Beach 20th

A Florida-plated Honda tore down Beach 20th. The driver lost control. The car’s front end struck a man standing off the road. He died on the pavement. Another pedestrian was hurt. Aggressive driving left blood on the street.

A sedan with Florida plates sped south on Beach 20th Street in Far Rockaway. According to the police report, the Honda’s front end struck a 59-year-old man who was standing off the roadway. He died at the scene. Another pedestrian, a 36-year-old man, suffered back injuries. The report lists 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage' as the contributing factor. The right front bumper of the car was damaged. No other contributing factors are noted. The crash did not occur at an intersection. The victims were not in the roadway. The violence of the impact and the listed driver behavior point to a deadly failure behind the wheel.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4559882 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-04
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras While Undermining Safety With Speeding

Councilwoman Selvena Brooks-Powers sped through Queens after vowing to slow down. Cameras caught her three times in three months. She leads the transportation committee. Seventeen tickets in eleven months. Twenty-seven Queens crash deaths this year. No comment from her.

On August 17, 2022, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers of District 31, chair of the City Council’s transportation committee, was reported for repeated speeding violations. The matter, titled 'Queens councilwoman hasn’t stopped speeding through NYC despite pledge to do better,' details that Brooks-Powers was caught by city speed cameras on April 24, June 23, and July 22, despite a public promise to 'do better' after 17 prior tickets in 11 months. She has praised speed cameras as vital for protecting 'motorists, pedestrians, and cyclists.' Nearly all violations occurred in Queens, where 27 people died in car crashes this year as of July 31. Brooks-Powers’ record now qualifies her for the dangerous vehicle abatement program, which can mandate a safety course or impoundment. She did not respond to requests for comment.


Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Conversion of Parking to Greenspace

Turning parking into greenspace means fewer floods, safer streets. Asphalt traps water. Storms turn roads into rivers. Bioswales and trees soak up rain, protect homes, keep subways dry. The city must swap pavement for life. Action saves lives, not parking.

On August 16, 2022, the Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, discussed flood prevention. An opinion from a Transportation Alternatives staffer urged the Council to 'transform impervious driving lanes into green climate solutions.' The piece calls for bioswales and greenspace in place of parking, citing the deadly floods after Hurricane Ida. It highlights that 72 percent of city land is impervious, worsening flash floods. The author presses city leaders, including Mayor Eric Adams, to repurpose street space for climate resilience, referencing the NYC 25x25 challenge. The message is clear: 'Our streets can become the solution to climate change and flooding.' No council vote occurred, but the advocacy pushes for urgent, systemic change to protect New Yorkers from future storms.


Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting QueensLink Subway Expansion Study

Fifteen Queens officials urge state and city to fund a study for QueensLink. They want trains running where weeds grow. They reject inflated costs. They say transit equity matters. They press for action, not delay. Riders wait. Streets stay dangerous.

On August 5, 2022, fifteen elected officials and two community board chairs from Queens signed a letter demanding Governor Hochul and Mayor Adams fund an environmental impact study (EIS) for the QueensLink subway expansion. The proposal, discussed in the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, seeks to restore service on the abandoned LIRR Rockaway Beach Branch, connecting Rego Park and Ozone Park. Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, committee chair, emphasized, 'Transportation equity is a major issue in our city that must be confronted.' The letter criticizes the MTA’s previous cost estimates and compares QueensLink’s need to the state-backed Interborough Express. Supporters argue that if the state can spend $1 billion widening the Van Wyck Expressway, it can fund a study for transit. The EIS would include community engagement to address local concerns. The push is clear: more transit, fewer cars, safer streets for all.


2
Head-On SUV Collision Bleeds Queens Parkway

Two SUVs crashed head-on in the dark on Belt Parkway. Metal screamed. A young woman bled from her leg. A man bruised his knee. Both stayed conscious. The airbag burst. The night stayed cold. The road bore the cost.

Two sport utility vehicles collided head-on late at night on Belt Parkway in Queens. According to the police report, a 22-year-old woman driving a Jeep suffered severe bleeding to her leg. A 47-year-old man driving the other SUV sustained a knee contusion. Both drivers were conscious after the crash. The report lists the contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. Both vehicles sustained heavy front-end damage. The police report describes the scene: 'Two SUVs met head-on in the dark. Metal tore. A 22-year-old woman, alone in her Jeep, bled from the leg. The airbag burst.' The cause remains unclear in the official record.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4552497 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-04
Brooks-Powers Backs Safety-Boosting Crosswalk and Stop Sign

A new crosswalk and four-way stop sign now stand at Surf Avenue and West 37th Street. Years of community pressure forced action. The intersection, deadly for seniors and pedestrians, finally gets protection. Council and DOT responded. Locals, especially elders, celebrate the change.

On July 26, 2022, Councilmember Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Transportation Chair, joined Councilmember Ari Kagan and DOT officials at Surf Avenue and West 37th Street. The matter: 'Surf Avenue gets new crosswalk and four-way stop sign, creating a safer intersection for seniors.' Kagan’s office led the push, with Brooks-Powers elevating the issue. Kagan said, 'It was one of the most dangerous intersections in Coney Island, not just for pedestrians but for drivers as well.' The crossing serves the Scheuer House senior facility. Community Board 13 and local groups demanded action. Brooks-Powers praised the advocacy: 'Now, your residents will be able to cross the street safely!' The intersection, once life-threatening, now offers basic protection for the city’s most vulnerable.


Pedestrian Killed Walking Along Belt Parkway

A woman, sixty, walked with traffic on Belt Parkway. A vehicle struck her head-on. She died by the shoulder. No crosswalk. No stop. The road stayed busy. She did not move again.

A 60-year-old woman was killed while walking along Belt Parkway. According to the police report, she was walking with traffic, not at an intersection, when a vehicle struck her head-on. She suffered crush injuries to her entire body and died at the scene. The report notes the point of impact was the center front end of the vehicle. The contributing factor is listed as 'Unspecified.' No crosswalk was present. The police report does not identify any driver errors or vehicle details. The victim’s actions and safety equipment are not cited as contributing factors.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4549579 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-04
Brooks-Powers Opposes Jamaica Busways Citing Business Harm

Two Queens council members want the city to scrap Jamaica’s busways. They say bus lanes hurt drivers and businesses. Riders say commutes barely improved. DOT stands firm. The fight pits car convenience against safer, faster transit for thousands.

On July 18, 2022, Council Members Nantasha Williams and Selvena Brooks-Powers opposed the city’s pilot busways on Archer and Jamaica avenues. The Department of Transportation (DOT) launched the one-year, 24/7 busway pilot to speed up commutes for over 250,000 daily bus riders. Williams called her district a 'car community' and argued, 'there's only one metric of success for the bus lane and not looking comprehensively at how it's actually impacting the community.' Brooks-Powers claimed, 'People cannot access our local businesses.' Both members urged the city to end or shorten the pilot, citing business and driver complaints. DOT and transit advocates countered that bus speeds improved. The DOT plans to continue the pilot and survey businesses and riders at its end. No safety analyst assessment was provided.