Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Brooklyn Heights?

Brooklyn Heights Bleeds: Speed Kills, Leaders Stall
Brooklyn Heights: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 4, 2025
The Toll in Brooklyn Heights
Two dead. Three seriously hurt. In the last three and a half years, the streets of Brooklyn Heights have not been quiet. The numbers do not lie. 213 people injured, 2 killed, 3 left with life-altering wounds since 2022. The dead do not speak. The injured limp, or do not walk at all. The pain is not abstract. It is a name missing from a dinner table, a scar that will not fade.
The Crashes Keep Coming
A 76-year-old woman died in the back seat of an SUV on Furman Street. The driver was speeding—aggressive. She was trapped, crushed, incoherent before the end. The driver survived, injured but alive. The cause: unsafe speed, road rage. The street did not forgive. NYC Open Data
A 31-year-old woman, Katherine Harris, was killed crossing Atlantic Avenue. The driver was drunk. He ran a red light at 72 mph. He did not stop. He killed her steps from her home. Her mother said, “She was a phenomenon, a force to be reckoned with… I lost part of me.”
A cyclist, 26, was cut down on Atlantic Avenue. An SUV, a distracted driver. The cyclist left with deep wounds. The driver was parked, but the street was not safe. NYC Open Data
Leadership: Action and Delay
Council Member Lincoln Restler has sponsored bills to speed up protected bike lanes and ban parking near crosswalks. He has called for speed limiters on repeat offenders. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon has pushed for fines for bike lane parking and speed-limiting tech. State Senator Andrew Gounardes has led on expanding speed camera enforcement and closing loopholes for plate cheats. But many bills sit in committee. Many measures are still just words.
The city has the power to lower speed limits. The council can demand daylight at crosswalks. The state can force speeders to slow down. Every delay is another risk. Every loophole is a wound waiting to open.
The Call
This is not fate. This is policy. Call your council member. Call the mayor. Demand a 20 mph limit. Demand protected bike lanes. Demand action, not excuses. The dead cannot speak. You can.
Citations
▸ Citations
- Drunk Driver Speeds, Kills Pedestrian in Brooklyn, NY Daily News, Published 2025-02-28
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4557775 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-06-25
- Drunk Driver Speeds, Kills Pedestrian in Brooklyn, NY Daily News, Published 2025-02-28
- File S 7336, Open States, Published 2025-04-11
- File Res 0854-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-04-24
- Hochul Signs Speed Camera Bill, Citing Streetsblog’s Coverage of Unsafe School Streets, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-06-24
- ‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-21
- How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-16
- Council Member Yusef Salaam Throws Support Behind Albany Push To Rein In Speeding Drivers, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-04-30
Other Representatives

District 52
341 Smith St., Brooklyn, NY 11231
Room 826, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248

District 33
410 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11217
718-875-5200
250 Broadway, Suite 1748, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7214

District 26
497 Carroll St. Suite 31, Brooklyn, NY 11215
Room 917, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Help Fix the Problem.
This address sits in
Traffic Safety Timeline for Brooklyn Heights
Res 1024-2025Restler Backs Safety‑Boosting Owner Liability Camera Pilot▸Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler Backs Safety‑Boosting Owner Liability Camera Program▸Council pushes Albany to pass A.5440. Owner liability when cars flout posted rules. Cameras to curb illegal parking that endangers people. Less chaos. More space for those on foot and bike.
Res 1024-2025 is a Council resolution now in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced August 14, 2025 and referred the same day. It “calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.5440, which imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York.” Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, sponsored by Assemblymember Steven Raga, would pilot camera enforcement (on city vehicles or along streets) for posted parking rules, with owner fines from $50 to $250 and a six-year term, plus a two-year public report. The aim: curb illegal parking that endangers people outside cars and clogs the street.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler Backs Safety‑Boosting Owner Liability Camera Program▸Council pushes Albany to pass A.5440. Owner liability when cars flout posted rules. Cameras to curb illegal parking that endangers people. Less chaos. More space for those on foot and bike.
Res 1024-2025 is a Council resolution now in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced August 14, 2025 and referred the same day. It “calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.5440, which imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York.” Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, sponsored by Assemblymember Steven Raga, would pilot camera enforcement (on city vehicles or along streets) for posted parking rules, with owner fines from $50 to $250 and a six-year term, plus a two-year public report. The aim: curb illegal parking that endangers people outside cars and clogs the street.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors deadlines for school-zone safety devices, improving street safety.▸Sets a 60-day clock for DOT to install traffic calming or control on streets by schools once a study says yes. Exempts major projects. Students walk there. Delay leaves them in the path of cars.
Int 1353-2025 was introduced on August 14, 2025. Referred that day to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Status: in committee. It orders DOT to install any traffic calming or control device next to a school within 60 days of a study. Major transportation projects are exempt. The bill says: “the department shall complete the installation… by no later than 60 days.” Sponsors: Council Members Jennifer Gutiérrez, Farah N. Louis, and Lincoln Restler. Louis is the primary sponsor. The focus is school frontage, where children and caregivers move on foot.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors faster installation of school traffic safety devices, boosting overall safety.▸Int 1353-2025 forces DOT to move fast near schools. When a traffic study finds a calming or control device is needed, installation must finish within 60 days. The bill was referred to the Transportation and Infrastructure committee on Aug. 14, 2025.
Int. No. 1353 (status: Committee) was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on Aug. 14, 2025 (agenda and first vote listed Aug. 14, 2025). The matter is titled: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the time permitted for the installation of a traffic calming device or traffic control device on any street adjacent to a school." It was introduced by Council Member Jennifer Gutiérrez and cosponsored by Tiffany Cabán, Lincoln Restler and Farah N. Louis. The bill would "complete the installation... by no later than 60 days after the department issues such traffic study determination." It takes effect immediately.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler co-sponsors owner-liability enforcement resolution, improving safety by deterring bike-lane and crosswalk blocking.▸Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1358-2025Restler is primary sponsor of bill revoking placards for obscured plates, improving safety.▸Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
-
File Int 1358-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
- File Res 1024-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler Backs Safety‑Boosting Owner Liability Camera Program▸Council pushes Albany to pass A.5440. Owner liability when cars flout posted rules. Cameras to curb illegal parking that endangers people. Less chaos. More space for those on foot and bike.
Res 1024-2025 is a Council resolution now in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced August 14, 2025 and referred the same day. It “calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.5440, which imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York.” Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, sponsored by Assemblymember Steven Raga, would pilot camera enforcement (on city vehicles or along streets) for posted parking rules, with owner fines from $50 to $250 and a six-year term, plus a two-year public report. The aim: curb illegal parking that endangers people outside cars and clogs the street.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler Backs Safety‑Boosting Owner Liability Camera Program▸Council pushes Albany to pass A.5440. Owner liability when cars flout posted rules. Cameras to curb illegal parking that endangers people. Less chaos. More space for those on foot and bike.
Res 1024-2025 is a Council resolution now in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced August 14, 2025 and referred the same day. It “calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.5440, which imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York.” Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, sponsored by Assemblymember Steven Raga, would pilot camera enforcement (on city vehicles or along streets) for posted parking rules, with owner fines from $50 to $250 and a six-year term, plus a two-year public report. The aim: curb illegal parking that endangers people outside cars and clogs the street.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors deadlines for school-zone safety devices, improving street safety.▸Sets a 60-day clock for DOT to install traffic calming or control on streets by schools once a study says yes. Exempts major projects. Students walk there. Delay leaves them in the path of cars.
Int 1353-2025 was introduced on August 14, 2025. Referred that day to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Status: in committee. It orders DOT to install any traffic calming or control device next to a school within 60 days of a study. Major transportation projects are exempt. The bill says: “the department shall complete the installation… by no later than 60 days.” Sponsors: Council Members Jennifer Gutiérrez, Farah N. Louis, and Lincoln Restler. Louis is the primary sponsor. The focus is school frontage, where children and caregivers move on foot.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors faster installation of school traffic safety devices, boosting overall safety.▸Int 1353-2025 forces DOT to move fast near schools. When a traffic study finds a calming or control device is needed, installation must finish within 60 days. The bill was referred to the Transportation and Infrastructure committee on Aug. 14, 2025.
Int. No. 1353 (status: Committee) was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on Aug. 14, 2025 (agenda and first vote listed Aug. 14, 2025). The matter is titled: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the time permitted for the installation of a traffic calming device or traffic control device on any street adjacent to a school." It was introduced by Council Member Jennifer Gutiérrez and cosponsored by Tiffany Cabán, Lincoln Restler and Farah N. Louis. The bill would "complete the installation... by no later than 60 days after the department issues such traffic study determination." It takes effect immediately.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler co-sponsors owner-liability enforcement resolution, improving safety by deterring bike-lane and crosswalk blocking.▸Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1358-2025Restler is primary sponsor of bill revoking placards for obscured plates, improving safety.▸Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
-
File Int 1358-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Council pushes Albany to pass A.5440. Owner liability when cars flout posted rules. Cameras to curb illegal parking that endangers people. Less chaos. More space for those on foot and bike.
Res 1024-2025 is a Council resolution now in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced August 14, 2025 and referred the same day. It “calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.5440, which imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York.” Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, sponsored by Assemblymember Steven Raga, would pilot camera enforcement (on city vehicles or along streets) for posted parking rules, with owner fines from $50 to $250 and a six-year term, plus a two-year public report. The aim: curb illegal parking that endangers people outside cars and clogs the street.
- File Res 1024-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler Backs Safety‑Boosting Owner Liability Camera Program▸Council pushes Albany to pass A.5440. Owner liability when cars flout posted rules. Cameras to curb illegal parking that endangers people. Less chaos. More space for those on foot and bike.
Res 1024-2025 is a Council resolution now in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced August 14, 2025 and referred the same day. It “calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.5440, which imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York.” Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, sponsored by Assemblymember Steven Raga, would pilot camera enforcement (on city vehicles or along streets) for posted parking rules, with owner fines from $50 to $250 and a six-year term, plus a two-year public report. The aim: curb illegal parking that endangers people outside cars and clogs the street.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors deadlines for school-zone safety devices, improving street safety.▸Sets a 60-day clock for DOT to install traffic calming or control on streets by schools once a study says yes. Exempts major projects. Students walk there. Delay leaves them in the path of cars.
Int 1353-2025 was introduced on August 14, 2025. Referred that day to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Status: in committee. It orders DOT to install any traffic calming or control device next to a school within 60 days of a study. Major transportation projects are exempt. The bill says: “the department shall complete the installation… by no later than 60 days.” Sponsors: Council Members Jennifer Gutiérrez, Farah N. Louis, and Lincoln Restler. Louis is the primary sponsor. The focus is school frontage, where children and caregivers move on foot.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors faster installation of school traffic safety devices, boosting overall safety.▸Int 1353-2025 forces DOT to move fast near schools. When a traffic study finds a calming or control device is needed, installation must finish within 60 days. The bill was referred to the Transportation and Infrastructure committee on Aug. 14, 2025.
Int. No. 1353 (status: Committee) was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on Aug. 14, 2025 (agenda and first vote listed Aug. 14, 2025). The matter is titled: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the time permitted for the installation of a traffic calming device or traffic control device on any street adjacent to a school." It was introduced by Council Member Jennifer Gutiérrez and cosponsored by Tiffany Cabán, Lincoln Restler and Farah N. Louis. The bill would "complete the installation... by no later than 60 days after the department issues such traffic study determination." It takes effect immediately.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler co-sponsors owner-liability enforcement resolution, improving safety by deterring bike-lane and crosswalk blocking.▸Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1358-2025Restler is primary sponsor of bill revoking placards for obscured plates, improving safety.▸Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
-
File Int 1358-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Council pushes Albany to pass A.5440. Owner liability when cars flout posted rules. Cameras to curb illegal parking that endangers people. Less chaos. More space for those on foot and bike.
Res 1024-2025 is a Council resolution now in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced August 14, 2025 and referred the same day. It “calls on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, A.5440, which imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York.” Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, sponsored by Assemblymember Steven Raga, would pilot camera enforcement (on city vehicles or along streets) for posted parking rules, with owner fines from $50 to $250 and a six-year term, plus a two-year public report. The aim: curb illegal parking that endangers people outside cars and clogs the street.
- File Res 1024-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors deadlines for school-zone safety devices, improving street safety.▸Sets a 60-day clock for DOT to install traffic calming or control on streets by schools once a study says yes. Exempts major projects. Students walk there. Delay leaves them in the path of cars.
Int 1353-2025 was introduced on August 14, 2025. Referred that day to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Status: in committee. It orders DOT to install any traffic calming or control device next to a school within 60 days of a study. Major transportation projects are exempt. The bill says: “the department shall complete the installation… by no later than 60 days.” Sponsors: Council Members Jennifer Gutiérrez, Farah N. Louis, and Lincoln Restler. Louis is the primary sponsor. The focus is school frontage, where children and caregivers move on foot.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors faster installation of school traffic safety devices, boosting overall safety.▸Int 1353-2025 forces DOT to move fast near schools. When a traffic study finds a calming or control device is needed, installation must finish within 60 days. The bill was referred to the Transportation and Infrastructure committee on Aug. 14, 2025.
Int. No. 1353 (status: Committee) was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on Aug. 14, 2025 (agenda and first vote listed Aug. 14, 2025). The matter is titled: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the time permitted for the installation of a traffic calming device or traffic control device on any street adjacent to a school." It was introduced by Council Member Jennifer Gutiérrez and cosponsored by Tiffany Cabán, Lincoln Restler and Farah N. Louis. The bill would "complete the installation... by no later than 60 days after the department issues such traffic study determination." It takes effect immediately.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler co-sponsors owner-liability enforcement resolution, improving safety by deterring bike-lane and crosswalk blocking.▸Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1358-2025Restler is primary sponsor of bill revoking placards for obscured plates, improving safety.▸Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
-
File Int 1358-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Sets a 60-day clock for DOT to install traffic calming or control on streets by schools once a study says yes. Exempts major projects. Students walk there. Delay leaves them in the path of cars.
Int 1353-2025 was introduced on August 14, 2025. Referred that day to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Status: in committee. It orders DOT to install any traffic calming or control device next to a school within 60 days of a study. Major transportation projects are exempt. The bill says: “the department shall complete the installation… by no later than 60 days.” Sponsors: Council Members Jennifer Gutiérrez, Farah N. Louis, and Lincoln Restler. Louis is the primary sponsor. The focus is school frontage, where children and caregivers move on foot.
- File Int 1353-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Int 1353-2025Restler co-sponsors faster installation of school traffic safety devices, boosting overall safety.▸Int 1353-2025 forces DOT to move fast near schools. When a traffic study finds a calming or control device is needed, installation must finish within 60 days. The bill was referred to the Transportation and Infrastructure committee on Aug. 14, 2025.
Int. No. 1353 (status: Committee) was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on Aug. 14, 2025 (agenda and first vote listed Aug. 14, 2025). The matter is titled: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the time permitted for the installation of a traffic calming device or traffic control device on any street adjacent to a school." It was introduced by Council Member Jennifer Gutiérrez and cosponsored by Tiffany Cabán, Lincoln Restler and Farah N. Louis. The bill would "complete the installation... by no later than 60 days after the department issues such traffic study determination." It takes effect immediately.
-
File Int 1353-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler co-sponsors owner-liability enforcement resolution, improving safety by deterring bike-lane and crosswalk blocking.▸Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1358-2025Restler is primary sponsor of bill revoking placards for obscured plates, improving safety.▸Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
-
File Int 1358-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Int 1353-2025 forces DOT to move fast near schools. When a traffic study finds a calming or control device is needed, installation must finish within 60 days. The bill was referred to the Transportation and Infrastructure committee on Aug. 14, 2025.
Int. No. 1353 (status: Committee) was introduced and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on Aug. 14, 2025 (agenda and first vote listed Aug. 14, 2025). The matter is titled: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the time permitted for the installation of a traffic calming device or traffic control device on any street adjacent to a school." It was introduced by Council Member Jennifer Gutiérrez and cosponsored by Tiffany Cabán, Lincoln Restler and Farah N. Louis. The bill would "complete the installation... by no later than 60 days after the department issues such traffic study determination." It takes effect immediately.
- File Int 1353-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Res 1024-2025Restler co-sponsors owner-liability enforcement resolution, improving safety by deterring bike-lane and crosswalk blocking.▸Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
-
File Res 1024-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1358-2025Restler is primary sponsor of bill revoking placards for obscured plates, improving safety.▸Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
-
File Int 1358-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Illegally parked cars endanger people on foot and bike. Res 1024-2025 urges Albany to pass A.5440. Cameras ticket owners who flout posted rules. Fines escalate. Goal: clear lanes and crosswalks. Make streets less hostile to people, not cars.
Res 1024-2025 sits in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced and referred August 14, 2025. The resolution urges passage of State bill A.5440, which, in the Council’s words, "imposes owner liability for failure of an operator to comply with traffic control indicators within the city of New York." Sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. A.5440, by Assemblymember Steven Raga, authorizes a six-year camera pilot to ticket owners for posted parking-rule violations caught by street or vehicle-mounted cameras. Fines start at $50 and rise to $250 for repeaters, with a $25 late penalty. DOT must publish a two-year report. The aim: fewer illegal blockers, safer space for people outside cars.
- File Res 1024-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Int 1358-2025Restler is primary sponsor of bill revoking placards for obscured plates, improving safety.▸Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
-
File Int 1358-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Hidden plates beat the cameras. Pedestrians lose. Cyclists lose. Int 1358-2025 would yank city parking permits from plate cheats. It also targets permit misuse and big unpaid fines. A strike at impunity that puts people on foot and bike at risk.
Int 1358-2025 is in Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, with same‑day referral. Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Robert F. Holden. The bill quotes its aim as the “revocation of city‑issued parking permits” for “obscured or defaced license plates.” It would also revoke permits for three misuse violations, any §19‑166 violation, or unpaid violations over $350. Status: Committee. Agenda date: August 14, 2025. Obscured plates block identification and undermine camera enforcement that protects people walking and cycling. This bill goes at that shield and the culture of permit misuse that lets drivers dodge accountability.
- File Int 1358-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Gounardes Advocates Subway Accessibility For All New Yorkers▸Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
-
Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Summer Streets grows, but cars still rule. Pedestrians and cyclists get scraps. Asphalt wins. The city drags its feet. People lose. Safety rises where cars vanish, but the reach is small.
"The subway belongs to all New Yorker, and it should be accessible to all New Yorkers." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, David Meyer issued a statement on the expansion of Summer Streets, covered by Streetsblog NYC. He said, 'Summer Streets is bigger and better than ever—and New Yorkers are begging for more.' Meyer supports car-free events but criticizes their limited scale. No council bill or committee action is attached. A safety analyst notes: expanding Summer Streets increases car-free space, encourages walking and cycling, and improves safety by reducing vehicle conflicts and promoting mode shift. But the limited reach means citywide benefits remain out of grasp.
- Monday’s Headlines: All Hail Summer Streets Edition, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Smith 9th Street Elevator Plan▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Every day, New Yorkers hike the stairs up this station like they're climbing Mount Everest, struggling to catch the train on time... With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that's finally going to change. It's simple: The subway belongs to every New Yorker, and it should be accessible to every New Yorker." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
- Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift, BKReader, Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Welcomes Smith-9th Street Elevator Accessibility Upgrade▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change." -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
- Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators, Brooklyn Paper, Published 2025-08-11
Simon Calls Smith-9th Elevator Safety Boosting Accessibility Upgrade▸MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
-
Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift,
BKReader,
Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
MTA will install an elevator at Smith-9th Street, the city’s tallest subway station. Riders now face steep climbs. Soon, F and G lines open to all. Barriers fall. Access rises. Fewer forced to drive.
"Climbing the tallest station in the system shouldn't be an endurance test." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, the MTA announced an elevator for Smith-9th Street station, Brooklyn’s highest subway stop. BKReader reported: 'The MTA will install an elevator at the Smith-9th Street station.' No council bill or committee is listed. State Senator Andrew Gounardes, Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, and NYCHA leaders backed the move. MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo called Smith-9th the clearest case for access. Installing an elevator helps pedestrians, especially those with mobility impairments. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and reducing street danger for all.
- Brooklyn’s Steepest Subway Stop to Get a Lift, BKReader, Published 2025-08-11
Simon Praises MTA Accessibility Priority and Elevator Installation▸Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
-
Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Smith-9th Streets, city’s highest subway stop, will get elevators. The climb ends. State officials promise relief for riders. No more 90-foot ascent. Gowanus waits for access.
"Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day." -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 11, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Streets station in Gowanus, the city’s tallest subway stop. The MTA’s $68.4 billion capital plan for 2025-2029 funds the project. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said, “With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change.” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the MTA for prioritizing accessibility. The upgrades follow a court settlement requiring 95% ADA-accessible stations by 2055. Safety analysts note: elevator installation boosts access for people with mobility challenges but does not directly impact street safety for pedestrians or cyclists.
- Tall order: Smith-9th Streets subway station, city’s highest, to get elevators, Brooklyn Paper, Published 2025-08-11
Gounardes Celebrates Elevators Ending Smith-9th Subway Climb▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""With elevators coming to the Smith-9th Street station, that’s finally going to change."" -- Andrew Gounardes
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
- Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent, Brooklyn Paper, Published 2025-08-10
Simon Praises Safety Boosting Elevators for Smith 9th Station▸Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
-
Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent,
Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Smith-9th Street stands 90 feet high. No elevators. State officials promise lifts. The climb ends. Access rises. Vulnerable riders—elderly, disabled, parents—gain ground. Transit grows safer. Streets may see fewer cars.
""Adding elevators to the station is a huge win for transit equity and for the thousands of riders who rely on this stop every day."" -- Jo Anne Simon
On August 10, 2025, state officials announced elevators for Smith-9th Street station in Gowanus, Brooklyn. The station, nearly 90 feet above ground, is the city’s tallest and lacks elevators. The matter: 'New York City's tallest subway station will soon have elevators, ending the difficult climb to the platform.' State Sen. Andrew Gounardes led the announcement. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon praised the move. MTA chief accessibility officer Quemuel Arroyo backed the upgrade. Adding elevators boosts access for people with mobility challenges. It makes transit a real option, shifting trips away from cars and easing danger for vulnerable road users.
- Tall order: NYC’s tallest subway station to get elevators, putting accessibility on the ascent, Brooklyn Paper, Published 2025-08-10
2Sedans Collide on Atlantic Avenue, Two Hurt▸Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Two sedans crashed at 211 Atlantic Ave. Impact left two men with neck injuries. Both suffered whiplash. Police cite failure to yield. Metal and glass. Pain and shock. Brooklyn streets, never quiet.
Two sedans collided at 211 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, two men—one driver, one front passenger—sustained neck injuries and whiplash. Both were listed as injured and in shock or conscious. The crash involved vehicles traveling east, one going straight, the other starting in traffic. Police cite 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No mention of helmet or signal use as a factor. The report lists no injuries for the other occupants. The toll: pain, injury, and another mark on Brooklyn’s streets.
Taxi Rear-Ended by Sedan on BQE; Elderly Passenger Hurt▸Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Sedan slammed into taxi’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. Elderly woman in back seat suffered head injury. Police cite unsafe speed. Metal, glass, blood. System failed her.
A sedan struck the rear of a taxi on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. An 88-year-old woman riding in the taxi’s back seat suffered a head contusion. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Speed.' Three other occupants, including both drivers and another passenger, were involved but not reported injured. The impact hit the taxi’s center back end. No mention of helmet or signal use as contributing factors. The crash underscores the danger of speed on city highways.
Sedan Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal▸A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
A Ford sedan hit a woman in the crosswalk on Boerum Place. She crossed with the signal. The driver failed to yield. Her leg was injured. The street stayed loud. The danger stayed real.
A Ford sedan traveling north on Boerum Place struck a 34-year-old woman as she crossed at the intersection with Livingston Street. According to the police report, the pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the driver made a left turn and failed to yield the right-of-way. The woman suffered injuries to her knee, lower leg, and foot, and was in shock at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors were noted.
SUV Driver Distracted, Pedicab Cyclist Injured on Furman Street▸SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
SUV struck pedicab on Furman Street. Cyclist, 62, suffered leg injury. Police cite driver distraction. No damage to vehicles. Streets remain dangerous for those outside cars.
A station wagon/SUV collided with a pedicab at 360 Furman Street in Brooklyn. The 62-year-old pedicab cyclist was injured, sustaining a contusion to the lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was listed as a contributing factor. The SUV driver was not reported injured. No vehicle damage was noted. The report does not mention helmet use or signaling as factors. This crash highlights the ongoing risks faced by cyclists and other vulnerable road users when drivers are distracted.
Tow Truck Rear-Ends Box Truck on Expressway▸Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Tow truck struck box truck’s rear on Brooklyn Queens Expressway. One driver suffered neck injury. Both vehicles moved straight. No clear cause listed. Steel met steel. Pain followed.
A tow truck hit the back of a box truck on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway in Brooklyn. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when the crash occurred. One driver, age 44, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. The other driver, age 51, was not reported injured. The police report lists no specific driver errors or contributing factors. Both vehicles were registered in New York and driven by licensed drivers. No helmet or signal use was listed as a factor.
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge▸Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
-
Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-07-25
Thin string, nearly invisible, sliced at necks and faces. Cyclists struck crossing Marine Parkway Bridge. Injuries mount. No answers. Danger lingers. System fails to clear the path.
Gothamist (2025-07-25) reports multiple cyclists injured by string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge walkway. Victims described sudden pain and red marks. One cyclist landed in intensive care in June. The NYPD said no criminality was suspected and has not identified the source. The MTA forbids cycling on the path, but most riders do not dismount due to the narrow walkway. The article quotes Angel Montalvo: "I felt pain, but I didn't know what it was." The recurring hazard exposes gaps in bridge safety and enforcement, leaving vulnerable users at risk.
- Cyclists Injured By Hidden String On Bridge, Gothamist, Published 2025-07-25