About these crash totals
Counts come from NYC police crash reports (NYC Open Data). We sum all crashes, injuries, and deaths for this area across the selected time window shown on the card. Injury severity follows the official definitions in the NYPD dataset.
- Crashes: number of police‑reported collisions (all road users).
- All injuries: total injured people in those crashes.
- Moderate / Serious: subcategories reported by officers (e.g., broken bones vs. life‑threatening trauma).
- Deaths: people who died due to a crash.
Notes: Police reports can be corrected after initial publication. Minor incidents without a police report are not included.
Close▸ Killed 11
▸ Crush Injuries 9
▸ Amputation 1
▸ Severe Bleeding 7
▸ Severe Lacerations 6
▸ Concussion 9
▸ Whiplash 65
▸ Contusion/Bruise 98
▸ Abrasion 61
▸ Pain/Nausea 29
About this chart
We group pedestrian injuries and deaths by the vehicle type that struck them (as recorded in police reports). Use the dropdown to view totals, serious injuries, or deaths.
- Trucks/Buses, SUVs/Cars, Mopeds, and Bikes reflect the reporting categories in the crash dataset.
- Counts include people on foot only; crashes with no injured pedestrians are not shown here.
Notes: Police classification can change during investigations. Small categories may have year-to-year variance.
CloseAbout these numbers
These totals count vehicles with at least the shown number of camera‑issued speeding violations (school‑zone speed cameras) in any rolling 12‑month window in this district. Totals are summed from 2022 to the present for this geography.
- ≥ 6 (6+): advocates’ standard for repeat speeding offenders who should face escalating consequences.
- ≥ 16 (16+): threshold in the current edited bill awaiting State Senate action.
About this list
This ranks vehicles by the number of NYC school‑zone speed‑camera violations they received in the last 12 months anywhere in the city. The smaller note shows how many times the same plate was caught in this area in the last 90 days.
Camera violations are issued by NYC DOT’s program. Counts reflect issued tickets and may omit dismissed or pending cases. Plate text is shown verbatim as recorded.
Close
BQE at Atlantic: a morning, a death
Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill-Gowanus-Red Hook: Jan 1, 2022 - Aug 31, 2025
Just after 9 AM on Aug 27, 2025, a motorcyclist collided with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway near the Atlantic Avenue exit. The driver kept going. The rider, a 30-year-old off-duty NYPD officer, died at the hospital, and police later charged a trucker with leaving the scene (ABC7, NY Daily News).
He was one of 6 people killed on the streets and highways of Carroll Gardens–Cobble Hill–Gowanus–Red Hook since Jan 1, 2022. Another 1,099 people were injured here in that time, across 2,565 crashes (NYC Open Data).
“We know how to fix it: safer street design,” State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said at a Brooklyn street-safety rally this summer (BKReader).
The highway and the avenue keep drawing blood
The BQE near Atlantic Avenue is this area’s worst hot spot, with 1 death and 248 injuries since 2022. Atlantic Avenue itself saw another 1 death and 41 injuries (NYC Open Data). The pattern is not subtle; it’s carved into the map.
Crashes here spike through the morning and midday. Deaths are logged at 9, 10, and 11 AM hours in the dataset, even as injuries climb across the day (NYC Open Data).
Trucks are big. People are breakable.
Since 2022, trucks have been involved in pedestrian harm in this area, including 2 pedestrian deaths captured in the records. Sedans and SUVs injure far more people, but heavy vehicles leave no margin when they miss (NYC Open Data).
Named, fixable factors appear again and again: failure to yield and inattention/distraction are present in injury and death crashes here. Unsafe speed shows up in deadly cases too, including an 18-year-old killed as a passenger at Atlantic and Court in 2023, where police cited speed (NYC Open Data – CrashID 4655140).
Make the turns human. Slow the straights.
On local streets, the fixes are simple and known: daylight corners, add leading pedestrian intervals, and harden turns at Atlantic, Court, Columbia, and Smith. On truck routes, tighten curb radii and add protection at crosswalks. Targeted enforcement for yielding and phone use belongs at the same corners. These match the conditions the city’s own data shows here.
The laws on the table, and who has moved
Citywide, Albany has already locked in 24/7 speed cameras through 2030, a program the governor signed this June. Sponsors and supporters say cameras cut speeds and injuries; the law is on the books to keep them running (Streetsblog NYC).
The next lever is stopping repeat speeders. The Stop Super Speeders Act (S4045/A2299) would require intelligent speed assistance for drivers with a record of violations. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes sponsors the Senate bill and voted it forward in committee. Assembly Members Jo Anne Simon and Marcela Mitaynes co-sponsor the Assembly version, and Simon also backed a bill to expand camera enforcement against obscured plates (S4045, A2299).
After the sirens fade
The officer died on the BQE. A truck driver was charged with leaving him there. The rest of us still walk Atlantic. We still cross Court. The numbers do not blink.
The laws exist. The designs exist. The names will, too, if nothing changes. Tell City Hall and Albany to use the tools they already have. Start here: /take_action/.
Frequently Asked Questions
▸ What changed on the BQE near Atlantic?
▸ How bad is traffic violence here since 2022?
▸ Where are the worst spots?
▸ Which factors show up again and again?
▸ How were these numbers calculated?
▸ Who can act now?
▸ What is CrashCount?
Citations
▸ Citations
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – Crashes - Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-31
- Off-duty NYPD officer killed on the way to work in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn, ABC7, Published 2025-08-28
- Truck driver arrested in Brooklyn crash that killed off-duty NYPD cop on motorcycle, NY Daily News, Published 2025-08-28
- Sunset Park Urges City to Fast-Track Third Avenue Street Fixes, BKReader, Published 2025-07-24
- Hochul Signs Speed Camera Reauthorization, Enforcement Continues Through 2030, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-06-30
- File S 4045, Open States / NY Senate, Published 2025-06-11
- File A 7997, Open States / NY Assembly, Published 2025-04-16
Other Representatives

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

District 39
456 5th Avenue, 3rd Floor, Brooklyn, NY 11215
718-499-1090
250 Broadway, Suite 1745, New York, NY 10007
212-788-6969

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
- Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill-Gowanus-Red Hook
- Brooklyn CB6
- Police Precinct 76
- Council District 39
- Assembly District 52
- Senate District 26
- Brooklyn
Traffic Safety Timeline for Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill-Gowanus-Red Hook
27
Breaking: Hit-and-Run Driver Kills Cyclist in Brooklyn▸
-
Breaking: Hit-and-Run Driver Kills Cyclist in Brooklyn,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-27
19
Atlantic Avenue SUV driver injures scooter rider▸Sep 19 - A driver in an SUV going east on Atlantic hit a man on a standing scooter at Clinton Street in Brooklyn. The rider hurt his shoulder. Police recorded no driver factor and listed Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion.
A driver in an SUV traveling east on Atlantic Avenue hit a 46-year-old man on a standing scooter at Clinton Street in Brooklyn. The rider suffered a shoulder and upper-arm bruise. The SUV driver, a 71-year-old man, was not reported injured. According to the police report, the SUV was going straight ahead and the standing scooter was making a left turn. According to the police report, the contributing factors list “Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion,” and police recorded no driver contributing factor. No other injuries were documented in the report.
19
Woman fatally struck by 18-wheeler truck in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn▸
-
Woman fatally struck by 18-wheeler truck in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn,
ABC7,
Published 2025-09-19
16
Improper Turn Triggers Atlantic Avenue Crash▸Sep 16 - At Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street, a right‑turning SUV driver collided with an eastbound SUV. A 37‑year‑old driver suffered a head injury. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.”
Two SUV drivers crashed at Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street in Brooklyn. One driver was making a right turn; the other was going straight east. A 37-year-old male driver reported a head injury and whiplash. Another person was listed with unspecified injuries. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.” Police also recorded pre-crash actions showing one driver making a right turn and the other proceeding straight, with center-front impact and damage on both vehicles. The crash occurred on an eastbound stretch of Atlantic Avenue.
14
Unsafe speed in 2 Ave SUV collision▸Sep 14 - Drivers of two SUVs crashed at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn. A 34-year-old driver died. Two passengers were hurt, one with head trauma. Police recorded unsafe speed. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic.
Drivers of two SUVs collided at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn around 6:25 p.m. A 34-year-old driver was killed. Two passengers in the northbound SUV were injured: a 38-year-old woman in the right rear seat with head crush injuries and a 64-year-old front passenger with a leg fracture. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic and was involved. "According to the police report, officers recorded Unsafe Speed." The report lists both SUVs going straight before the crash and the pickup stopped southbound. Points of impact include the SUVs’ front ends and one SUV’s left rear quarter panel.
12
Moped Driver Killed on 3 Ave▸Sep 12 - A moped rider died at 3 Ave and St Marks Pl in Brooklyn. Police recorded improper lane use. The crash involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck.
A crash on 3 Ave at St Marks Pl in Brooklyn involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck. The moped driver, 39, was heading north and going straight. He was ejected and killed. According to the police report, “Passing or Lane Usage Improper” was a contributing factor. Police recorded improper passing or lane use. The SUV was parked. The flatbed driver was going straight north. It happened around 1:05 p.m. The zip is 11217. The case falls in the 84th Precinct.
10
Sedan Driver Rear-Ends SUV on Gowanus Ramp▸Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
- Breaking: Hit-and-Run Driver Kills Cyclist in Brooklyn, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-09-27
19
Atlantic Avenue SUV driver injures scooter rider▸Sep 19 - A driver in an SUV going east on Atlantic hit a man on a standing scooter at Clinton Street in Brooklyn. The rider hurt his shoulder. Police recorded no driver factor and listed Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion.
A driver in an SUV traveling east on Atlantic Avenue hit a 46-year-old man on a standing scooter at Clinton Street in Brooklyn. The rider suffered a shoulder and upper-arm bruise. The SUV driver, a 71-year-old man, was not reported injured. According to the police report, the SUV was going straight ahead and the standing scooter was making a left turn. According to the police report, the contributing factors list “Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion,” and police recorded no driver contributing factor. No other injuries were documented in the report.
19
Woman fatally struck by 18-wheeler truck in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn▸
-
Woman fatally struck by 18-wheeler truck in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn,
ABC7,
Published 2025-09-19
16
Improper Turn Triggers Atlantic Avenue Crash▸Sep 16 - At Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street, a right‑turning SUV driver collided with an eastbound SUV. A 37‑year‑old driver suffered a head injury. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.”
Two SUV drivers crashed at Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street in Brooklyn. One driver was making a right turn; the other was going straight east. A 37-year-old male driver reported a head injury and whiplash. Another person was listed with unspecified injuries. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.” Police also recorded pre-crash actions showing one driver making a right turn and the other proceeding straight, with center-front impact and damage on both vehicles. The crash occurred on an eastbound stretch of Atlantic Avenue.
14
Unsafe speed in 2 Ave SUV collision▸Sep 14 - Drivers of two SUVs crashed at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn. A 34-year-old driver died. Two passengers were hurt, one with head trauma. Police recorded unsafe speed. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic.
Drivers of two SUVs collided at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn around 6:25 p.m. A 34-year-old driver was killed. Two passengers in the northbound SUV were injured: a 38-year-old woman in the right rear seat with head crush injuries and a 64-year-old front passenger with a leg fracture. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic and was involved. "According to the police report, officers recorded Unsafe Speed." The report lists both SUVs going straight before the crash and the pickup stopped southbound. Points of impact include the SUVs’ front ends and one SUV’s left rear quarter panel.
12
Moped Driver Killed on 3 Ave▸Sep 12 - A moped rider died at 3 Ave and St Marks Pl in Brooklyn. Police recorded improper lane use. The crash involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck.
A crash on 3 Ave at St Marks Pl in Brooklyn involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck. The moped driver, 39, was heading north and going straight. He was ejected and killed. According to the police report, “Passing or Lane Usage Improper” was a contributing factor. Police recorded improper passing or lane use. The SUV was parked. The flatbed driver was going straight north. It happened around 1:05 p.m. The zip is 11217. The case falls in the 84th Precinct.
10
Sedan Driver Rear-Ends SUV on Gowanus Ramp▸Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 19 - A driver in an SUV going east on Atlantic hit a man on a standing scooter at Clinton Street in Brooklyn. The rider hurt his shoulder. Police recorded no driver factor and listed Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion.
A driver in an SUV traveling east on Atlantic Avenue hit a 46-year-old man on a standing scooter at Clinton Street in Brooklyn. The rider suffered a shoulder and upper-arm bruise. The SUV driver, a 71-year-old man, was not reported injured. According to the police report, the SUV was going straight ahead and the standing scooter was making a left turn. According to the police report, the contributing factors list “Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion,” and police recorded no driver contributing factor. No other injuries were documented in the report.
19
Woman fatally struck by 18-wheeler truck in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn▸
-
Woman fatally struck by 18-wheeler truck in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn,
ABC7,
Published 2025-09-19
16
Improper Turn Triggers Atlantic Avenue Crash▸Sep 16 - At Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street, a right‑turning SUV driver collided with an eastbound SUV. A 37‑year‑old driver suffered a head injury. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.”
Two SUV drivers crashed at Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street in Brooklyn. One driver was making a right turn; the other was going straight east. A 37-year-old male driver reported a head injury and whiplash. Another person was listed with unspecified injuries. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.” Police also recorded pre-crash actions showing one driver making a right turn and the other proceeding straight, with center-front impact and damage on both vehicles. The crash occurred on an eastbound stretch of Atlantic Avenue.
14
Unsafe speed in 2 Ave SUV collision▸Sep 14 - Drivers of two SUVs crashed at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn. A 34-year-old driver died. Two passengers were hurt, one with head trauma. Police recorded unsafe speed. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic.
Drivers of two SUVs collided at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn around 6:25 p.m. A 34-year-old driver was killed. Two passengers in the northbound SUV were injured: a 38-year-old woman in the right rear seat with head crush injuries and a 64-year-old front passenger with a leg fracture. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic and was involved. "According to the police report, officers recorded Unsafe Speed." The report lists both SUVs going straight before the crash and the pickup stopped southbound. Points of impact include the SUVs’ front ends and one SUV’s left rear quarter panel.
12
Moped Driver Killed on 3 Ave▸Sep 12 - A moped rider died at 3 Ave and St Marks Pl in Brooklyn. Police recorded improper lane use. The crash involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck.
A crash on 3 Ave at St Marks Pl in Brooklyn involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck. The moped driver, 39, was heading north and going straight. He was ejected and killed. According to the police report, “Passing or Lane Usage Improper” was a contributing factor. Police recorded improper passing or lane use. The SUV was parked. The flatbed driver was going straight north. It happened around 1:05 p.m. The zip is 11217. The case falls in the 84th Precinct.
10
Sedan Driver Rear-Ends SUV on Gowanus Ramp▸Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
- Woman fatally struck by 18-wheeler truck in hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn, ABC7, Published 2025-09-19
16
Improper Turn Triggers Atlantic Avenue Crash▸Sep 16 - At Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street, a right‑turning SUV driver collided with an eastbound SUV. A 37‑year‑old driver suffered a head injury. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.”
Two SUV drivers crashed at Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street in Brooklyn. One driver was making a right turn; the other was going straight east. A 37-year-old male driver reported a head injury and whiplash. Another person was listed with unspecified injuries. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.” Police also recorded pre-crash actions showing one driver making a right turn and the other proceeding straight, with center-front impact and damage on both vehicles. The crash occurred on an eastbound stretch of Atlantic Avenue.
14
Unsafe speed in 2 Ave SUV collision▸Sep 14 - Drivers of two SUVs crashed at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn. A 34-year-old driver died. Two passengers were hurt, one with head trauma. Police recorded unsafe speed. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic.
Drivers of two SUVs collided at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn around 6:25 p.m. A 34-year-old driver was killed. Two passengers in the northbound SUV were injured: a 38-year-old woman in the right rear seat with head crush injuries and a 64-year-old front passenger with a leg fracture. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic and was involved. "According to the police report, officers recorded Unsafe Speed." The report lists both SUVs going straight before the crash and the pickup stopped southbound. Points of impact include the SUVs’ front ends and one SUV’s left rear quarter panel.
12
Moped Driver Killed on 3 Ave▸Sep 12 - A moped rider died at 3 Ave and St Marks Pl in Brooklyn. Police recorded improper lane use. The crash involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck.
A crash on 3 Ave at St Marks Pl in Brooklyn involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck. The moped driver, 39, was heading north and going straight. He was ejected and killed. According to the police report, “Passing or Lane Usage Improper” was a contributing factor. Police recorded improper passing or lane use. The SUV was parked. The flatbed driver was going straight north. It happened around 1:05 p.m. The zip is 11217. The case falls in the 84th Precinct.
10
Sedan Driver Rear-Ends SUV on Gowanus Ramp▸Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 16 - At Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street, a right‑turning SUV driver collided with an eastbound SUV. A 37‑year‑old driver suffered a head injury. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.”
Two SUV drivers crashed at Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street in Brooklyn. One driver was making a right turn; the other was going straight east. A 37-year-old male driver reported a head injury and whiplash. Another person was listed with unspecified injuries. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Turning Improperly.” Police also recorded pre-crash actions showing one driver making a right turn and the other proceeding straight, with center-front impact and damage on both vehicles. The crash occurred on an eastbound stretch of Atlantic Avenue.
14
Unsafe speed in 2 Ave SUV collision▸Sep 14 - Drivers of two SUVs crashed at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn. A 34-year-old driver died. Two passengers were hurt, one with head trauma. Police recorded unsafe speed. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic.
Drivers of two SUVs collided at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn around 6:25 p.m. A 34-year-old driver was killed. Two passengers in the northbound SUV were injured: a 38-year-old woman in the right rear seat with head crush injuries and a 64-year-old front passenger with a leg fracture. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic and was involved. "According to the police report, officers recorded Unsafe Speed." The report lists both SUVs going straight before the crash and the pickup stopped southbound. Points of impact include the SUVs’ front ends and one SUV’s left rear quarter panel.
12
Moped Driver Killed on 3 Ave▸Sep 12 - A moped rider died at 3 Ave and St Marks Pl in Brooklyn. Police recorded improper lane use. The crash involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck.
A crash on 3 Ave at St Marks Pl in Brooklyn involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck. The moped driver, 39, was heading north and going straight. He was ejected and killed. According to the police report, “Passing or Lane Usage Improper” was a contributing factor. Police recorded improper passing or lane use. The SUV was parked. The flatbed driver was going straight north. It happened around 1:05 p.m. The zip is 11217. The case falls in the 84th Precinct.
10
Sedan Driver Rear-Ends SUV on Gowanus Ramp▸Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 14 - Drivers of two SUVs crashed at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn. A 34-year-old driver died. Two passengers were hurt, one with head trauma. Police recorded unsafe speed. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic.
Drivers of two SUVs collided at 2 Ave and 9 St in Brooklyn around 6:25 p.m. A 34-year-old driver was killed. Two passengers in the northbound SUV were injured: a 38-year-old woman in the right rear seat with head crush injuries and a 64-year-old front passenger with a leg fracture. A pickup driver was stopped in traffic and was involved. "According to the police report, officers recorded Unsafe Speed." The report lists both SUVs going straight before the crash and the pickup stopped southbound. Points of impact include the SUVs’ front ends and one SUV’s left rear quarter panel.
12
Moped Driver Killed on 3 Ave▸Sep 12 - A moped rider died at 3 Ave and St Marks Pl in Brooklyn. Police recorded improper lane use. The crash involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck.
A crash on 3 Ave at St Marks Pl in Brooklyn involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck. The moped driver, 39, was heading north and going straight. He was ejected and killed. According to the police report, “Passing or Lane Usage Improper” was a contributing factor. Police recorded improper passing or lane use. The SUV was parked. The flatbed driver was going straight north. It happened around 1:05 p.m. The zip is 11217. The case falls in the 84th Precinct.
10
Sedan Driver Rear-Ends SUV on Gowanus Ramp▸Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 12 - A moped rider died at 3 Ave and St Marks Pl in Brooklyn. Police recorded improper lane use. The crash involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck.
A crash on 3 Ave at St Marks Pl in Brooklyn involved a moped, a parked SUV, and a flatbed truck. The moped driver, 39, was heading north and going straight. He was ejected and killed. According to the police report, “Passing or Lane Usage Improper” was a contributing factor. Police recorded improper passing or lane use. The SUV was parked. The flatbed driver was going straight north. It happened around 1:05 p.m. The zip is 11217. The case falls in the 84th Precinct.
10
Sedan Driver Rear-Ends SUV on Gowanus Ramp▸Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 10 - A westbound sedan driver hit the back of an SUV on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. One driver reported back pain. Two passengers, including a 0-year-old, were listed. Police recorded Following Too Closely.
Two westbound drivers crashed on the Gowanus Ramp at 6:35 a.m. on September 10, 2025. The driver of a sedan hit the back of an SUV. The sedan's front was damaged; the SUV's rear was damaged. A 35-year-old driver was injured with back pain and shock. Two additional occupants, ages 43 and 0, were listed as passengers with injuries recorded as unspecified. According to the police report, the contributing factor was "Following Too Closely". Police recorded Following Too Closely; no other factors were cited. Both drivers were licensed and going straight west.
10Int 1375-2025
Hanif co-sponsors bicycle parking expansion, boosting safety and cutting sidewalk clutter.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
-
File Int 1375-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 10 - Int. 1375 orders DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years, with at least 400 per year on commercial blocks. The measure aims to make cycling more secure, cut sidewalk bike clutter, and boost safety in underserved neighborhoods.
Bill Int. 1375 (Int 1375-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Key dates: LS #14435 filed 02/26/2025; event recorded 2025-09-10; effective date: immediately. Matter title: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to expanding the bicycle parking station program." The bill requires DOT to install 5,000 bicycle parking stations over five years (1,000 per year), with at least 400 annually on commercial blocks, post locations online, and file a one-time report within six years. Prime sponsors Gale A. Brewer, Tiffany Cabán (primary), Lincoln Restler and Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Safety note: expanding 5,000 stations—especially on commercial blocks and in underserved areas—will make cycling more convenient and secure, encourage mode shift and safety in numbers, and cut bike clutter and pedestrian conflicts.
- File Int 1375-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-09-10
10Int 1386-2025
Hanif is primary sponsor of prompt street furniture repair, modestly improving safety.▸Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
-
File Int 1386-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 10 - Int. 1386 demands repair or replacement of damaged street furniture within three months. It forces public tracking of notices. It covers bike racks, shelters and bollards but excludes traffic signals. It aims to modestly improve pedestrian and cyclist safety.
Bill Int 1386-2025 (status: SPONSORSHIP) was filed 9/4/2025 and appears on the council record 9/10/2025. It is before the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York in relation to requiring prompt repair of street furniture." Primary sponsor Shahana K. Hanif introduced the bill. Co-sponsors Julie Menin, Justin L. Brannan and Frank Morano joined. The bill requires the Department to log notices and repair or replace street furniture within three months, or record why not. Requiring timely repair and public tracking modestly improves safety and comfort for pedestrians and cyclists, though impact is limited by the three-month window and exclusion of traffic signals.
- File Int 1386-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-09-10
8
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say▸
-
Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say,
The Brooklyn Paper,
Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
- Brooklyn road rage attack: Man brutally stabbed over double-parked car, cops say, The Brooklyn Paper, Published 2025-09-08
5
Driver Turning Right Hits Cyclist on Hicks▸Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 5 - Driver of an SUV made a right turn at Hicks and Union and hit a cyclist going straight. The 28-year-old man suffered a leg abrasion. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver.
A driver in an SUV made a right turn at Hicks Street and Union Street and hit a cyclist who was traveling straight. The cyclist, a 28-year-old man, suffered a lower-leg abrasion and was conscious. According to the police report, the driver was traveling east in an SUV and making a right turn when the crash occurred. Police recorded failure to yield by the driver. The point of impact was the SUV’s right front bumper and the bike’s front end. Information on vehicle occupant injuries is listed as unspecified in the report.
5
Lander Publishes Bus Report Cards Calls For Accountability▸Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
-
Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 5 - Comptroller Brad Lander’s bus report cards land hard. Grades are low. The report names failing routes and service collapse. Poor bus service pushes riders toward cars and raises street danger. The transparency could force bus-priority fixes that help pedestrians and cyclists.
"Comptroller Brad Lander is out with his latest bus report cards, and the grades are as low as expected." -- Brad S. Lander
This is a report release, not legislation (no bill number, file number null). Status: released. Committee: N/A. Key date: report published September 5, 2025 and covered by Streetsblog NYC. Matter title: "Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition." Comptroller Brad Lander issued the bus report cards. Streetsblog reporter David Meyer filed the coverage. Brad S. Lander urged bus report card transparency. Safety note: "Publishing poor bus report cards doesn’t change conditions directly, though weak bus service undermines mode shift and can increase car traffic risk. The transparency could, however, spur bus-priority improvements that would benefit pedestrians and cyclists."
- Friday’s Headlines: D Bus is F’d Edition, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-09-05
4
Lander Issues Failing Bus Report Card Cites Neutral Safety Effects▸Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
-
F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines,
AMNY,
Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 4 - Brad Lander’s report flunks the city’s bus network. More than half of 332 routes earned a D or worse. Slow, unreliable service strands riders. Without fixes, poor transit can push people into cars and worsen street danger.
"City Comptroller Brad Lander is already doling out failing grades for lackluster bus service in NYC." -- Brad S. Lander
No bill number. This is a Comptroller report published Sept 4, 2025 and not before a Council committee. The matter borrows the AMNY headline: "F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines." Comptroller Brad S. Lander issued and backed the scathing grades. No council sponsors or votes are recorded. A report card critiquing bus performance has no immediate safety effect on pedestrians and cyclists. If it spurs bus‑priority upgrades that speed buses and reduce car dependence, safety could improve; without follow‑through, poor service may push riders to driving and worsen street danger.
- F for frigging slow! Lander’s bus report card claims dismal service on more than half of bus lines, AMNY, Published 2025-09-04
2
Drivers ignore traffic control at Henry, Sackett▸Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Sep 2 - Two SUV drivers going straight collided at Henry and Sackett in Brooklyn. A 71-year-old driver was hurt with chest pain and shock. Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both.
Two SUV drivers collided while going straight at Henry St and Sackett St in Brooklyn. One driver, 71, was injured with chest pain and shock; injury severity 3. Another occupant was listed with an unspecified injury. "According to the police report, the crash occurred at 7:09 a.m. and involved a southbound 2007 Honda SUV and a westbound SUV." Police recorded Traffic Control Disregarded by both drivers. The Honda showed center front-end damage. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed as injured.
31
Motorcyclist Injured in Bond Street Van Crash▸Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Aug 31 - A motorcyclist and a van driver collided on Bond at Union. Both drivers moved north. The rider was partially ejected and hurt in the arm. Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving.
A driver on a motorcycle and a van driver collided at Bond Street and Union Street in Brooklyn around 2 p.m. The motorcyclist, 35, was injured, partially ejected, and suffered arm trauma. The van driver reported no injury. Both drivers were heading north and going straight. The motorcycle showed front-end damage; the van had rear damage. According to the police report, contributing factors included 'Following Too Closely' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage.' Police recorded Following Too Closely and Aggressive Driving by the drivers involved.
27
Motorcyclist Killed Under Box Truck Ramp▸Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Aug 27 - A motorcyclist was crushed beneath a box truck on a Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and killed. Two people in the truck were not reported injured.
A motorcyclist died after colliding with a box truck on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway ramp. The 30-year-old rider was ejected and suffered crush injuries to the entire body and was killed. Two people occupied the truck; they were not reported injured. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling west; the motorcycle was 'Demolished' and the truck showed 'Undercarriage' damage. The crash data list contributing factors as unspecified and do not identify driver errors. The police record lists pre-crash actions as 'Going Straight Ahead' for both vehicles.
26
SUV strikes girl on Hoyt Street▸Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
26
Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
-
Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Aug 26 - A southbound SUV hit a 10-year-old girl on Hoyt Street at Butler. Center-front impact. She went down with a leg bruise. The driver kept straight with a blocked view. Brooklyn heard the thud and held its breath.
A southbound 2019 Lincoln SUV struck a 10-year-old pedestrian on Hoyt Street near Butler Street in Brooklyn. She suffered a knee and lower-leg contusion. According to the police report, the crash listed “View Obstructed/Limited” as the contributing factor. Driver actions included going straight ahead with a center-front impact. The report flags driver error as View Obstructed/Limited for both the driver and the crash. The child was crossing with no signal or crosswalk noted, which appears after the driver’s listed factors in the data.
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Avilés Calls Adams Veto Misguided Backs Safety‑boosting Vending Reform▸Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
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Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer,
amny.com,
Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Aug 26 - Mayor Adams vetoed a council push to decriminalize street vending. Vendors clustered on the narrow Brooklyn Bridge walkway. Crowding squeezes pedestrians, collides with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement, raising crash and injury risk.
""There are immense barriers to entry for the often working-class and immigrant New Yorkers that populate our city as street vendors,"" -- Alexa Avilés
Bill: City Council package to decriminalize street vending (file number not provided). Status: vetoed by Mayor Eric Adams (veto reported last month). Committee: Committee on Immigration, chaired by Council Member Alexa Aviles. Key dates: vendors observed Aug. 25, 2025; story published Aug. 26, 2025. The article ran under the headline, "Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer." Adams issued the veto. Aviles and supporters pushed the decriminalization package and criticized enforcement barriers. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez warned vendors impede pedestrian mobility. Safety analysts note: illegal vending clusters on the narrow walkway, reduces pedestrian space, creates conflicts with cyclists and strollers, and can impede emergency movement—raising crash and injury risk.
- Defying a NYC ban, illegal vending thrives on iconic Brooklyn Bridge this summer, amny.com, Published 2025-08-26
22
SUV and Sedan Collide; Front Passenger Hurt▸Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Aug 22 - The driver of an SUV northbound and the driver of a sedan eastbound collided at 3rd Ave and 14th St. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger suffered knee and lower-leg trauma and shock. Police recorded non-working and disregarded traffic controls.
The driver of an SUV was traveling north and the driver of a sedan was traveling east when they collided at 3rd Avenue and 14th Street. A 47-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, suffering knee/lower-leg/foot trauma and shock. According to the police report, the contributing factors were "Traffic Control Device Improper/Non-Working" and "Traffic Control Disregarded." Police recorded both drivers proceeding straight. The SUV sustained left-front bumper damage; the sedan sustained right-front quarter-panel damage. The report lists traffic-control failures as the recorded factors linked to the crash.
21
Unlicensed SUV driver turns left, strikes pedestrian▸Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.
Aug 21 - The driver of an unlicensed SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and hit a 30-year-old man outside an intersection. He suffered a concussion and lower-leg injuries. Police list the driver as unlicensed.
The driver of a 2017 SUV made a left turn on Garnet Street at Smith Street and struck a 30-year-old man who was a pedestrian outside an intersection. The man was conscious and treated for a concussion and knee/lower-leg injuries. According to the police report, "the driver was unlicensed, the point of impact was the left front bumper, and contributing factors were listed as 'Unspecified.' Driver actions included Making Left Turn." The report documents the driver's unlicensed status, the left-front point of impact, and the left-turn maneuver as driver actions in the collision.