Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Auburndale?

Six Dead, No Change: Auburndale’s Streets Are Killing Us
Auburndale: Jan 1, 2022 - Aug 5, 2025
The Toll in Plain Sight
Auburndale bleeds, slow and steady. Since 2022, six people have died on its streets. Five were women. One was a cyclist, struck by an SUV just last week at Hollis Court Boulevard and 50th Avenue. She was 55. The driver stayed. The street stayed the same. Police are still investigating the crash.
In the last twelve months, 197 people were hurt in 351 crashes. One did not come home. Most were walking, biking, or just trying to cross. The numbers do not flinch. They do not heal.
Who Pays the Price
The old and the young fall hardest. In three years, 45 children and 64 seniors have been injured. Cars and SUVs did most of the damage. The dead do not get a second chance. The living get scars.
A 75-year-old woman was killed crossing 192nd Street. The record says “driver inattention.” The street says nothing. The record says nothing about her name.
Leadership: Words and Votes
Local leaders have moved, but not enough. State Senator John Liu voted yes to curb repeat speeders, backing a bill to force speed-limiting tech on drivers who rack up violations. He voted yes in committee. Council Member Vickie Paladino cheered new car-free school streets, calling it a win for children. She called it a win for safe pick-up, drop-off, and play.
But the streets are still fast. The deaths are still coming. The city can lower the speed limit to 20 mph. It has not. The law is there. The will is not.
Act or Wait for the Next Siren
This is not fate. It is policy. Call your council member. Call the mayor. Tell them to lower the speed limit, redesign the streets, and stop the next crash before it happens. The dead cannot speak. The living must.
Frequently Asked Questions
▸ Where does Auburndale sit politically?
▸ What types of vehicles caused injuries and deaths to pedestrians in Auburndale?
▸ Are these crashes just 'accidents'?
▸ What can local politicians do to stop traffic violence?
▸ How many people have died or been seriously hurt in Auburndale since 2022?
▸ What is CrashCount?
▸ Who is most at risk on Auburndale’s streets?
Citations
▸ Citations
- Man Killed By Car In Queens Dispute, ABC7, Published 2025-08-01
- Two Killed In Separate E-Vehicle Crashes, NY Daily News, Published 2025-08-03
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4512714 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-05
- File S 4045, Open States, Published 2025-06-11
- More Safe School Streets Coming To NYC This Fall, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2024-08-29
Other Representatives

District 26
213-33 39th Ave., Suite 238, Bayside, NY 11361
Room 422, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248

District 19
250 Broadway, Suite 1551, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7250

District 16
38-50 Bell Blvd. Suite C, Bayside, NY 11361
Room 915, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Help Fix the Problem.
This address sits in
Traffic Safety Timeline for Auburndale
Int 1362-2025Paladino Backs Misguided Removal Of Bus And Bike Benchmarks▸Paladino moves to cut the Streets Master Plan. The bill deletes bus- and bike-lane quotas and their definitions. Accountability drops. Riders and walkers lose clear targets. The car status quo holds.
Int 1362-2025 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, and referral the same day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino. The bill amends Admin Code §19-199.1 to repeal the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane,” and to strip lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan. The matter summary says, “This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan.” It also deletes protected lane reporting from neighborhood investment lists, while keeping other benchmarks for APS, bus stop upgrades, TSP, intersection redesigns, ramps, and pedestrian space. Status: in committee; no vote yet.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino Backs Misguided Removal of Bus Bike Benchmarks▸Paladino’s bill guts the Streets Master Plan. It repeals definitions for protected bike and bus lanes and deletes their quotas. Riders and walkers lose firm targets. The city trades clear commitments for vague promises.
Int 1362-2025 sits in committee. The Council introduced it on August 14, 2025 and referred it to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure that day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino (District 19). The bill repeals the definitions of protected bicycle lane and protected bus lane in Admin Code §19-199.1. It also strikes the Streets Master Plan benchmarks that required installing protected bike and bus lanes. As the matter summary states, "This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan." Other benchmarks remain: transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, intersection redesigns, accessible pedestrian signals, pedestrian space, and ramps. The change erases clear lane targets for cyclists and bus riders.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino Backs Misguided Removal of Bus Bike Benchmarks▸Paladino’s bill guts the Streets Master Plan. It repeals definitions for protected bike and bus lanes and deletes their quotas. Riders and walkers lose firm targets. The city trades clear commitments for vague promises.
Int 1362-2025 sits in committee. The Council introduced it on August 14, 2025 and referred it to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure that day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino (District 19). The bill repeals the definitions of protected bicycle lane and protected bus lane in Admin Code §19-199.1. It also strikes the Streets Master Plan benchmarks that required installing protected bike and bus lanes. As the matter summary states, "This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan." Other benchmarks remain: transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, intersection redesigns, accessible pedestrian signals, pedestrian space, and ramps. The change erases clear lane targets for cyclists and bus riders.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino co-sponsors bill removing bike and bus benchmarks, increasing crash risk.▸Paladino moves to cut the Streets Master Plan. The bill deletes bus- and bike-lane quotas and their definitions. Accountability drops. Riders and walkers lose clear targets. The car status quo holds.
Int 1362-2025 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, and referral the same day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino. The bill amends Admin Code §19-199.1 to repeal the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane,” and to strip lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan. The matter summary says, “This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan.” It also deletes protected lane reporting from neighborhood investment lists, while keeping other benchmarks for APS, bus stop upgrades, TSP, intersection redesigns, ramps, and pedestrian space. Status: in committee; no vote yet.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK▸A driver struck a man crossing 155th Street near JFK. The driver fled. The man died at Jamaica Hospital. Police search for answers. Seventeen killed in Queens South this year. The toll climbs.
Gothamist (2025-08-13) reports a 52-year-old man was killed crossing 155th Street and South Conduit Avenue near JFK Airport at 2:30 a.m. The driver fled. Police said, "the driver hit the 52-year-old man as he crossed" and left the scene. No vehicle description was released. NYPD data shows 17 traffic deaths in Queens South this year, up from 13 last year. The incident highlights ongoing risks for pedestrians and the persistent issue of hit-and-run drivers in the area.
-
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-08-13
▸
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane▸Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
-
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane,
NY1,
Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Paladino moves to cut the Streets Master Plan. The bill deletes bus- and bike-lane quotas and their definitions. Accountability drops. Riders and walkers lose clear targets. The car status quo holds.
Int 1362-2025 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, and referral the same day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino. The bill amends Admin Code §19-199.1 to repeal the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane,” and to strip lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan. The matter summary says, “This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan.” It also deletes protected lane reporting from neighborhood investment lists, while keeping other benchmarks for APS, bus stop upgrades, TSP, intersection redesigns, ramps, and pedestrian space. Status: in committee; no vote yet.
- File Int 1362-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino Backs Misguided Removal of Bus Bike Benchmarks▸Paladino’s bill guts the Streets Master Plan. It repeals definitions for protected bike and bus lanes and deletes their quotas. Riders and walkers lose firm targets. The city trades clear commitments for vague promises.
Int 1362-2025 sits in committee. The Council introduced it on August 14, 2025 and referred it to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure that day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino (District 19). The bill repeals the definitions of protected bicycle lane and protected bus lane in Admin Code §19-199.1. It also strikes the Streets Master Plan benchmarks that required installing protected bike and bus lanes. As the matter summary states, "This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan." Other benchmarks remain: transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, intersection redesigns, accessible pedestrian signals, pedestrian space, and ramps. The change erases clear lane targets for cyclists and bus riders.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino Backs Misguided Removal of Bus Bike Benchmarks▸Paladino’s bill guts the Streets Master Plan. It repeals definitions for protected bike and bus lanes and deletes their quotas. Riders and walkers lose firm targets. The city trades clear commitments for vague promises.
Int 1362-2025 sits in committee. The Council introduced it on August 14, 2025 and referred it to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure that day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino (District 19). The bill repeals the definitions of protected bicycle lane and protected bus lane in Admin Code §19-199.1. It also strikes the Streets Master Plan benchmarks that required installing protected bike and bus lanes. As the matter summary states, "This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan." Other benchmarks remain: transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, intersection redesigns, accessible pedestrian signals, pedestrian space, and ramps. The change erases clear lane targets for cyclists and bus riders.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino co-sponsors bill removing bike and bus benchmarks, increasing crash risk.▸Paladino moves to cut the Streets Master Plan. The bill deletes bus- and bike-lane quotas and their definitions. Accountability drops. Riders and walkers lose clear targets. The car status quo holds.
Int 1362-2025 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, and referral the same day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino. The bill amends Admin Code §19-199.1 to repeal the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane,” and to strip lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan. The matter summary says, “This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan.” It also deletes protected lane reporting from neighborhood investment lists, while keeping other benchmarks for APS, bus stop upgrades, TSP, intersection redesigns, ramps, and pedestrian space. Status: in committee; no vote yet.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK▸A driver struck a man crossing 155th Street near JFK. The driver fled. The man died at Jamaica Hospital. Police search for answers. Seventeen killed in Queens South this year. The toll climbs.
Gothamist (2025-08-13) reports a 52-year-old man was killed crossing 155th Street and South Conduit Avenue near JFK Airport at 2:30 a.m. The driver fled. Police said, "the driver hit the 52-year-old man as he crossed" and left the scene. No vehicle description was released. NYPD data shows 17 traffic deaths in Queens South this year, up from 13 last year. The incident highlights ongoing risks for pedestrians and the persistent issue of hit-and-run drivers in the area.
-
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-08-13
▸
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane▸Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
-
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane,
NY1,
Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Paladino’s bill guts the Streets Master Plan. It repeals definitions for protected bike and bus lanes and deletes their quotas. Riders and walkers lose firm targets. The city trades clear commitments for vague promises.
Int 1362-2025 sits in committee. The Council introduced it on August 14, 2025 and referred it to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure that day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino (District 19). The bill repeals the definitions of protected bicycle lane and protected bus lane in Admin Code §19-199.1. It also strikes the Streets Master Plan benchmarks that required installing protected bike and bus lanes. As the matter summary states, "This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan." Other benchmarks remain: transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, intersection redesigns, accessible pedestrian signals, pedestrian space, and ramps. The change erases clear lane targets for cyclists and bus riders.
- File Int 1362-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino Backs Misguided Removal of Bus Bike Benchmarks▸Paladino’s bill guts the Streets Master Plan. It repeals definitions for protected bike and bus lanes and deletes their quotas. Riders and walkers lose firm targets. The city trades clear commitments for vague promises.
Int 1362-2025 sits in committee. The Council introduced it on August 14, 2025 and referred it to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure that day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino (District 19). The bill repeals the definitions of protected bicycle lane and protected bus lane in Admin Code §19-199.1. It also strikes the Streets Master Plan benchmarks that required installing protected bike and bus lanes. As the matter summary states, "This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan." Other benchmarks remain: transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, intersection redesigns, accessible pedestrian signals, pedestrian space, and ramps. The change erases clear lane targets for cyclists and bus riders.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino co-sponsors bill removing bike and bus benchmarks, increasing crash risk.▸Paladino moves to cut the Streets Master Plan. The bill deletes bus- and bike-lane quotas and their definitions. Accountability drops. Riders and walkers lose clear targets. The car status quo holds.
Int 1362-2025 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, and referral the same day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino. The bill amends Admin Code §19-199.1 to repeal the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane,” and to strip lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan. The matter summary says, “This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan.” It also deletes protected lane reporting from neighborhood investment lists, while keeping other benchmarks for APS, bus stop upgrades, TSP, intersection redesigns, ramps, and pedestrian space. Status: in committee; no vote yet.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK▸A driver struck a man crossing 155th Street near JFK. The driver fled. The man died at Jamaica Hospital. Police search for answers. Seventeen killed in Queens South this year. The toll climbs.
Gothamist (2025-08-13) reports a 52-year-old man was killed crossing 155th Street and South Conduit Avenue near JFK Airport at 2:30 a.m. The driver fled. Police said, "the driver hit the 52-year-old man as he crossed" and left the scene. No vehicle description was released. NYPD data shows 17 traffic deaths in Queens South this year, up from 13 last year. The incident highlights ongoing risks for pedestrians and the persistent issue of hit-and-run drivers in the area.
-
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-08-13
▸
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane▸Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
-
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane,
NY1,
Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Paladino’s bill guts the Streets Master Plan. It repeals definitions for protected bike and bus lanes and deletes their quotas. Riders and walkers lose firm targets. The city trades clear commitments for vague promises.
Int 1362-2025 sits in committee. The Council introduced it on August 14, 2025 and referred it to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure that day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino (District 19). The bill repeals the definitions of protected bicycle lane and protected bus lane in Admin Code §19-199.1. It also strikes the Streets Master Plan benchmarks that required installing protected bike and bus lanes. As the matter summary states, "This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan." Other benchmarks remain: transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, intersection redesigns, accessible pedestrian signals, pedestrian space, and ramps. The change erases clear lane targets for cyclists and bus riders.
- File Int 1362-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Int 1362-2025Paladino co-sponsors bill removing bike and bus benchmarks, increasing crash risk.▸Paladino moves to cut the Streets Master Plan. The bill deletes bus- and bike-lane quotas and their definitions. Accountability drops. Riders and walkers lose clear targets. The car status quo holds.
Int 1362-2025 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, and referral the same day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino. The bill amends Admin Code §19-199.1 to repeal the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane,” and to strip lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan. The matter summary says, “This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan.” It also deletes protected lane reporting from neighborhood investment lists, while keeping other benchmarks for APS, bus stop upgrades, TSP, intersection redesigns, ramps, and pedestrian space. Status: in committee; no vote yet.
-
File Int 1362-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-08-14
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK▸A driver struck a man crossing 155th Street near JFK. The driver fled. The man died at Jamaica Hospital. Police search for answers. Seventeen killed in Queens South this year. The toll climbs.
Gothamist (2025-08-13) reports a 52-year-old man was killed crossing 155th Street and South Conduit Avenue near JFK Airport at 2:30 a.m. The driver fled. Police said, "the driver hit the 52-year-old man as he crossed" and left the scene. No vehicle description was released. NYPD data shows 17 traffic deaths in Queens South this year, up from 13 last year. The incident highlights ongoing risks for pedestrians and the persistent issue of hit-and-run drivers in the area.
-
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-08-13
▸
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane▸Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
-
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane,
NY1,
Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Paladino moves to cut the Streets Master Plan. The bill deletes bus- and bike-lane quotas and their definitions. Accountability drops. Riders and walkers lose clear targets. The car status quo holds.
Int 1362-2025 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on August 14, 2025, and referral the same day. Sponsored by Council Member Vickie Paladino. The bill amends Admin Code §19-199.1 to repeal the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane,” and to strip lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan. The matter summary says, “This bill would remove the bus lane and bike lane quotas from the Streets Master Plan.” It also deletes protected lane reporting from neighborhood investment lists, while keeping other benchmarks for APS, bus stop upgrades, TSP, intersection redesigns, ramps, and pedestrian space. Status: in committee; no vote yet.
- File Int 1362-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK▸A driver struck a man crossing 155th Street near JFK. The driver fled. The man died at Jamaica Hospital. Police search for answers. Seventeen killed in Queens South this year. The toll climbs.
Gothamist (2025-08-13) reports a 52-year-old man was killed crossing 155th Street and South Conduit Avenue near JFK Airport at 2:30 a.m. The driver fled. Police said, "the driver hit the 52-year-old man as he crossed" and left the scene. No vehicle description was released. NYPD data shows 17 traffic deaths in Queens South this year, up from 13 last year. The incident highlights ongoing risks for pedestrians and the persistent issue of hit-and-run drivers in the area.
-
Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-08-13
▸
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane▸Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
-
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane,
NY1,
Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
A driver struck a man crossing 155th Street near JFK. The driver fled. The man died at Jamaica Hospital. Police search for answers. Seventeen killed in Queens South this year. The toll climbs.
Gothamist (2025-08-13) reports a 52-year-old man was killed crossing 155th Street and South Conduit Avenue near JFK Airport at 2:30 a.m. The driver fled. Police said, "the driver hit the 52-year-old man as he crossed" and left the scene. No vehicle description was released. NYPD data shows 17 traffic deaths in Queens South this year, up from 13 last year. The incident highlights ongoing risks for pedestrians and the persistent issue of hit-and-run drivers in the area.
- Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK, Gothamist, Published 2025-08-13
▸
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane▸Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
-
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane,
NY1,
Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane▸Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
-
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane,
NY1,
Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Astoria shopkeepers fight a protected bike lane on 31st Street. They claim city plans threaten their business and public safety. The lawsuit lands in Queens Supreme Court. The city faces pushback, progress stalls.
NY1 reported on August 11, 2025, that over a dozen Astoria business owners filed suit to block a protected bike lane on 31st Street. The petition, lodged in Queens Supreme Court, claims the redesign from 36th Avenue to Newton Avenue would 'hurt their day-to-day operations and jeopardize public safety.' Owners accuse the city of acting in an 'arbitrary and capricious' way, moving forward despite objections. The case highlights ongoing tension between street safety projects and local business concerns. The outcome could shape future protected bike lane installations citywide.
- Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane, NY1, Published 2025-08-11
Liu Criticizes Federal Funding Cut Undermining Flood Protection▸Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
-
Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace,
AMNY,
Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Floods drowned Bay Terrace. Streets vanished. Leaders demand signs and real fixes. Pedestrians and cyclists still face danger. Signs warn, but water keeps coming.
"Just as Queens was about to get hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal infrastructure plan to address some of the severe flooding issues right here in Queens, the Trump administration yanked it, revoked that funding, and this is what we’re going to have to be faced with even more." -- John Liu
On August 8, 2025, Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Council Member Vickie Paladino, joined by State Sen. John Liu and others, called for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation in Bay Terrace. They urged the Department of Transportation to act after flash floods submerged the Cross Island Parkway. The matter, described as a 'call for flood-related street signage and storm mitigation efforts,' saw Richards call signage a 'small step' and Paladino stress the need for warnings. The safety analyst notes these efforts may help general conditions but do not address the core safety needs of pedestrians and cyclists or shift burdens away from vulnerable users.
- Queens leaders call for flood signage and infrastructure in Bay Terrace, AMNY, Published 2025-08-08
Braunstein Opposes Creedmoor Density Cuts Hurting Safety▸Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
-
NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Queens leaders kill Creedmoor’s car-free dream. The city bows to drivers. Walkers and cyclists lose. Streets stay hostile. Safety gains vanish. The promise of a people-first neighborhood dies.
On August 7, 2025, Eastern Queens Greenway condemned the city’s decision to scale back the Creedmoor redevelopment. The plan, once a bold vision for a car-free, walkable neighborhood, was gutted after pressure from local politicians like Assembly Member Ed Braunstein and Council Member Joann Ariola. The original proposal called for 2,775 homes and limited parking. Now, density drops by 27 percent. Empire State Development claims compromise, but the statement is aspirational and lacks concrete safety measures for pedestrians or cyclists. Vulnerable road users remain exposed. The city missed its chance.
- NYC Could Have Its First Car-Free Neighborhood (But Won’t Get It Due To Revanchist Pols), Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-08-07
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street▸A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
-
Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street,
New York Post,
Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
A car struck and killed a 23-year-old man on 101st Street. The driver sped off after an encounter at the window. Police found the victim with severe trauma. He died at Jamaica Hospital.
According to the New York Post (2025-08-01), a 23-year-old man died after being run over on 101st Street and Liberty Boulevard in Queens. The article reports, "Sonalall approached the driver's side window and flashed what appeared to be a gun, startling the motorist, who then drove off, striking Sonalall." The Queens District Attorney's Office did not charge the driver, citing fear for his life. The incident highlights the lethal risk when vehicles are used in moments of conflict. No charges were filed, raising questions about how self-defense is interpreted in car-related deaths.
- Man Killed By Driver In Queens Street, New York Post, Published 2025-08-01
SUV Left Turn Kills E-Bike Rider on Hollis Court Blvd▸SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
SUV turned left on Hollis Court Blvd. E-bike rider struck, killed. Impact crushed chest. No helmet. Streets silent. Another life lost to steel and speed.
A 55-year-old woman riding an e-bike was killed when an SUV making a left turn struck her on Hollis Court Blvd at 50 Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV hit the e-bike with its right front quarter panel as both vehicles traveled south. The e-bike rider was ejected and suffered fatal chest injuries. The police report lists all contributing factors as 'Unspecified.' The e-bike rider was not wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but no driver errors were cited. The crash left the cyclist dead at the scene.
Sedans Collide on 46th Avenue, Elderly Driver Injured▸Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Two sedans crashed in Queens. An 83-year-old woman suffered a bruised leg. Police cite driver inattention. Metal struck metal. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two sedans collided at 46th Avenue and 192nd Street in Queens. An 83-year-old woman, driving one of the cars, was injured with a contusion to her lower leg. According to the police report, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' was a contributing factor in the crash. No other injuries were specified for the other occupants. The impact damaged the front ends of both vehicles. The report does not list any helmet or signal issues. The crash highlights the ongoing risk faced by vehicle occupants when drivers lose focus.
John Liu Endorses Safety Boosting 14th Street Redesign Plan▸City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
-
Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street,
New York Magazine - Curbed,
Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
City and business leaders back a $3 million study to overhaul 14th Street. The plan aims to carve out space for walkers, bikers, and buses. Cars lose ground. Streets grow safer. The city bets on change.
On July 29, 2025, Christopher Bonanos reported a sweeping proposal to remake 14th Street. No council bill number or committee is listed. The Adams administration, local BIDs, and the NYC Economic Development Corporation pledged $3 million for a 24-month study. The plan, described as 'transformative' and 'generational,' aims to create a 'complete street' for pedestrians, cyclists, delivery workers, and transit. Mayor Eric Adams and city officials support the move. According to safety analysts, such overhauls, especially when led by city and business groups, often yield safer, more equitable streets for vulnerable users.
- Everyone Wants to Fix 14th Street, New York Magazine - Curbed, Published 2025-07-29
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train▸A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
-
Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train,
amny,
Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
A 15-year-old boy fell from a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. He landed on the tracks. Medics rushed him to Bellevue. He died. The city mourns another young life lost to the subway’s hard edge.
According to amny (July 8, 2025), Carlos Oliver, 15, died after falling from atop a 7 train at Queensboro Plaza. Police found him on the tracks around 2:45 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital. The article quotes NYC Transit President Demetrius Crichlow: “This was as avoidable as it is tragic.” The MTA has updated its “Ride Inside, Stay Alive” campaign, broadcasting warnings every 10 to 15 minutes along the 7 line. The incident highlights ongoing risks in the subway system and the need for effective deterrence and safety measures.
- Teen Dies Falling From 7 Train, amny, Published 2025-07-08
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash▸City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
-
City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash,
New York Post,
Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
City aims to carve bike lanes into 31st Street. Merchants fear lost access. Residents cite danger. DOT points to dozens hurt, two killed. The street stays deadly. The fight over space continues.
According to the New York Post (2025-07-05), the NYC Department of Transportation plans to narrow lanes and add bike paths on 31st Street in Astoria, Queens. The DOT cites 126 injured vehicle occupants, 33 injured pedestrians, 24 injured cyclists, and two deaths from 2020 to 2024, calling it 'one of the most dangerous streets in Queens.' Business owners warn the changes will block deliveries and threaten livelihoods. Residents worry about access and safety, especially for the elderly and students. The plan highlights the tension between street redesigns and the needs of vulnerable road users.
- City Bike Lane Plan Sparks Queens Clash, New York Post, Published 2025-07-05
Int 0857-2024Paladino votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
- File Int 0857-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-06-30
Int 0857-2024Ung votes yes to remove abandoned vehicles, boosting street safety.▸Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
-
File Int 0857-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Council orders swift removal of abandoned, derelict cars. Streets clear in 72 hours. No plates, no stickers, no excuses. Police and sanitation must act. Safer crossings for all who walk, ride, or wait.
Bill Int 0857-2024, now at the Mayor's desk, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council on June 30, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to vehicles reported as abandoned to the department of sanitation," requires the Department of Sanitation to remove derelict vehicles within 72 hours of report. The NYPD must tow cars lacking valid plates or stickers. Prime sponsor Selvena N. Brooks-Powers led, joined by Crystal Hudson, Amanda Farías, Lincoln Restler, and others. The law targets street hazards, clearing blocked sightlines and crosswalks. It aims to cut risks for pedestrians and cyclists by removing abandoned vehicles fast.
- File Int 0857-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-06-30
SUV and Sedan Collide on Francis Lewis Blvd▸Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Two cars crashed on Francis Lewis Blvd. Three men hurt. Drivers failed to obey traffic control. Metal twisted. Pain followed. Streets stayed dangerous.
Two vehicles, an SUV and a sedan, collided at Francis Lewis Blvd and 45 Dr in Queens. Three men were injured: a 55-year-old driver with a fractured arm, a 70-year-old front passenger with chest pain, and an 83-year-old driver with chest pain. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Traffic Control Disregarded.' Both vehicles suffered front-end damage. The data lists no other contributing factors before driver error. The report does not mention pedestrians or cyclists.
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run▸A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
-
Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
A cyclist died on Astoria Boulevard. A fleeing driver struck her. She flew from her bike, hit a parked car, and never got up. Police stopped the chase. The driver kept going. The street stayed deadly.
According to the New York Post (published June 24, 2025), Bekim Fiseku, 53, was charged after fatally striking cyclist Amanda Servedio, 36, while fleeing a burglary in Queens. Surveillance video showed Servedio "went flying off her bicycle and slammed into a parked BMW while Fiseku sped off." Police ended their pursuit to help Servedio, who died at Elmhurst Hospital. Fiseku was on supervised release for a prior federal conviction at the time. The article highlights that Fiseku had three passengers and was fleeing police, raising questions about police pursuit protocols and the risks to vulnerable road users. The crash underscores ongoing dangers for cyclists on city streets.
- Cyclist Killed In Queens Hit-And-Run, New York Post, Published 2025-06-24
Distracted Drivers Collide on 204th Street▸Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.
Two sedans crashed at 204th Street and 35th Avenue. One driver suffered chest injuries. A one-year-old and several others were shaken. Police cite driver inattention. Metal bent. Lives jarred. The street bore the brunt of distraction.
Two sedans collided at the intersection of 204th Street and 35th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, both vehicles were traveling straight when they crashed. One driver, a 65-year-old man, sustained chest injuries and was in shock. A one-year-old passenger and several other occupants were also involved, with injuries listed as unspecified. The police report states, 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both drivers. No other factors were cited. The crash underscores the danger when drivers lose focus, leaving passengers and drivers at risk.