Crash Count for Glendale
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 1,112
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 581
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 116
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 5
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 28, 2025
Carnage in Glendale
Detailed breakdowns aren’t yet available for this year slice; totals below reflect the selected window.
Killed 1
Crush Injuries 1
Whole body 1
Amputation 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Severe Bleeding 2
Head 1
Whole body 1
Severe Lacerations 1
Head 1
Concussion 3
Head 2
Lower leg/foot 1
Whiplash 10
Neck 4
Back 2
Head 2
Whole body 2
Contusion/Bruise 28
Lower leg/foot 10
+5
Shoulder/upper arm 5
Head 4
Back 3
Lower arm/hand 3
Face 1
Hip/upper leg 1
Neck 1
Abrasion 16
Lower leg/foot 7
+2
Lower arm/hand 3
Face 2
Head 2
Shoulder/upper arm 2
Pain/Nausea 11
Back 4
Neck 4
Lower leg/foot 3
Head 2
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Chest 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 28, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Glendale?

Preventable Speeding in Glendale School Zones

(since 2022)

Glendale Bleeds: Demand Safe Streets Now

Glendale: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 4, 2025

The Numbers Don’t Lie

One death. Four serious injuries. 391 people hurt. That’s Glendale since 2022. The numbers come slow, but they never stop. Each one is a body broken or a life ended. Each one is a family changed forever. NYC crash data

Children are not spared. Fourteen kids have been injured in the last year alone. One child died. The street does not care how old you are. The street takes what it wants.

The Shape of the Danger

SUVs lead the charge. They hit, they injure, they kill. Six pedestrians struck by SUVs, sedans, bikes, buses, trucks—they all play their part. But the big cars do the most harm. See the numbers.

Cyclists bleed too. A 46-year-old man crushed by a car passing too close. A 54-year-old thrown from his bike by a bus. The road is not safe for those who move without steel around them.

What Has Been Done—And What Hasn’t

No new laws. No bold moves. The city talks about Vision Zero. The state passes bills. But in Glendale, the pace is slow. The danger is fast. There is no sign of a local leader standing up, demanding more for the people who walk and ride here. There is no record of a council member or board chair calling for protected bike lanes, slower speeds, or more enforcement. The silence is loud.

The Call

This is not fate. This is policy. Every crash is a choice made by someone in power. Demand action. Call your council member. Call the mayor. Tell them you want streets where a child can cross without fear. Tell them you want fewer funerals and more safe journeys. Do not wait for another name on the list. Take action now.

Citations

Citations
  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4549825 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-06-04

Other Representatives

Jenifer Rajkumar
Assembly Member Jenifer Rajkumar
District 38
District Office:
83-91 Woodhaven Blvd., Woodhaven, NY 11421
Legislative Office:
Room 637, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Joann Ariola
Council Member Joann Ariola
District 32
District Office:
114-12 Beach Channel Drive, Suite 1, Rockaway Park, NY 11694
718-318-6411
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1550, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7382
Joe Addabbo
State Senator Joe Addabbo
District 15
District Office:
66-85 73rd Place, Middle Village, NY 11379
Legislative Office:
Room 811, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247

Traffic Safety Timeline for Glendale

27
Parked SUV, Westbound Cyclist Crash on Cooper Ave

Sep 27 - Queens, Cooper Ave at 82 St. A westbound bicyclist hit trouble with a parked SUV. Impact to the left doors. Her face was cut. Police recorded driver inattention and other vehicular factors.

On Cooper Ave at 82 St in Queens, a parked SUV and a westbound bicyclist crashed. The bicyclist, a 49-year-old woman, was injured. She was conscious and suffered a facial abrasion. The SUV had damage to its left side doors. The bike’s front end was damaged. According to the police report, contributing factors were Driver Inattention/Distraction and Other Vehicular. Police recorded driver inattention/distraction and other vehicular factors. The SUV driver is a licensed 25-year-old man. No other injuries were specified.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4845801 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
26
Motorcyclist killed in multiple collisions on Long Island Expressway, NYPD says
21
Woman killed after being pinned under car while crossing Queens intersection
20
Female construction worker killed on Queens job site, hit-and-run driver arrested
16
Man struck and killed by two vehicles while trying to cross Belt Parkway in South Ozone Park: NYPD
15
Suspect in deadly DWI crash sexually harassed teen before intentionally striking her with SUV, Queens DA says
14
Parking pull-out crash injures teen passenger

Sep 14 - Two sedans collided on Metropolitan Ave in Queens. A 19-year-old front passenger was hurt, in shock with back pain. One driver started from parking. Police recorded driver inattention/distraction.

Two sedans crashed by 89-29 Metropolitan Ave in Queens at 6:02 p.m. Police list both vehicles traveling south. One driver was going straight. The other was starting from parking. A 19-year-old front-seat passenger was injured, reported in shock with back pain and a complaint of pain or nausea. Other occupants were recorded with unspecified injuries. Both drivers were licensed in New York, and both cars were registered in the state. "According to the police report," driver inattention/distraction contributed to the collision. Damage was noted to a right front bumper on one car and a left front bumper on the other.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4842279 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
13
16-year-old girl struck and killed in Queens

29
Sedan and pickup collide at Union Tpke, Woodhaven

Aug 29 - Two drivers going straight northwest crashed on Union Turnpike at Woodhaven Boulevard in Queens. The woman driving the sedan was hurt. Police recorded driver inexperience.

Two drivers collided on Union Turnpike at Woodhaven Boulevard in Queens while both were going straight northwest. A 35-year-old woman driving a 2013 Honda sedan was injured with neck pain. The male pickup driver was listed with unspecified injuries. According to the police report, both drivers were traveling straight and police recorded driver inexperience. Point of impact was the sedan’s center front and the pickup’s left front. No pedestrians or cyclists were listed. Both vehicles showed front-end damage. Collision ID 4839745.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4839745 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
24
Alcohol crash injures teen passengers

Aug 24 - Eastbound SUV hit on Union Turnpike. Parked cars clipped. Teen riders hurt. Front passenger hurt. Two drivers involved. Police flag alcohol. Metal, glass, and sirens on 88th Street.

An eastbound Mercedes SUV going straight on Union Turnpike at 88th Street struck a westbound Jeep SUV and also clipped parked vehicles. A 16-year-old rear passenger, a 15-year-old rear passenger, a 50-year-old front passenger, and a 55-year-old driver were injured. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Alcohol Involvement.” The data list no rider or pedestrian errors. The record shows multiple vehicles with right‑front impacts and parked cars hit, marking poor driver control consistent with the cited alcohol involvement. No helmet or signal issues are noted in the report.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4837304 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
23
Distracted driver injures woman in Queens

Aug 23 - A sedan ran east on Cooper Ave. The front end hit. A 57-year-old driver was hurt in the chest. Shock set in. The scene sat in Queens silence. Distraction did the damage. Streets bear the weight.

A 2019 Acura sedan traveling east struck with a center front-end impact near 80-00 Cooper Ave in Queens. One 57-year-old female driver was injured with chest trauma. According to the police report, the contributing factor was “Driver Inattention/Distraction.” The data flags driver inattention and distraction for both the driver and registrant. No other road users are listed as struck, but the crash shows front-end damage and an injured occupant. This is another case where driver inattention turns motion into harm on a neighborhood street.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4837294 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-02
14
Int 1362-2025 Ariola co-sponsors bill removing bus and bike benchmarks from streets master plan.

Aug 14 - Int 1362 repeals the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane” and strips explicit benchmarks for protected lanes from the streets master plan. It preserves signal and pedestrian targets but weakens commitments to physical protection, threatening safety and equity.

Bill Int 1362-2025. Status: Sponsorship, introduced Aug 14, 2025. Referred to Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The measure, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to removing benchmarks for bus lanes and bicycle lanes from the streets master plan and repealing certain definitions in relation thereto," repeals the definitions of "protected bicycle lane" and "protected bus lane" and removes related benchmarks in the master plan (master plan dates referenced include Dec. 1, 2021 and Dec. 1, 2026). Primary sponsor: Robert F. Holden. Co-sponsors: Inna Vernikov, Joann Ariola, Chris Banks, Vickie Paladino. Safety analysts warn: "Removing explicit benchmarks and definitions for protected bus and bicycle lanes weakens commitments to physically protected infrastructure... likely reducing mode shift to walking and cycling and worsening equity and safety-in-numbers; the retained measures focus on signals and pedestrian amenities but do not replace the protective effect of designated protected lanes."


14
Int 1362-2025 Ariola co-sponsors bill to remove bus and bike lane benchmarks, no safety impact.

Aug 14 - Int 1362 strips definitions for protected bus and bike lanes and removes benchmarks from the streets master plan. It guts measurable targets. Safe space for pedestrians and cyclists is at risk. The city could slow needed separated infrastructure.

Bill: Int. No. 1362 (Int 1362-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Event date: 2025-08-14. The matter reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to removing benchmarks for bus lanes and bicycle lanes from the streets master plan and repealing certain definitions in relation thereto." Council Member Robert F. Holden is the primary sponsor. Joann Ariola and Vickie Paladino are co-sponsors. The draft repeals the definitions of "protected bicycle lane" and "protected bus lane" and removes explicit benchmarks tied to transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, accessible pedestrian signals and intersection redesigns. Removing those benchmarks weakens commitments to high‑quality separated infrastructure and measurable mode‑shift targets, likely slowing deployment of safe space for pedestrians and cyclists and undermining equitable street redesigns.


14
Int 1362-2025 Ariola co-sponsors bill to remove bus and bike lane benchmarks, no safety impact.

Aug 14 - Int. No. 1362 strips city definitions and benchmarks for protected bicycle lanes and protected bus lanes. It removes targets and accountability. The change will slow deployment of separated bike and bus infrastructure and erode safety and equity for pedestrians and cyclists.

Int. No. 1362 (filed Aug. 14, 2025; stage: SPONSORSHIP) was referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to removing benchmarks for bus lanes and bicycle lanes and repealing certain definitions in relation thereto." Council Member Robert F. Holden is the primary sponsor. Co-sponsors are Vickie Paladino, Joann Ariola, and Inna Vernikov. The bill repeals the definitions of "protected bicycle lane" and "protected bus lane" and removes benchmark requirements from the streets master plan. Safety analysts note that removing explicit benchmarks and definitions weakens accountability for building separated cycling and bus infrastructure, likely decreasing street equity and safety-in-numbers for pedestrians and cyclists.


14
Int 1358-2025 Holden co-sponsors permit revocation for placard abuse and obscured plates, improving safety.

Aug 14 - Int 1358-2025 yanks city parking permits from drivers with obscured or defaced plates. It also targets placard misuse and unpaid fines over $350. The move restores camera enforcement. Pedestrians and cyclists gain space and accountability.

Int 1358-2025. Status: Sponsorship, referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on August 14, 2025. The bill seeks the “revocation of city-issued parking permits for violations related to obscured or defaced license plates.” Primary sponsor: Council Member Lincoln Restler. Co-sponsor: Council Member Robert F. Holden. The measure would revoke permits after three misuse violations, any §19-166 offense, unpaid violations over $350, or operating with an obscured plate. Revoking city-issued parking permits for obscured/defaced plates and placard misuse increases accountability, restores automated enforcement, and deters illegal parking. This reduces bike lane and crosswalk blocking and curbs impunity among placard holders, improving safety for pedestrians and cyclists.


14
Int 1362-2025 Holden is primary sponsor of bill removing bus and bike lane benchmarks.

Aug 14 - Int. No. 1362 strips city definitions and benchmarks for protected bicycle lanes and protected bus lanes. It removes targets and accountability. The change will slow deployment of separated bike and bus infrastructure and erode safety and equity for pedestrians and cyclists.

Int. No. 1362 (filed Aug. 14, 2025; stage: SPONSORSHIP) was referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The matter is titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to removing benchmarks for bus lanes and bicycle lanes and repealing certain definitions in relation thereto." Council Member Robert F. Holden is the primary sponsor. Co-sponsors are Vickie Paladino, Joann Ariola, and Inna Vernikov. The bill repeals the definitions of "protected bicycle lane" and "protected bus lane" and removes benchmark requirements from the streets master plan. Safety analysts note that removing explicit benchmarks and definitions weakens accountability for building separated cycling and bus infrastructure, likely decreasing street equity and safety-in-numbers for pedestrians and cyclists.


14
Int 1362-2025 Holden is primary sponsor removing bus and bike lane benchmarks from streets master plan.

Aug 14 - Int 1362 strips definitions for protected bus and bike lanes and removes benchmarks from the streets master plan. It guts measurable targets. Safe space for pedestrians and cyclists is at risk. The city could slow needed separated infrastructure.

Bill: Int. No. 1362 (Int 1362-2025). Status: SPONSORSHIP. Committee: Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Event date: 2025-08-14. The matter reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to removing benchmarks for bus lanes and bicycle lanes from the streets master plan and repealing certain definitions in relation thereto." Council Member Robert F. Holden is the primary sponsor. Joann Ariola and Vickie Paladino are co-sponsors. The draft repeals the definitions of "protected bicycle lane" and "protected bus lane" and removes explicit benchmarks tied to transit signal priority, bus stop upgrades, accessible pedestrian signals and intersection redesigns. Removing those benchmarks weakens commitments to high‑quality separated infrastructure and measurable mode‑shift targets, likely slowing deployment of safe space for pedestrians and cyclists and undermining equitable street redesigns.


14
Int 1362-2025 Holden is primary sponsor removing bus and bike lane benchmarks.

Aug 14 - Int 1362 repeals the definitions of “protected bicycle lane” and “protected bus lane” and strips explicit benchmarks for protected lanes from the streets master plan. It preserves signal and pedestrian targets but weakens commitments to physical protection, threatening safety and equity.

Bill Int 1362-2025. Status: Sponsorship, introduced Aug 14, 2025. Referred to Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The measure, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to removing benchmarks for bus lanes and bicycle lanes from the streets master plan and repealing certain definitions in relation thereto," repeals the definitions of "protected bicycle lane" and "protected bus lane" and removes related benchmarks in the master plan (master plan dates referenced include Dec. 1, 2021 and Dec. 1, 2026). Primary sponsor: Robert F. Holden. Co-sponsors: Inna Vernikov, Joann Ariola, Chris Banks, Vickie Paladino. Safety analysts warn: "Removing explicit benchmarks and definitions for protected bus and bicycle lanes weakens commitments to physically protected infrastructure... likely reducing mode shift to walking and cycling and worsening equity and safety-in-numbers; the retained measures focus on signals and pedestrian amenities but do not replace the protective effect of designated protected lanes."


12
Speeding Car Slams Food Truck, Kills Two

Aug 12 - A car tore through an Astoria intersection. It struck a food truck. Two men died on the sidewalk. The driver died too. Metal, flesh, coffee, blood. The street swallowed them. It happened fast. No one stood a chance.

According to the New York Post (2025-08-12), an 84-year-old driver sped through 42nd Street and 19th Avenue in Astoria, Queens, crashing into a food truck and killing two customers and himself. Surveillance showed the car "going about 60 miles an hour" before impact. The article quotes a witness: "Someone screamed really loudly, and I just had stepped back, like right up to the sidewalk." The force severed a victim's foot. The crash highlights the lethal risk when drivers lose control at high speed in pedestrian zones. No charges were filed; the driver died at the scene.


11
Astoria Businesses Sue Over Bike Lane

Aug 11 - 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.