Crash Count for Brooklyn Heights
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 671
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 240
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 69
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 4
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 2
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Aug 5, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Brooklyn Heights?

Brooklyn Heights Bleeds: Speed Kills, Leaders Stall

Brooklyn Heights Bleeds: Speed Kills, Leaders Stall

Brooklyn Heights: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 4, 2025

The Toll in Brooklyn Heights

Two dead. Three seriously hurt. In the last three and a half years, the streets of Brooklyn Heights have not been quiet. The numbers do not lie. 213 people injured, 2 killed, 3 left with life-altering wounds since 2022. The dead do not speak. The injured limp, or do not walk at all. The pain is not abstract. It is a name missing from a dinner table, a scar that will not fade.

The Crashes Keep Coming

A 76-year-old woman died in the back seat of an SUV on Furman Street. The driver was speeding—aggressive. She was trapped, crushed, incoherent before the end. The driver survived, injured but alive. The cause: unsafe speed, road rage. The street did not forgive. NYC Open Data

A 31-year-old woman, Katherine Harris, was killed crossing Atlantic Avenue. The driver was drunk. He ran a red light at 72 mph. He did not stop. He killed her steps from her home. Her mother said, “She was a phenomenon, a force to be reckoned with… I lost part of me.”

A cyclist, 26, was cut down on Atlantic Avenue. An SUV, a distracted driver. The cyclist left with deep wounds. The driver was parked, but the street was not safe. NYC Open Data

Leadership: Action and Delay

Council Member Lincoln Restler has sponsored bills to speed up protected bike lanes and ban parking near crosswalks. He has called for speed limiters on repeat offenders. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon has pushed for fines for bike lane parking and speed-limiting tech. State Senator Andrew Gounardes has led on expanding speed camera enforcement and closing loopholes for plate cheats. But many bills sit in committee. Many measures are still just words.

The city has the power to lower speed limits. The council can demand daylight at crosswalks. The state can force speeders to slow down. Every delay is another risk. Every loophole is a wound waiting to open.

The Call

This is not fate. This is policy. Call your council member. Call the mayor. Demand a 20 mph limit. Demand protected bike lanes. Demand action, not excuses. The dead cannot speak. You can.

Citations

Citations

Other Representatives

Jo Anne Simon
Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon
District 52
District Office:
341 Smith St., Brooklyn, NY 11231
Legislative Office:
Room 826, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Lincoln Restler
Council Member Lincoln Restler
District 33
District Office:
410 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11217
718-875-5200
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1748, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7214
Andrew Gounardes
State Senator Andrew Gounardes
District 26
District Office:
497 Carroll St. Suite 31, Brooklyn, NY 11215
Legislative Office:
Room 917, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies

Brooklyn Heights Brooklyn Heights sits in Brooklyn, Precinct 84, District 33, AD 52, SD 26, Brooklyn CB2.

See also
Boroughs
City Council Districts
Community Boards
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Brooklyn Heights

Gounardes Mourns Victim Highlights Need for Safer Streets

Norman Fruchter, education reformer, died after a driver reversed into him at a crosswalk-less Bay Ridge intersection. The driver stayed. No charges. A vigil drew family, officials, and anger. Fruchter’s wife was killed by a reckless driver in 1997. Grief, outrage, no justice.

On January 4, 2023, Norman Fruchter was struck and killed by a reversing driver at 68th Street and Bliss Terrace in Council District 47. The intersection lacked a pedestrian crosswalk. Council Member Justin Brannan attended the vigil and tweeted, 'Confronting traffic violence also means taking personal responsibility [and] safe driving habits. It will take all of us.' The driver remained at the scene but faced no charges. Fruchter’s son Lev condemned the New York Automobile Insurance Plan for letting dangerous drivers stay insured. Community leaders, including NYC Comptroller Brad Lander and State Senator Andrew Gounardes, joined in mourning and frustration. Fruchter’s wife Rachel was also killed by a reckless driver in 1997, a tragedy that helped spark Vision Zero. Nearly three decades later, traffic laws remain weak. No systemic change. Vulnerable road users still pay the price.


A 1637
Simon sponsors bill adding surcharge for bike lane parking, boosts cyclist safety.

Assembly bill A 1637 targets drivers who block bike lanes. It adds a mandatory surcharge for violators. Money goes straight to the court. Cyclists get a clear lane. Law aims to keep cars out.

Assembly bill A 1637 was introduced on January 17, 2023, and is in the sponsorship stage. The bill, titled 'Relates to violations and a mandatory surcharge for parking in a bicycle lane,' would require drivers who park in bike lanes to pay an extra fee to the court that finds them liable. Jo Anne Simon (District 52) sponsored the bill, joined by Deborah Glick (District 66) and Tony Simone (District 75) as co-sponsors. The measure seeks to deter illegal parking in bike lanes by hitting violators in the wallet. No safety analyst note was provided.


A 1280
Simon co-sponsors bill boosting street safety for all users.

Assembly bill A 1280 pushes for streets built for all. Dozens of lawmakers back the plan. The bill demands roads that protect walkers, cyclists, and riders. It calls for design, not luck, to keep people safe.

Assembly bill A 1280, now in sponsorship, aims to 'enable safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles.' Introduced January 13, 2023, the bill sits with the Assembly. Jonathan Rivera leads as primary sponsor, joined by over 70 co-sponsors including Patrick Burke, Kenny Burgos, and Catalina Cruz. Their action signals strong legislative momentum. The bill’s focus: force planners to build streets for people, not just cars. No safety analyst note is available, but the intent is clear—systemic change for vulnerable road users. The bill’s progress can be tracked at the New York Assembly website.


S 153
Gounardes co-sponsors bill boosting bus lane enforcement, improving street safety.

Senate bill S 153 cracks down on bus lane violators. Owners face liability. Cameras catch drivers blocking buses. Sponsors push for stronger enforcement. Streets clear for buses, danger cut for those on foot.

Senate bill S 153, sponsored by Liz Krueger (District 28) with Andrew Gounardes (26) and Brad Hoylman-Sigal (47) as co-sponsors, is at the sponsorship stage. Introduced January 4, 2023, it 'relates to owner liability for failure of operator to comply with bus operation-related local law or regulation traffic restrictions and to the adjudication of certain parking infractions.' The bill extends a bus rapid transit demonstration program, using cameras to enforce bus lane rules. No safety analyst note was provided. The sponsors aim to hold vehicle owners accountable and keep bus lanes clear, a move that can reduce risk for pedestrians and bus riders.


S 343
Gounardes sponsors bill to create vehicle pedestrian safety rating system.

Senate bill S 343 seeks a clear, public safety score for cars. The DMV would post these ratings. Lawmakers push for sunlight on danger. Pedestrians face risk. The system aims to expose it.

Senate bill S 343 was proposed on January 4, 2023. It sits in the sponsorship stage. The bill, titled 'Creates a pedestrian safety rating system for motor vehicles,' would require the Department of Motor Vehicles to post these ratings online. Primary sponsor Andrew Gounardes leads, joined by Leroy Comrie, Michael Gianaris, Brad Hoylman-Sigal, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, Zellnor Myrie, Gustavo Rivera, Julia Salazar, Luis R. Sepúlveda, and Toby Ann Stavisky. The measure targets transparency. It puts the danger of cars in plain sight. No safety analyst note was provided.


Jo Anne Simon Backs Safety Boosting Lower DWI Threshold

City and state officials want to drop the legal blood-alcohol limit to 0.05. The bill sits in committee. Drunk drivers killed 42 people last year. Officials talk tough but focus on drinking, not driving. The danger remains for those outside the car.

Senate and Assembly bill, sponsored by Sen. John Liu and Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon, seeks to lower New York’s drunk driving threshold from 0.08 to 0.05 percent BAC. Announced at a December 22, 2022 press conference, the bill has stalled in committee for years. The matter aims to redefine DWI: 'driving while intoxicated would be defined as anything above a blood-alcohol content of 0.05 percent.' Simon and Liu back the measure; city DOT and NYPD leaders joined them. DOT Deputy Commissioner Margaret Forgione said, 'There is not really a safe level of drinking and driving, but the law suggests there is.' In 2021, 42 people died in drunk driving crashes, up 60 percent from previous years. Officials promise enforcement and education, but their messaging targets drinking, not the act of driving. Vulnerable road users remain at risk while the law lags.


Jo Anne Simon Supports Safety Boosting Lower DWI Threshold

City officials push Albany to drop the drunk driving threshold from 0.08 to 0.05 percent. The bill lingers in committee. Drunk drivers killed 42 New Yorkers last year. Messaging still centers on not drinking, not on not driving.

Senate Bill sponsored by John Liu and Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon seeks to lower New York’s DWI blood-alcohol threshold from 0.08% to 0.05%. The bill, re-submitted in the last legislative session, remains stuck in committee. At a December 22, 2022 press conference, DOT Deputy Commissioner Margaret Forgione said, 'There is not really a safe level of drinking and driving, but the law suggests there is.' Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez and NYPD’s Kim Royster also spoke, focusing on enforcement and urging drivers to avoid drinking before driving. Advocates like Alisa McMorris of Mothers Against Drunk Driving called for stronger messaging: 'We want people to make choices before they leave their home.' Despite evidence that lowering the threshold could cut traffic deaths by 10%, city messaging still stops short of telling people not to drive to events where they plan to drink.


Andrew Gounardes Supports Misguided Bill Rewarding Illegal Plate Reporting

Drivers hide plates. Cameras miss them. Streets stay dangerous. Senator Gounardes pushes a bill to pay citizens for reporting illegal plates. Police claim action, but advocates see little change. The bill sits in committee. Ghost cars keep rolling.

State Senator Andrew Gounardes introduced a bill in 2022 to reward citizens who report illegal license plates. The bill remains in committee. The measure would give whistleblowers 25% of the ticket, up to $75. The matter targets drivers who obscure or remove plates to dodge automated enforcement. As city and state agencies rely more on cameras to catch speeders and red-light runners, more drivers hide their plates. The Department of Transportation says cameras failed to ticket over 4% of violators last fall, up from 1% in 2019. Advocates accuse police of lax enforcement and even breaking the law themselves. Gounardes’s bill, still stalled, aims to close this loophole and put power in the hands of citizens. Vulnerable road users remain at risk while enforcement lags.


Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Penalties and Civilian Reporting

Police arrested Adam White for removing plastic from a hidden plate. Charges dropped. Council Member Restler pushes Int. 501: fines for blocking lanes, rewards for civilian reporting. Politicians call for accountability. Defaced plates shield reckless drivers. Streets stay dangerous.

On December 1, 2022, Brooklyn Council Member Lincoln Restler renewed his push for Int. 501, a bill to fine drivers $175 for blocking bike lanes, bus lanes, sidewalks, crosswalks, or hydrants near schools, and to reward civilians with 25% of the fine for reporting violations. The matter arose after attorney Adam White was arrested for removing plastic from an obscured license plate; charges were later dropped by Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, citing 'insufficient evidence.' The bill, discussed at a press conference, aims to crack down on license plate defacement and illegal parking, which Restler says is rampant among city workers and police. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes introduced a similar bill at the state level. Both lawmakers stress the need for public accountability and tougher enforcement to protect vulnerable road users from drivers who evade responsibility.


Sedan Hits Object on Fulton Street

A 62-year-old man driving a Ford sedan on Fulton Street in Brooklyn was injured. The car struck an object with its left front bumper. The driver was not ejected and wore a lap belt and harness. Injury severity was moderate.

According to the police report, a 62-year-old male driver was operating a 2001 Ford sedan northbound on Fulton Street in Brooklyn when the vehicle impacted an object with its left front bumper. The driver was the sole occupant and sustained injuries classified as moderate (severity 3). He was not ejected from the vehicle and was restrained by a lap belt and harness. The report lists the contributing factors as unspecified, with no direct driver errors identified. The vehicle damage was limited to the left front bumper. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved in the crash.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4582980 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-12
Gounardes Urges Governor to Fund MTA Rescue

Lawmakers and advocates rallied in Manhattan. They demanded more money for the MTA. They want six-minute bus and subway service. They warned against service cuts and fare hikes. They called for gas tax revenue to fund transit. Riders need safe, frequent service.

On November 17, 2022, state legislators and transit advocates pressed for increased MTA funding and six-minute off-peak service. The push comes ahead of the next budget cycle. Assembly Members Zohran Mamdani and Amanda Septimo, State Senator Andrew Gounardes, and Assembly Member Emily Gallagher led the call. Mamdani said, 'If we implement six-minute service, the consequences would be felt for riders across all aspects of their life.' Septimo called transit an economic and racial justice issue. Gounardes urged the governor to include MTA funding in the initial budget. Gallagher criticized the gas tax holiday, urging funds go to transit. MTA Chairman Janno Lieber warned that cuts or fare hikes would devastate working- and middle-class New Yorkers. The group demanded action to protect and improve transit for all riders.


75-Year-Old Pedestrian Injured on Clinton Street

A 75-year-old woman crossing Clinton Street with the signal was struck by a northbound sedan making a left turn. The driver failed to yield right-of-way and was inattentive. The pedestrian suffered a hip and upper leg contusion but remained conscious.

According to the police report, a 75-year-old female pedestrian was injured on Clinton Street in Brooklyn when a northbound sedan making a left turn struck her. The pedestrian was crossing with the signal. The report lists the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The pedestrian sustained a contusion and bruise to the hip and upper leg but remained conscious. The vehicle showed no damage despite the impact. The driver was licensed and operating a 2013 Ford sedan. No other contributing factors such as helmet use or signaling were noted.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4578680 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-12
Sedan Turning Left Hits Parked Cars in Brooklyn

A sedan making a left turn struck two parked sedans on Joralemon Street in Brooklyn. The driver, a 57-year-old man, suffered injuries to his entire body and was incoherent at the scene. The crash caused center-end damage to all vehicles involved.

According to the police report, a sedan traveling northwest was making a left turn on Joralemon Street when it collided with two parked sedans facing west. The driver of the turning vehicle, a 57-year-old man, was injured with bodily trauma affecting his entire body and was incoherent at the scene. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or distraction. The parked vehicles sustained center back-end damage, while the turning sedan had front-end damage. No occupants were reported in the parked cars. The driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights the dangers posed by turning maneuvers near parked vehicles.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4576462 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-12
Volvo Turns, Pedestrian’s Leg Shattered in Brooklyn

A Volvo turned right on Tillary Street. The driver looked away. A woman crossed with the light. The car struck her. Her leg broke under the bumper. The street stayed quiet. The driver failed to yield. She lay hurt on the pavement.

A Volvo sedan struck a 27-year-old woman as she crossed Tillary Street at Cadman Plaza West in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the woman walked with the signal when the car turned right and hit her, shattering her leg. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. The driver, a 56-year-old man, did not report injuries. The car showed no visible damage. The woman suffered crush injuries to her lower leg and foot. She was conscious at the scene. The crash highlights the danger when drivers turn and fail to see people in the crosswalk.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4575251 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-12
Gounardes Mentioned in Bond Street Traffic Flip Debate

Councilmember Restler and Brooklyn leaders want DOT to flip Bond Street’s traffic northbound after Schermerhorn’s redesign. Locals face gridlock. Community Board 2 backs the move. They demand DOT protect the Bond Street bike lane with a physical barrier.

On October 21, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) and Brooklyn Community Board 2 requested the Department of Transportation (DOT) extend Bond Street’s northbound direction to Livingston Street. The request follows complaints after Schermerhorn Street’s redesign, which added a protected bike lane but made all crossings one-way southbound, causing gridlock and blocking access for services. The Community Board’s Transportation and Public Safety Committee, chaired by Sid Meyer, voted to support the change and insisted DOT maintain and protect the Bond Street bike lane with a physical barrier. Restler said, 'We believe that this proposal will improve traffic flow and enhance the public’s access to essential services, deliveries, and residences.' DOT is reviewing the proposal. The matter centers on the impact of traffic changes on residents and the need to safeguard vulnerable road users.


Simon Supports Bond Street Traffic Flip and Bike Lane Protection

Councilmember Restler and Brooklyn leaders want DOT to flip Bond Street’s traffic northbound after Schermerhorn’s redesign. Locals face gridlock. Community Board 2 backs the move. They demand DOT protect the Bond Street bike lane with a physical barrier.

On October 21, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) and Brooklyn Community Board 2 requested the Department of Transportation (DOT) extend Bond Street’s northbound direction to Livingston Street. The request follows complaints after Schermerhorn Street’s redesign, which added a protected bike lane but made all crossings one-way southbound, causing gridlock and blocking access for services. The Community Board’s Transportation and Public Safety Committee, chaired by Sid Meyer, voted to support the change and insisted DOT maintain and protect the Bond Street bike lane with a physical barrier. Restler said, 'We believe that this proposal will improve traffic flow and enhance the public’s access to essential services, deliveries, and residences.' DOT is reviewing the proposal. The matter centers on the impact of traffic changes on residents and the need to safeguard vulnerable road users.


Concrete Mixer Hits Sedan on BQE Lane Change

A concrete mixer truck changed lanes on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway and struck a sedan from behind. The sedan’s driver, a 26-year-old man, suffered a back contusion. The truck’s driver was distracted, causing the crash. Both vehicles traveled eastbound.

According to the police report, a concrete mixer truck traveling east on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway changed lanes and collided with the rear center of a sedan also traveling east. The sedan’s 26-year-old male driver was injured, sustaining a back contusion but remained conscious and was not ejected. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as a contributing factor for the truck driver. The sedan driver was properly restrained with a lap belt and harness. The truck’s point of impact was its right front bumper, damaging its undercarriage. The sedan’s front end was damaged. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4573275 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-12
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Schermerhorn Street Bike Lane

City officials cut the ribbon on a new two-way protected bike lane on Schermerhorn Street. Cyclists now ride behind parked cars, shielded from traffic. Councilmember Lincoln Restler pushed for the overhaul after years of crashes and blocked lanes. Safety comes first.

On October 12, 2022, the Department of Transportation opened a fortified, two-way protected bike lane on Schermerhorn Street in Brooklyn’s District 33. The project, championed by Councilmember Lincoln Restler, followed years of complaints about blocked, unprotected lanes and frequent crashes. The matter, described as a 'complete transformation of the look and feel of the corridor,' converted Schermerhorn from a chaotic two-way street to a one-way with parking-protected bike lanes. Restler, who once failed to ride the stretch without leaving the lane due to illegal parking, called the redesign 'real safety in downtown Brooklyn.' DOT data shows 29 cyclists injured and one killed on this stretch since 2012. The overhaul separates cyclists from moving vehicles, reducing risk for Brooklyn’s most vulnerable road users.


Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Schermerhorn Street Bike Lane

Officials cut the ribbon on a fortified, two-way bike lane on Schermerhorn Street. Cyclists now ride behind parked cars, shielded from traffic. The old, chaotic street saw 29 cyclist injuries and one death. Councilmember Restler pushed for this change.

On October 12, 2022, the Department of Transportation held a ribbon-cutting for the new protected bike lane on Schermerhorn Street in Brooklyn's District 33. The overhaul converted the street to one-way eastbound and installed a two-way, parking-protected bike lane. The matter summary reads: 'DOT cuts ribbon on newly fortified Schermerhorn Street bike lane.' Councilmember Lincoln Restler, who championed the redesign, attended the event and called it 'a great friggin day for Brooklyn.' The old lanes were unprotected and blocked by double-parked cars, forcing cyclists into traffic. Since 2012, 29 cyclists have been injured and one killed along this stretch. The new design separates cyclists from vehicles, aiming to end the danger that plagued this busy corridor.


Simon Endorses Safety Boosting Schermerhorn Protected Bike Lane

City officials cut the ribbon on a new two-way protected bike lane on Schermerhorn Street. Cyclists now ride behind parked cars, shielded from traffic. Councilmember Lincoln Restler pushed for the overhaul after years of crashes and blocked lanes. Safety comes first.

On October 12, 2022, the Department of Transportation opened a fortified, two-way protected bike lane on Schermerhorn Street in Brooklyn’s District 33. The project, championed by Councilmember Lincoln Restler, followed years of complaints about blocked, unprotected lanes and frequent crashes. The matter, described as a 'complete transformation of the look and feel of the corridor,' converted Schermerhorn from a chaotic two-way street to a one-way with parking-protected bike lanes. Restler, who once failed to ride the stretch without leaving the lane due to illegal parking, called the redesign 'real safety in downtown Brooklyn.' DOT data shows 29 cyclists injured and one killed on this stretch since 2012. The overhaul separates cyclists from moving vehicles, reducing risk for Brooklyn’s most vulnerable road users.