About these crash totals
Counts come from NYC police crash reports (NYC Open Data). We sum all crashes, injuries, and deaths for this area across the selected time window shown on the card. Injury severity follows the official definitions in the NYPD dataset.
- Crashes: number of police‑reported collisions (all road users).
- All injuries: total injured people in those crashes.
- Moderate / Serious: subcategories reported by officers (e.g., broken bones vs. life‑threatening trauma).
- Deaths: people who died due to a crash.
Notes: Police reports can be corrected after initial publication. Minor incidents without a police report are not included.
Close▸ Killed 2
▸ Crush Injuries 4
▸ Severe Bleeding 2
▸ Severe Lacerations 2
▸ Concussion 10
▸ Whiplash 11
▸ Contusion/Bruise 74
▸ Abrasion 45
▸ Pain/Nausea 20
About this chart
We group pedestrian injuries and deaths by the vehicle type that struck them (as recorded in police reports). Use the dropdown to view totals, serious injuries, or deaths.
- Trucks/Buses, SUVs/Cars, Mopeds, and Bikes reflect the reporting categories in the crash dataset.
- Counts include people on foot only; crashes with no injured pedestrians are not shown here.
Notes: Police classification can change during investigations. Small categories may have year-to-year variance.
CloseAbout these numbers
These totals count vehicles with at least the shown number of camera‑issued speeding violations (school‑zone speed cameras) in any rolling 12‑month window in this district. Totals are summed from 2022 to the present for this geography.
- ≥ 6 (6+): advocates’ standard for repeat speeding offenders who should face escalating consequences.
- ≥ 16 (16+): threshold in the current edited bill awaiting State Senate action.
About this list
This ranks vehicles by the number of NYC school‑zone speed‑camera violations they received in the last 12 months anywhere in the city. The smaller note shows how many times the same plate was caught in this area in the last 90 days.
Camera violations are issued by NYC DOT’s program. Counts reflect issued tickets and may omit dismissed or pending cases. Plate text is shown verbatim as recorded.
Close
On 4th Avenue, a bike goes down again
Park Slope: Jan 1, 2022 - Oct 11, 2025
Just before 2 PM on Sep 28, 2025, at 4th Avenue and 11th Street, a driver and a person on a bike collided. The cyclist was hurt. City data record the crash.
They were one of 3 people killed here since 2022 and hundreds more injured. The toll in Park Slope from Jan 1, 2022 to Oct 11, 2025: 3 deaths and 1,007 injuries across 2,024 crashes, according to NYC’s crash database.
This Week
- Sep 28: A cyclist and a driver collided at 4th Avenue and 11th Street; the cyclist was injured, police noted traffic control was disregarded and failure to yield by the driver among factors in the record. Source
- Sep 24: A driver turned left at 4th Avenue and 9th Street and hit a person on a bike; the cyclist was hurt. Source
- Sep 12: A driver turned right from 4th Avenue onto Degraw Street and struck a cyclist; the rider was injured. Source
- Aug 17: A bike and an SUV crash on 4th Avenue at 14th Street sent the cyclist to the hospital. Source
Where the street bites
Cyclists keep getting hit along 4th Avenue. Since 2022, people on bikes suffered 230 injuries here; 1 cyclist was killed. People walking were hurt 184 times; 1 person on foot was killed. That is from the same city dataset.
Hot spots stand out. Flatbush Avenue leads with 85 injuries and 1 death. 4th Avenue follows with 69 injuries. The source is NYC Open Data.
Late afternoon and evening cut deep. Injury counts spike around 4 PM to 6 PM and stay high into 8 PM, per the city records for this area. See the dataset.
How crashes happen here
Police reports in this neighborhood often list driver failure to yield and disregarding signals. Those show up repeatedly in the records tied to recent bike crashes on 4th Avenue. Source: NYC Open Data.
The ledger and the names
The numbers are plain. Since 2022: 3 dead. 1,007 injured. Most of the harm falls on people outside cars: cyclists (230 injured, 1 killed) and people walking (184 injured, 1 killed). One occupant also died. The source is the city’s crash data.
Officials on the hook
Council Member Shahana K. Hanif is backing bills to add bike parking (Int. 1375-2025) and fix broken street furniture faster. Both are on the Council’s transportation docket. Council records show her as a sponsor.
State Senator Zellnor Myrie appears in the record supporting bus improvements in broader coverage, while Assembly Member Robert Carroll is recorded backing a delivery worker insurance measure. Those mentions come from our timeline of public statements. The crash counts do not slow for words alone.
We know the next steps. Slow the cars. Stop repeat speeders. Our city already has the tools outlined here. See our Take Action page for how to push them.
What must happen now
- Harden the danger points: daylight corners and protect turns at Flatbush Avenue and along 4th Avenue. Source: injury concentration in city data.
- Give people on foot a head start with leading pedestrian intervals, and enforce failure to yield at the 4th Avenue crossings where cyclists keep getting hit. Source: recurring turning crashes in recent records.
- Expand secure bike parking (Int. 1375-2025) so riders are not pushed into the gutter by sidewalk clutter or double-parking. Source: Council file.
Lower the default speed. Fit the worst repeat speeders’ cars with limiters. It is not abstract. It is the difference between a bruise and a funeral. Act here: Take Action.
Frequently Asked Questions
▸ What changed here in the past month?
▸ Where are people getting hurt most?
▸ How were these numbers calculated?
▸ Who represents this area?
▸ What is CrashCount?
Citations
▸ Citations
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – Crashes - Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-10-11
- NYC Council Legistar – Int 1375-2025 and Int 1386-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-09-10
Other Representatives
Assembly Member Robert Carroll
District 44
Council Member Shahana K. Hanif
District 39
State Senator Zellnor Myrie
District 20
▸ Other Geographies
Park Slope Park Slope sits in Brooklyn, Precinct 78, District 39, AD 44, SD 20, Brooklyn CB6.
▸ See also
Traffic Safety Timeline for Park Slope
7
String Slices Cyclists On Parkway Bridge▸Jun 7 - A string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge cut two cyclists. One suffered a slashed throat and blood loss, the other needed stitches. The string’s source remains unclear. Kite fighting blamed, but city action lags. Riders bleed. System fails.
Gothamist (2025-06-07) reports two cyclists were injured by a string suspended across the Marine Parkway Bridge. One cyclist, Robert Hillebrand, suffered a severed windpipe and required blood transfusions. Another, Jennifer Noble, received stitches and a broken finger. Police said the string was likely from kite fighting, a practice where glass-coated strings are used to cut opponents' kites. Witnesses described a yellow nylon string stretched across the bike lane. The NYPD found no criminality. The city parks department bans kite fighting but enforcement is lacking. Danny Mundy, a local civic leader, said, “It’s absolutely dangerous and unacceptable.” Previous injuries and lawsuits linked to kite string in the area highlight ongoing risks for cyclists and wildlife. No driver involvement was reported, but the incident exposes gaps in infrastructure and enforcement.
-
String Slices Cyclists On Parkway Bridge,
Gothamist,
Published 2025-06-07
3
SUV Fails to Yield, Teen Ejected on Atlantic▸Jun 3 - A teen was ejected and injured when an SUV failed to yield on Atlantic Avenue at Flatbush. The crash left the 15-year-old bleeding and in shock. Center front and left bumper damage marked the impact. The street bore the cost.
A crash on Atlantic Avenue at Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn involved a station wagon/SUV and left a 15-year-old male injured and ejected from a vehicle. According to the police report, the SUV was traveling east and struck another vehicle at the center front and left front bumper. The injured teen suffered knee and lower leg injuries and was reported in shock with minor bleeding. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as a contributing factor. Multiple occupants, including a 66-year-old male, were involved but did not report injuries. The crash data also notes 'Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion' as a secondary factor. The impact underscores the danger when drivers fail to yield on busy city streets.
3
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸Jun 3 - Another joins Families for Safe Streets. Another life lost. The toll rises. Grief sharpens the call for change. Streets stay deadly. The city fails to shield its own. The group grows. The danger remains.
On June 3, 2025, Gersh Kuntzman issued an advocacy statement, reported by Streetsblog NYC. The statement reads, 'There's a new member of Families for Safe Streets, which is not good news.' Joe Jankoski, mourning Amanda Servedio, spoke out after her death by a recidivist speeder. The group’s ranks swell with each tragedy. No specific bill or committee is named in this event. Kuntzman’s statement underscores the relentless danger faced by pedestrians and cyclists. The safety analyst notes: the event describes a new member joining an advocacy group, which does not directly affect pedestrian or cyclist safety at the population level. The city’s streets remain perilous. The group’s growth is a grim measure of failure.
-
Tuesday’s Headlines: Stop Super Speeders Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-03
3
Myrie Supports Safety Boosting Brooklyn Subway Capital Plan▸Jun 3 - MTA will untangle the Nostrand Junction choke point in Brooklyn. Trains crawl. Riders stew. The fix promises faster, steadier service. Fewer delays. More trains. Streets breathe easier when subways run strong. The city waits for relief.
On June 3, 2025, the MTA unveiled its 2025-2029 capital plan, targeting the notorious Nostrand Junction subway bottleneck in Central Brooklyn. The plan, announced by MTA Construction & Development president Jamie Torres-Springer and supported by State Sen. Zellnor Myrie, promises to 'finally unclog a notoriously slow-rolling segment of the subway.' The project will keep express and local trains on their tracks, cut delays, and boost throughput from 44 to 60 trains per hour. Myrie said, 'I'm proud the MTA Capital Plan includes funding to finally un-cluster Crown Heights so more New Yorkers can get to work and school on time.' According to safety analysts, improving subway service can shift trips from cars to transit, reducing car traffic and risks for pedestrians and cyclists. The work is overdue. The city watches.
-
MTA To Finally Untangle Notorious Brooklyn Subway Pinch Point,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-03
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for seniors. More elders could ride. Streets may see more slow, unprotected cyclists. Danger from cars remains. Bill sits in committee. No safety fixes for traffic threats.
Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' requires the Department of Transportation to set lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The measure aims to boost senior cycling but does not address street safety or car violence. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes bill for cheaper bike share for New Yorkers over 65. More seniors could ride. The city’s streets may see older cyclists in the mix. The committee now holds the bill.
Bill Int 1288-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced May 28, 2025, and re-referred June 4, it mandates a discounted bike share rate for seniors 65 and older. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.” Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, and Menin. The Department of Transportation would require bike share operators to offer this rate. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
Jun 7 - A string stretched across the Marine Parkway Bridge cut two cyclists. One suffered a slashed throat and blood loss, the other needed stitches. The string’s source remains unclear. Kite fighting blamed, but city action lags. Riders bleed. System fails.
Gothamist (2025-06-07) reports two cyclists were injured by a string suspended across the Marine Parkway Bridge. One cyclist, Robert Hillebrand, suffered a severed windpipe and required blood transfusions. Another, Jennifer Noble, received stitches and a broken finger. Police said the string was likely from kite fighting, a practice where glass-coated strings are used to cut opponents' kites. Witnesses described a yellow nylon string stretched across the bike lane. The NYPD found no criminality. The city parks department bans kite fighting but enforcement is lacking. Danny Mundy, a local civic leader, said, “It’s absolutely dangerous and unacceptable.” Previous injuries and lawsuits linked to kite string in the area highlight ongoing risks for cyclists and wildlife. No driver involvement was reported, but the incident exposes gaps in infrastructure and enforcement.
- String Slices Cyclists On Parkway Bridge, Gothamist, Published 2025-06-07
3
SUV Fails to Yield, Teen Ejected on Atlantic▸Jun 3 - A teen was ejected and injured when an SUV failed to yield on Atlantic Avenue at Flatbush. The crash left the 15-year-old bleeding and in shock. Center front and left bumper damage marked the impact. The street bore the cost.
A crash on Atlantic Avenue at Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn involved a station wagon/SUV and left a 15-year-old male injured and ejected from a vehicle. According to the police report, the SUV was traveling east and struck another vehicle at the center front and left front bumper. The injured teen suffered knee and lower leg injuries and was reported in shock with minor bleeding. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as a contributing factor. Multiple occupants, including a 66-year-old male, were involved but did not report injuries. The crash data also notes 'Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion' as a secondary factor. The impact underscores the danger when drivers fail to yield on busy city streets.
3
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸Jun 3 - Another joins Families for Safe Streets. Another life lost. The toll rises. Grief sharpens the call for change. Streets stay deadly. The city fails to shield its own. The group grows. The danger remains.
On June 3, 2025, Gersh Kuntzman issued an advocacy statement, reported by Streetsblog NYC. The statement reads, 'There's a new member of Families for Safe Streets, which is not good news.' Joe Jankoski, mourning Amanda Servedio, spoke out after her death by a recidivist speeder. The group’s ranks swell with each tragedy. No specific bill or committee is named in this event. Kuntzman’s statement underscores the relentless danger faced by pedestrians and cyclists. The safety analyst notes: the event describes a new member joining an advocacy group, which does not directly affect pedestrian or cyclist safety at the population level. The city’s streets remain perilous. The group’s growth is a grim measure of failure.
-
Tuesday’s Headlines: Stop Super Speeders Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-03
3
Myrie Supports Safety Boosting Brooklyn Subway Capital Plan▸Jun 3 - MTA will untangle the Nostrand Junction choke point in Brooklyn. Trains crawl. Riders stew. The fix promises faster, steadier service. Fewer delays. More trains. Streets breathe easier when subways run strong. The city waits for relief.
On June 3, 2025, the MTA unveiled its 2025-2029 capital plan, targeting the notorious Nostrand Junction subway bottleneck in Central Brooklyn. The plan, announced by MTA Construction & Development president Jamie Torres-Springer and supported by State Sen. Zellnor Myrie, promises to 'finally unclog a notoriously slow-rolling segment of the subway.' The project will keep express and local trains on their tracks, cut delays, and boost throughput from 44 to 60 trains per hour. Myrie said, 'I'm proud the MTA Capital Plan includes funding to finally un-cluster Crown Heights so more New Yorkers can get to work and school on time.' According to safety analysts, improving subway service can shift trips from cars to transit, reducing car traffic and risks for pedestrians and cyclists. The work is overdue. The city watches.
-
MTA To Finally Untangle Notorious Brooklyn Subway Pinch Point,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-03
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for seniors. More elders could ride. Streets may see more slow, unprotected cyclists. Danger from cars remains. Bill sits in committee. No safety fixes for traffic threats.
Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' requires the Department of Transportation to set lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The measure aims to boost senior cycling but does not address street safety or car violence. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes bill for cheaper bike share for New Yorkers over 65. More seniors could ride. The city’s streets may see older cyclists in the mix. The committee now holds the bill.
Bill Int 1288-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced May 28, 2025, and re-referred June 4, it mandates a discounted bike share rate for seniors 65 and older. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.” Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, and Menin. The Department of Transportation would require bike share operators to offer this rate. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
Jun 3 - A teen was ejected and injured when an SUV failed to yield on Atlantic Avenue at Flatbush. The crash left the 15-year-old bleeding and in shock. Center front and left bumper damage marked the impact. The street bore the cost.
A crash on Atlantic Avenue at Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn involved a station wagon/SUV and left a 15-year-old male injured and ejected from a vehicle. According to the police report, the SUV was traveling east and struck another vehicle at the center front and left front bumper. The injured teen suffered knee and lower leg injuries and was reported in shock with minor bleeding. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as a contributing factor. Multiple occupants, including a 66-year-old male, were involved but did not report injuries. The crash data also notes 'Pedestrian/Bicyclist/Other Pedestrian Error/Confusion' as a secondary factor. The impact underscores the danger when drivers fail to yield on busy city streets.
3
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸Jun 3 - Another joins Families for Safe Streets. Another life lost. The toll rises. Grief sharpens the call for change. Streets stay deadly. The city fails to shield its own. The group grows. The danger remains.
On June 3, 2025, Gersh Kuntzman issued an advocacy statement, reported by Streetsblog NYC. The statement reads, 'There's a new member of Families for Safe Streets, which is not good news.' Joe Jankoski, mourning Amanda Servedio, spoke out after her death by a recidivist speeder. The group’s ranks swell with each tragedy. No specific bill or committee is named in this event. Kuntzman’s statement underscores the relentless danger faced by pedestrians and cyclists. The safety analyst notes: the event describes a new member joining an advocacy group, which does not directly affect pedestrian or cyclist safety at the population level. The city’s streets remain perilous. The group’s growth is a grim measure of failure.
-
Tuesday’s Headlines: Stop Super Speeders Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-03
3
Myrie Supports Safety Boosting Brooklyn Subway Capital Plan▸Jun 3 - MTA will untangle the Nostrand Junction choke point in Brooklyn. Trains crawl. Riders stew. The fix promises faster, steadier service. Fewer delays. More trains. Streets breathe easier when subways run strong. The city waits for relief.
On June 3, 2025, the MTA unveiled its 2025-2029 capital plan, targeting the notorious Nostrand Junction subway bottleneck in Central Brooklyn. The plan, announced by MTA Construction & Development president Jamie Torres-Springer and supported by State Sen. Zellnor Myrie, promises to 'finally unclog a notoriously slow-rolling segment of the subway.' The project will keep express and local trains on their tracks, cut delays, and boost throughput from 44 to 60 trains per hour. Myrie said, 'I'm proud the MTA Capital Plan includes funding to finally un-cluster Crown Heights so more New Yorkers can get to work and school on time.' According to safety analysts, improving subway service can shift trips from cars to transit, reducing car traffic and risks for pedestrians and cyclists. The work is overdue. The city watches.
-
MTA To Finally Untangle Notorious Brooklyn Subway Pinch Point,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-03
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for seniors. More elders could ride. Streets may see more slow, unprotected cyclists. Danger from cars remains. Bill sits in committee. No safety fixes for traffic threats.
Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' requires the Department of Transportation to set lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The measure aims to boost senior cycling but does not address street safety or car violence. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes bill for cheaper bike share for New Yorkers over 65. More seniors could ride. The city’s streets may see older cyclists in the mix. The committee now holds the bill.
Bill Int 1288-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced May 28, 2025, and re-referred June 4, it mandates a discounted bike share rate for seniors 65 and older. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.” Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, and Menin. The Department of Transportation would require bike share operators to offer this rate. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
Jun 3 - Another joins Families for Safe Streets. Another life lost. The toll rises. Grief sharpens the call for change. Streets stay deadly. The city fails to shield its own. The group grows. The danger remains.
On June 3, 2025, Gersh Kuntzman issued an advocacy statement, reported by Streetsblog NYC. The statement reads, 'There's a new member of Families for Safe Streets, which is not good news.' Joe Jankoski, mourning Amanda Servedio, spoke out after her death by a recidivist speeder. The group’s ranks swell with each tragedy. No specific bill or committee is named in this event. Kuntzman’s statement underscores the relentless danger faced by pedestrians and cyclists. The safety analyst notes: the event describes a new member joining an advocacy group, which does not directly affect pedestrian or cyclist safety at the population level. The city’s streets remain perilous. The group’s growth is a grim measure of failure.
- Tuesday’s Headlines: Stop Super Speeders Edition, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-06-03
3
Myrie Supports Safety Boosting Brooklyn Subway Capital Plan▸Jun 3 - MTA will untangle the Nostrand Junction choke point in Brooklyn. Trains crawl. Riders stew. The fix promises faster, steadier service. Fewer delays. More trains. Streets breathe easier when subways run strong. The city waits for relief.
On June 3, 2025, the MTA unveiled its 2025-2029 capital plan, targeting the notorious Nostrand Junction subway bottleneck in Central Brooklyn. The plan, announced by MTA Construction & Development president Jamie Torres-Springer and supported by State Sen. Zellnor Myrie, promises to 'finally unclog a notoriously slow-rolling segment of the subway.' The project will keep express and local trains on their tracks, cut delays, and boost throughput from 44 to 60 trains per hour. Myrie said, 'I'm proud the MTA Capital Plan includes funding to finally un-cluster Crown Heights so more New Yorkers can get to work and school on time.' According to safety analysts, improving subway service can shift trips from cars to transit, reducing car traffic and risks for pedestrians and cyclists. The work is overdue. The city watches.
-
MTA To Finally Untangle Notorious Brooklyn Subway Pinch Point,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-03
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for seniors. More elders could ride. Streets may see more slow, unprotected cyclists. Danger from cars remains. Bill sits in committee. No safety fixes for traffic threats.
Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' requires the Department of Transportation to set lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The measure aims to boost senior cycling but does not address street safety or car violence. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes bill for cheaper bike share for New Yorkers over 65. More seniors could ride. The city’s streets may see older cyclists in the mix. The committee now holds the bill.
Bill Int 1288-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced May 28, 2025, and re-referred June 4, it mandates a discounted bike share rate for seniors 65 and older. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.” Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, and Menin. The Department of Transportation would require bike share operators to offer this rate. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
Jun 3 - MTA will untangle the Nostrand Junction choke point in Brooklyn. Trains crawl. Riders stew. The fix promises faster, steadier service. Fewer delays. More trains. Streets breathe easier when subways run strong. The city waits for relief.
On June 3, 2025, the MTA unveiled its 2025-2029 capital plan, targeting the notorious Nostrand Junction subway bottleneck in Central Brooklyn. The plan, announced by MTA Construction & Development president Jamie Torres-Springer and supported by State Sen. Zellnor Myrie, promises to 'finally unclog a notoriously slow-rolling segment of the subway.' The project will keep express and local trains on their tracks, cut delays, and boost throughput from 44 to 60 trains per hour. Myrie said, 'I'm proud the MTA Capital Plan includes funding to finally un-cluster Crown Heights so more New Yorkers can get to work and school on time.' According to safety analysts, improving subway service can shift trips from cars to transit, reducing car traffic and risks for pedestrians and cyclists. The work is overdue. The city watches.
- MTA To Finally Untangle Notorious Brooklyn Subway Pinch Point, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-06-03
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for seniors. More elders could ride. Streets may see more slow, unprotected cyclists. Danger from cars remains. Bill sits in committee. No safety fixes for traffic threats.
Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' requires the Department of Transportation to set lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The measure aims to boost senior cycling but does not address street safety or car violence. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes bill for cheaper bike share for New Yorkers over 65. More seniors could ride. The city’s streets may see older cyclists in the mix. The committee now holds the bill.
Bill Int 1288-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced May 28, 2025, and re-referred June 4, it mandates a discounted bike share rate for seniors 65 and older. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.” Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, and Menin. The Department of Transportation would require bike share operators to offer this rate. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for seniors. More elders could ride. Streets may see more slow, unprotected cyclists. Danger from cars remains. Bill sits in committee. No safety fixes for traffic threats.
Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' requires the Department of Transportation to set lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The measure aims to boost senior cycling but does not address street safety or car violence. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025.
- File Int 1288-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes bill for cheaper bike share for New Yorkers over 65. More seniors could ride. The city’s streets may see older cyclists in the mix. The committee now holds the bill.
Bill Int 1288-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced May 28, 2025, and re-referred June 4, it mandates a discounted bike share rate for seniors 65 and older. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.” Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, and Menin. The Department of Transportation would require bike share operators to offer this rate. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 28 - Council pushes bill for cheaper bike share for New Yorkers over 65. More seniors could ride. The city’s streets may see older cyclists in the mix. The committee now holds the bill.
Bill Int 1288-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced May 28, 2025, and re-referred June 4, it mandates a discounted bike share rate for seniors 65 and older. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.” Council Member Farah N. Louis leads, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, and Menin. The Department of Transportation would require bike share operators to offer this rate. No safety analyst note was provided.
- File Int 1288-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors discounted senior bike share bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 28 - Council bill pushes for discounted bike share rates for New Yorkers 65 and up. The move aims to open city streets to older riders. The measure sits with the Transportation Committee. No safety review yet.
Int 1288-2025 was introduced on May 28, 2025, and referred to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for seniors, defined as those 65 or older. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors.' Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, and Gutiérrez. The bill was re-referred to committee on June 4, 2025. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.
- File Int 1288-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1288-2025
Hanif co-sponsors senior bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
-
File Int 1288-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 28 - Council pushes a bill to cut bike share costs for New Yorkers over 65. The measure aims to open city cycling to more seniors. The committee now weighs its next move.
Bill Int 1288-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for seniors,' would require the Department of Transportation to mandate lower bike share rates for those 65 and older. Council Member Farah N. Louis leads as primary sponsor, joined by Marte, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, Banks, Menin, Feliz, Hanks, Avilés, Gutiérrez, and Restler. The bill was re-referred to committee June 4. The move aims to make cycling more accessible for older New Yorkers.
- File Int 1288-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-05-28
28Int 1287-2025
Hanif co-sponsors student bike share discount bill, boosting street safety.▸May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
-
File Int 1287-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 28 - Council pushes cheaper bike share for students 16 and up. More teens on bikes. Streets shift. Danger remains. The bill sits in committee. Cyclists wait.
Int 1287-2025, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced May 28, 2025. The bill would require the Department of Transportation to set a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older. The matter title reads: "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to a discounted bike share rate for public school students aged 16 or older." Council Member Christopher Marte leads as primary sponsor, joined by Louis, Stevens, Brooks-Powers, Ossé, Restler, Powers, Lee, Nurse, Hanif, Brewer, and Banks. The bill was referred to committee and awaits further action. No safety analysis has been provided.
- File Int 1287-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-05-28
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run▸May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 26 - A driver struck Tiffany Cifuni after a fender-bender in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She was pregnant. The driver dragged her down a one-way street, crashed again, then fled. Cifuni’s family mourns. The street holds the mark of violence and loss.
NY Daily News reported on May 26, 2025, that Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a Chevy Trax rear-ended her on Van Buren St. in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her vehicle to confront the driver, who then ran her over and dragged her down the street. The driver fled, crashing into two more vehicles before abandoning the car. The article quotes Cifuni’s husband: “I lost my whole family tonight.” Surveillance footage captured the confrontation and the fatal impact. The incident highlights the lethal risk of driver aggression and the dangers of hit-and-run crashes. The driver’s decision to flee and drive the wrong way down a one-way street escalated the harm, underscoring systemic failures in street safety and enforcement.
- Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-Run, NY Daily News, Published 2025-05-26
22
Myrie Criticizes Misguided Fifth Avenue Car Lane Priority▸May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
-
Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 22 - City will spend $550 million to remake Fifth Avenue. Cars keep two lanes. Buses lose out. Cyclists get nothing. Sidewalks widen, but most space stays with traffic. Critics say safety for walkers and riders is left behind.
On May 22, 2025, Streetsblog NYC covered the city's announcement of a $550 million redesign for Fifth Avenue. The plan, described as a 'much-compromised redesign,' keeps two car lanes, scraps a bus lane, and offers no space for cyclists. Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called it a 'pedestrian-first corridor,' but critics, including Riders Alliance spokesman Danny Pearlstein, slammed the move as a 'huge corporate giveaway at New Yorkers' expense.' The redesign widens sidewalks and adds planters and seating, but cars still dominate. Council members and advocates oppose the car-first approach. According to safety analysts, the event only mentions the redesign and its cost, without specifying design features or their effects on vulnerable road users; therefore, the safety impact cannot be determined from the information provided.
- Thursday’s Headlines: Car-First Fifth Avenue Edition, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-22
21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Cyclist on Union Street▸May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 21 - SUV cut left on Union Street. Cyclist hit, thrown, leg smashed. Pain, shock, blood on the street. Failure to yield. Brooklyn night, sirens wail.
A 52-year-old woman riding a bike was hit and injured by an SUV making a left turn on Union Street at 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' The cyclist was ejected and suffered injuries to her leg, reporting pain and shock. The SUV driver was licensed in Georgia. No injuries were reported for the SUV occupants. The police report lists no other contributing factors.
21
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill▸May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
-
‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 21 - Senate moves to clamp down on repeat speeders. Bill forces reckless drivers to install speed limiters. Lawmakers act after years of carnage. Streets remain perilous for walkers and riders until the law takes hold.
On May 21, 2025, the Senate Transportation Committee advanced bill S4045B, known as the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure passed with just two 'no' votes out of 13. The bill requires speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more camera-issued speeding tickets in a year. Streetsblog NYC reports, 'A bill that would prevent the most-reckless drivers from speeding easily moved forward on Tuesday.' Senator Andrew Gounardes sponsors the bill, emphasizing it targets the most dangerous drivers. Assembly sponsor Emily Gallagher raised concerns about cost and judicial bias, but stressed that speeding endangers everyone. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins backs the bill's safety focus. According to safety analysts, restricting repeat speeders directly tackles a major threat to pedestrians and cyclists, likely reducing crashes and making streets safer citywide.
- ‘Stop Super Speeders’ Bill Advances in Senate Committee, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-21
20
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick▸May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
-
Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 20 - A car struck Ruari Fay-Handebeaux in a Bushwick crosswalk. The impact hurled him across the intersection. He lay broken—fractured skull, pelvis, ankle. The driver fled. Fay-Handebeaux survived. Police search. The street remains unchanged. Danger lingers.
ABC7 reported on May 20, 2025, that Ruari Fay-Handebeaux, 32, was hit by a car while standing in a crosswalk at Wyckoff Avenue and Himrod Street in Bushwick. Video shows the driver striking Fay-Handebeaux and launching him 10 to 15 feet into the intersection, then fleeing the scene. Fay-Handebeaux suffered a fractured pelvis, broken ankle, skull fractures, and other injuries. As he told ABC7, "Broken ankle, broken humorous, bunch of fractures in my skull." The NYPD continues to search for the driver. The crash highlights the persistent risk faced by pedestrians at city intersections and the ongoing threat posed by hit-and-run drivers. Fay-Handebeaux’s friends called for justice and accountability. The intersection remains unchanged, leaving others exposed to similar danger.
- Hit-And-Run Launches Pedestrian In Bushwick, ABC7, Published 2025-05-20
18
Cyclist Injured by Close Pass on 4th Avenue▸May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 18 - A cyclist riding south on 4th Avenue suffered a fractured arm after a vehicle passed too closely. The crash left the rider in shock and pain. Improper lane use played a role.
A 34-year-old male cyclist was injured on 4th Avenue at 5th Street in Brooklyn. According to the police report, the crash involved a bike and another unspecified vehicle, both traveling south. The cyclist suffered a fractured and dislocated upper arm and was left in shock. The report lists 'Passing Too Closely' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' as contributing factors. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report. No other injuries were reported.
17
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash▸May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
-
Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 17 - A man crossed Fulton Street. A Ford Explorer hit him. The driver sped off. The man died at the hospital. The street stayed quiet. Police searched for the car. The city counted another lost life.
ABC7 reported on May 17, 2025, that a 55-year-old man was killed while crossing Fulton Street at Washington Avenue in Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. According to police, 'a burgundy Ford Explorer with Pennsylvania license plates struck and killed the 55-year-old man.' The driver did not remain at the scene. The crash happened just before 12:30 a.m. The victim was taken to Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The incident highlights the ongoing danger faced by pedestrians and the persistent problem of hit-and-run drivers in New York City.
- Driver Flees After Brooklyn Fatal Crash, ABC7, Published 2025-05-17
16
Gounardes Champions Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill▸May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 16 - Senator Palumbo, once wary, now backs the Stop Super Speeders bill. The measure targets repeat speeders with court-ordered limiters. Twenty-one percent of fatal pedestrian crashes involve such drivers. Speed limiters cut deaths by over a third. Action, not talk.
On May 16, 2025, the New York State Senate debated the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029), which requires speed-limiting devices for drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, aims to curb reckless driving. Initially, Sen. Anthony Palumbo (R-Suffolk) opposed the measure, citing concerns about government overreach and enforcement. He compared it to ignition locks for drunk drivers, which he supports. After discussion with Gounardes, Palumbo shifted, supporting the bill if it meets its goal. The bill’s summary states it targets repeat speeders with court orders and misdemeanor charges for non-compliance. Data shows 21 percent of fatal pedestrian crashes in NYC involve vehicles with six or more camera tickets in the prior year. Speed limiters have been shown to reduce traffic deaths by 37 percent. Palumbo now signals willingness to take strong action against reckless drivers.
- How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-16
16
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter for Repeat Offenders▸May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
-
How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 16 - State Sen. Palumbo, once wary of government reach, now supports speed-limiting devices for repeat speeders. The bill targets drivers with six or more violations. Debate follows a fatal crash. Lawmakers clash, then unite. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
On May 16, 2025, State Sen. Anthony Palumbo, Republican from Suffolk, changed course on the Stop Super Speeders bill (S4045/A2029). The bill, sponsored by Sen. Andrew Gounardes, would require speed-limiting devices in cars of drivers with six or more speed-camera violations in a year. Palumbo first called the measure 'government overreach,' preferring license suspensions. After debate and a detailed comparison to ignition locks for drunk drivers, Palumbo agreed to support the bill if it meets its goal. Gounardes explained, 'We mimicked the ignition lock process and procedure.' The bill gained momentum after a deadly crash. According to the safety analyst, the event text does not describe a specific policy or legislative action affecting pedestrians or cyclists, so no safety impact can be determined.
- How One Anti-Gov’t Republican Signed onto a Street Safety Bill to Rein in Reckless Drivers, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-16
15
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
-
Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
NY Daily News,
Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 15 - Larry Maxwell crossed Sutter Avenue. A fleeing driver struck him. Maxwell fell hard. His son ran to his side. Paramedics rushed him to Brookdale Hospital. Maxwell died. The driver vanished. Cameras watched. No arrest. Family left with grief.
NY Daily News reported on May 15, 2025, that Larry Maxwell, 72, was killed by a hit-and-run driver while crossing Sutter Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Maxwell was heading to a family cookout when a driver, fleeing another crash, struck him and left the scene. The article quotes Maxwell’s son, Larnce Vargas: “There are so many cameras. So why is he still at large?” Despite surveillance in the area, the driver remains unidentified. The incident highlights gaps in enforcement and the persistent danger for pedestrians, even near their homes. The crash underscores the lethal risk posed by drivers who flee collisions and the limits of current city surveillance and response.
- Elderly Man Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run, NY Daily News, Published 2025-05-15
13
Improper Lane Use Injures Brooklyn Car Occupants▸May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.
May 13 - Sedan and box truck collided on 4th Avenue. Two people hurt. Police cite improper lane use and driver distraction. Metal twisted. Pain followed.
A sedan and a box truck crashed on 4th Avenue at 6th Street in Brooklyn. Two occupants suffered injuries: a 29-year-old woman with back pain and a 28-year-old man with neck whiplash. According to the police report, both vehicles were cited for 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Driver Inattention/Distraction.' The impact struck the front quarter panels of both vehicles. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash left passengers and drivers shaken and hurt. Helmet or signal use was not listed as a factor.