Crash Count for Kingsbridge-Marble Hill
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 936
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 502
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 129
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 11
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 5
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025
Carnage in Kingsbridge-Marble Hill
Killed 5
Crush Injuries 2
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Head 1
Whole body 1
Severe Bleeding 3
Head 2
Face 1
Severe Lacerations 3
Head 2
Face 1
Concussion 4
Head 3
Back 1
Whiplash 18
Neck 8
+3
Head 5
Back 4
Abdomen/pelvis 2
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Whole body 1
Contusion/Bruise 18
Lower leg/foot 5
Head 3
Whole body 3
Abdomen/pelvis 2
Lower arm/hand 2
Back 1
Face 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Abrasion 16
Lower leg/foot 7
+2
Lower arm/hand 4
Head 3
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Face 1
Whole body 1
Pain/Nausea 7
Neck 3
Back 2
Lower arm/hand 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Kingsbridge-Marble Hill?

Preventable Speeding in Kingsbridge-Marble Hill School Zones

(since 2022)

No More Excuses: Demand Safe Streets Before Another Life Is Lost

Kingsbridge-Marble Hill: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 4, 2025

Blood on the Crosswalks

A man steps off the curb. An SUV turns left. The man does not make it home. In Kingsbridge-Marble Hill, the story repeats. In the last twelve months, one person died and six were seriously injured on these streets. 125 people were hurt. The numbers do not flinch. They do not care if you are young or old. In the last three years, five people have died. Eight suffered serious injuries. The wounds do not heal. The dead do not return.

Who Pays the Price

SUVs and trucks do the most damage. In this region, SUVs killed two people and caused four serious injuries. Trucks killed one. Cars and sedans left more bodies broken. Buses, mopeds, bikes—they all played their part. But the weight of steel falls hardest from above. Pedestrians at intersections, children in crosswalks, elders with nowhere to run. The street does not forgive.

Leadership: Action or Excuse?

The city talks of Vision Zero. The state passed Sammy’s Law. The power to lower speed limits is here. But in Kingsbridge-Marble Hill, the silence is thick. No bold new protections. No flood of safe crossings. No rush to harden bike lanes or slow the traffic that kills. The numbers do not rise. The leaders wait. The blood dries on the asphalt.

What Comes Next

This is not fate. These are not accidents. Every crash is a choice—by a driver, by a planner, by a politician who looks away. The city can lower the speed limit to 20 mph. The council can demand more cameras, more daylight, more concrete between people and cars. But nothing changes unless you demand it.

Call your council member. Call the mayor. Demand safer speeds, more cameras, real protection for people who walk and bike.

Do not wait for another name on the list. The street will not wait for you.

Citations

Citations
  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4496246 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-06-04

Other Representatives

Jeffrey Dinowitz
Assembly Member Jeffrey Dinowitz
District 81
District Office:
3107 Kingsbridge Ave., Bronx, NY 10463
Legislative Office:
Room 632, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Eric Dinowitz
Council Member Eric Dinowitz
District 11
District Office:
277 West 231st Street, Bronx, NY 10463
718-549-7300
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1775, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7080
Twitter: @ericdinowitz
Robert Jackson
State Senator Robert Jackson
District 31
District Office:
5030 Broadway Suite 701, New York, NY 10034
Legislative Office:
Room 306, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies

Kingsbridge-Marble Hill Kingsbridge-Marble Hill sits in Bronx, Precinct 50, District 11, AD 81, SD 31, Bronx CB8.

See also
City Council Districts
Community Boards
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Kingsbridge-Marble Hill

8
S 131 Jackson co-sponsors bill to consider, not require, complete street design.

Jan 8 - Senate bill S 131 demands complete street design for state-funded projects. Sponsors push for safer roads. Guidance will go public. Streets could change. Pedestrians and cyclists stand to gain.

Senate bill S 131 was introduced on January 8, 2025, now in the sponsorship stage. The bill, titled 'Requires the consideration of complete street design for certain transportation projects which receive federal or state funding,' aims to force safer street planning. Primary sponsor Sean Ryan leads, joined by co-sponsors Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, Samra Brouk, Cordell Cleare, Leroy Comrie, Jeremy Cooney, Nathalia Fernandez, Michael Gianaris, Kristen Gonzalez, Robert Jackson, Rachel May, Kevin S. Parker, Christopher Ryan, and Luis R. Sepúlveda. The bill also orders the department to publish guidance on street design. No safety analyst note was provided.


26
Multi-Vehicle Crash on Major Deegan Expressway

Dec 26 - Two drivers suffered injuries in a southbound collision involving a sedan and an SUV on the Major Deegan Expressway. The crash, marked by rear-end impacts and lane changes, left both men in shock with serious arm and back injuries.

According to the police report, the crash occurred at 17:30 on the Major Deegan Expressway involving multiple vehicles traveling south. One sedan was changing lanes while another sedan and an SUV were going straight ahead. The point of impact included the center front end of the lane-changing sedan and the center back ends of the other vehicles. Driver errors cited include 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' by the driver of the lane-changing sedan. Both drivers were injured: a 56-year-old man suffered back injuries and internal complaints, and a 32-year-old man sustained injuries to his elbow, lower arm, and hand. Both were reported to be in shock. Neither occupant was ejected, and safety equipment use was noted for one driver as a harness. The report explicitly identifies driver inattention and failure to yield as contributing factors, focusing on driver errors without attributing fault to the victims.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4781742 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
26
Taxi Jumps Curb, Hits Midtown Pedestrians

Dec 26 - A taxi veered off Sixth Avenue, mounted the curb, and struck a crowd near Herald Square. Three pedestrians, including a child, landed in the hospital. The driver stayed at the scene. Metal, flesh, and concrete met in Midtown’s holiday rush.

Gothamist (2024-12-26) reports a Midtown crash where a taxi driver, experiencing a medical episode, drove onto the sidewalk at Sixth Avenue and West 34th Street, injuring a 9-year-old boy and two women. Police said, 'they did not suspect any criminality in the crash.' The driver, 58, remained at the scene and was taken for evaluation. Four others declined medical attention. The article notes, 'the driver was driving northbound on Sixth Avenue around 3 p.m. on Wednesday when he jumped the curb and plowed into a crowd.' The incident highlights the persistent risk posed by vehicles in crowded pedestrian zones, regardless of intent or driver health. No policy changes were announced.


25
Ydanis A Rodriguez Supports Safety Boosting Livable Streets Movement

Dec 25 - On Christmas, Streetsblog and Streetfilms released a film showing the year’s wins for livable streets. The montage honors advocates and city leaders. It marks progress for safer roads. The message is clear: change is possible. The fight for safer streets continues.

This advocacy piece, published December 25, 2024, by Streetsblog NYC, is not a council bill but a year-end reflection on the livable streets movement. The article, titled 'On Christmas, Let’s Consider the Successes of the Livable Streets Movement,' features a short film by Clarence Eckerson Jr. and highlights the work of groups like OpenPlans, Streetfilms, and StreetsblogNYC. Mayor Adams, Zohran Mamdani, Vickie Paladino, Ydanis Rodriguez, and Governor Kathy Hochul are named as figures in the year’s news. The film and article celebrate progress in street safety and sustainable transportation, showing that advocacy can bring real change for vulnerable road users. No direct safety analyst note is included, but the message is one of hope and continued struggle for safer streets.


23
NYPD Officer Veers Into Dirt Biker’s Path

Dec 23 - A police car crossed the line. Metal struck flesh. Samuel Williams, riding his dirt bike, was thrown and killed. Body cam footage shows the officer’s move. Another NYPD car tried the same. The city sent Williams’ family a bill.

NY Daily News (2024-12-23) reports that NYPD body camera footage shows an officer veering into the path of Samuel Williams, a 36-year-old dirt bike rider, during a pursuit on the University Heights Bridge. Williams was struck, thrown, and died from his injuries. The article states, “An officer pursuing dirt bikers suddenly crossed the double yellow line into Williams' path, causing a collision.” Another NYPD vehicle attempted a similar maneuver. The family’s attorney called it a “deadly maneuver” for a minor violation. The city later billed Williams’ family for police vehicle damages. The NYPD has not commented, citing litigation. The case raises questions about police pursuit tactics and accountability.


22
Sedan Hits Pedestrian Crossing With Signal

Dec 22 - A sedan failed to yield and struck a 24-year-old man crossing Broadway with the signal. The man suffered head injuries and shock. The car showed no damage. The street did not forgive the pedestrian.

According to the police report, a 24-year-old male pedestrian was crossing Broadway at W 233 St with the signal when a northbound sedan failed to yield and struck him. The pedestrian suffered head injuries, minor bleeding, and shock. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the contributing factor. The vehicle, a 2023 Acura sedan, showed no damage at the point of impact. No pedestrian fault is mentioned. This crash shows the danger when drivers do not yield to people lawfully crossing at intersections.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4781008 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
19
Int 1154-2024 De La Rosa co-sponsors bill to boost street safety with high-visibility markings.

Dec 19 - Council moves to test bold pavement markings at crash sites. Five spots per borough. Focus: places where drivers have killed or maimed. Report to follow. Streets marked for danger.

Int 1154-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced December 19, 2024. The bill orders a pilot for high visibility pavement markings—at least five locations per borough. The city must target streets with high injury or fatality counts from bad driving. The matter title reads: 'establishing a high visibility pavement marking pilot program.' Council Member Yusef Salaam leads, joined by Menin, De La Rosa, Brooks-Powers, Cabán, Brannan, and Hanif. The law demands a report on results and challenges. The aim: mark danger, force drivers to see, and push the city to act where blood has already been spilled.


17
Rodriguez Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Blvd Road Diet

Dec 17 - A corruption probe toppled Ingrid Lewis-Martin, City Hall’s top aide and a key road safety foe. Her resistance stalled the McGuinness Blvd. redesign, leaving pedestrians and cyclists at risk. Only after investigators seized phones did the city revive its safety plan.

This story centers on the McGuinness Boulevard safety redesign, a project to protect pedestrians and cyclists on a deadly Brooklyn street. No council bill number applies, but the saga unfolded across 2023 and 2024, with City Hall’s powerful aide Ingrid Lewis-Martin at the center. The matter: 'What role did a single bike lane play in Ingrid Lewis-Martin's undoing?' Lewis-Martin, Mayor Adams’s closest advisor, fought the road diet and bike lane, siding with Broadway Stages and its CEO Gina Argento, who opposed the plan. Under their pressure, Adams abandoned the Department of Transportation’s safety design. After both women’s phones were seized in a corruption probe, City Hall reversed course and advanced the safety project. The episode exposes how political interference delayed life-saving street changes, leaving vulnerable road users exposed to ongoing danger.


15
Rodriguez Supports Safety Measures Targeting Delivery Apps

Dec 15 - Gale Brewer backs tougher rules for delivery apps, not blanket e-bike crackdowns. She calls for speed limits, tracking, and safer batteries. Brewer rejects citywide licensing, focusing on big companies. Pedestrians stay at risk while apps dodge responsibility.

On December 15, 2024, Council Member Gale A. Brewer (District 6) took a public stance in an editorial titled, "NYC must curb the e-bikes: Regulations should be on the delivery apps." Brewer opposes citywide licensing and registration of all e-bikes, a measure supported by Councilman Bob Holden, calling it impractical. Instead, she urges the City Council to target commercial e-bike use by requiring delivery giants like Uber Eats, DoorDash, Grubhub, and Amazon to track their contractors’ speed, direction, and sidewalk riding, and report violations to city regulators. Brewer also proposes a 15 mph speed limit for e-bikes and mandates running lights for visibility. She highlights the danger of unsafe lithium-ion batteries and calls for stricter oversight. Brewer’s approach shifts responsibility from individual riders to the corporations profiting from delivery, aiming to protect the city’s 8 million pedestrians from reckless riding and battery fires.


12
Rodriguez Opposes Misguided E-Bike Registration Bill

Dec 12 - Two council members withdrew support for Intro 606 after a fierce hearing. Critics warned the bill would harm immigrants and delivery workers. DOT found no proof it would make streets safer. The bill still has 29 co-sponsors. Debate rages on.

Intro 606, a New York City Council bill requiring e-bike registration, lost support from Council Members Chi Ossé and Yusef Salaam after a divisive December 12, 2024 hearing in committee. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to requiring registration of certain bicycles with electric assist,' drew sharp criticism. Ossé cited fears of increased police enforcement and harm to immigrant communities: 'The hearing demonstrated concerns about the bill to be right: Beyond its sweeping consequences for green transit and healthy urbanism, Intro 606 could spell disaster for immigrant communities.' DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez opposed the bill, stating it would burden delivery workers and lacks evidence for improving safety. Civil rights groups warned of racial bias and criminalization. Despite withdrawals, 29 council members still co-sponsor the bill. Another measure, Intro 1131, proposing a task force to study e-bikes, received broad support.


11
Rodriguez Opposes Misguided E‑Bike Registration Supports Safety Redesign

Dec 11 - DOT Commissioner Rodriguez shot down the Council’s e-bike registration bill. He said enforcement tools already exist. He pointed to street redesigns that save lives. Council Member Holden pressed for plates. Rodriguez stood firm: cars, not e-bikes, drive the city’s blood toll.

On December 11, 2024, the City Council held a hearing on Intro 606, a bill to require registration and license plates for e-bikes and e-scooters. The bill, sponsored by Council Member Robert Holden, claims to address a 'public safety crisis.' DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez opposed the measure, stating, 'The administration already has the tools to enforce against illegal [cycling] behaviors; a license plate is not necessary for enforcement.' Rodriguez cited data: 105 pedestrians killed by cars this year, versus six by e-bikes, mopeds, and scooters combined. He argued that street redesigns, not new bureaucracy, cut deaths and injuries. Public Advocate Jumaane Williams echoed this, noting that registration backers often resist proven safety fixes like protected bike lanes. Rodriguez warned the bill would waste $19 million and slow adoption of sustainable transport. He called for holding delivery apps accountable and redesigning streets, not targeting vulnerable road users.


11
Rodriguez Supports Intent But Opposes Licensing Mandate

Dec 11 - Council grilled the Adams administration over a bill to license e-bikes and scooters. Supporters called it common sense. Critics warned it targets delivery workers. Tension ran high. Most deaths still come from cars, not bikes. The fight is far from over.

On December 11, 2024, the City Council held a hearing on a bill to require city-level licensing and registration for e-bikes and e-scooters not covered by state law. The bill, sponsored by Councilmember Bob Holden, claims to address 'the proliferation of these vehicles' and their impact on pedestrian and cyclist safety. Councilmember Vickie Paladino, District 19, insisted, 'This is a safety issue.' Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez countered, 'We agree with the intent, but we believe that mandating registration and licensing is not a solution.' Public Advocate Jumaane Williams warned the bill would 'have a disparate impact on low-income individuals, people of color, and undocumented migrants.' A separate resolution from Councilmember Gale Brewer supports licensing only for commercial e-bikes. The hearing exposed deep rifts over enforcement, equity, and the real sources of street danger.


5
Int 1138-2024 De La Rosa co-sponsors bill to ban parking near crosswalks, boosting street safety.

Dec 5 - Council bill bars cars from blocking crosswalks. No standing or parking within 20 feet. City must install daylighting barriers at 1,000 intersections yearly. Streets clear. Sightlines open. Danger cut.

Int 1138-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced December 5, 2024. The bill states: “prohibiting standing or parking a vehicle within 20 feet of a crosswalk at an intersection.” Council Member Erik D. Bottcher leads, joined by Public Advocate Jumaane Williams and over two dozen co-sponsors. The law orders the Department of Transportation to install daylighting barriers at a minimum of 1,000 intersections each year, up from 100. The city must also run outreach and education. The bill aims to keep crosswalks clear, improve visibility, and protect people on foot and bike. No more hiding behind parked cars. The committee laid the bill over on April 21, 2025.


4
Rodriguez Defends Misguided Bus Lane Expansion Shortfall

Dec 4 - DOT built just 5.3 miles of new bus lanes in 2024. The law demands 30. Commissioner Rodriguez called it a great job. Critics slammed the city for falling short. Riders wait. Streets stay clogged. Vulnerable New Yorkers pay the price.

On December 4, 2024, DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez defended the agency’s bus lane record before critics. The Streets Master Plan requires 30 new miles of bus lanes each year. In 2024, DOT delivered only 5.3 miles—just 17 percent of the legal mandate. Rodriguez claimed, “We are doing a great job,” citing national comparisons and blaming delays on community board processes and local opposition, especially around the 96th Street project. State Sen. Jessica Ramos, Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani, and State Sen. Zellnor Myrie condemned the city’s self-praise and legal failure. The matter title reads: ‘We Are Doing A Great Job’ … Falling Short of Bus Lane Requirement. Several projects are planned for 2025, but completion is uncertain. The city’s slow pace leaves bus riders and other vulnerable road users exposed to dangerous, congested streets.


27
Sedan Left Turn Hits Sedan Going Straight

Nov 27 - A left-turning sedan struck a sedan traveling straight on Van Cortlandt Park South in the Bronx. The left-turn driver suffered back injuries and whiplash. Police cited driver inattention and inexperience as causes. Both drivers were male and licensed.

According to the police report, at 12:08 on Van Cortlandt Park South near Putnam Ave W in the Bronx, a 27-year-old male driver in a 1999 Toyota sedan was making a left turn when his vehicle's right side doors were struck by a 2022 Dodge sedan traveling straight eastbound. The impact occurred on the left-turning vehicle's right side and the straight-moving vehicle's front center. The left-turn driver, who was wearing a lap belt and conscious, sustained back injuries and complained of whiplash. The report identifies 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Driver Inexperience' as contributing factors for the left-turn driver. Both drivers were licensed, with the left-turn driver licensed in New Jersey and the other in New York. The collision highlights the dangers posed by distracted and inexperienced drivers during turning maneuvers.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4775197 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
25
Rodriguez Supports Safety Boosting E Bike Charging Expansion

Nov 25 - DOT’s e-bike charging pilot slashed risky home charging for delivery workers. Battery swaps doubled. Fewer spare batteries on the street. City eyes 173 new hubs near public housing. Federal money fuels the push. Officials hail safety gains. Expansion looms.

On November 25, 2024, the Department of Transportation announced results from its e-bike charging pilot. The program, launched in March, ran for six months and involved 118 delivery workers. According to DOT, 'the pilot illustrated the strong demand for safe and accessible outdoor e-bike charging.' Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez stated, 'Safer charging practices are integral to a cleaner and more sustainable future.' The pilot cut home charging by 35% and halved spare battery use. DOT will expand the program with 173 new charging hubs near 53 NYCHA complexes, funded by a $25 million federal grant. The next phase will open facilities to NYCHA residents and the public, aiming for up to 1,000 battery-swap stations in two years. Activists and company leaders praised the safety improvements for delivery workers.


21
SUV Turns Left, Strikes Pedestrian Crossing With Signal

Nov 21 - A 24-year-old woman crossed Corlear Avenue with the signal. An SUV turned left, its bumper smashing her head. She fell. Blood pooled. She did not move. The street stayed quiet. The SUV showed no damage. The city’s silence deepened.

A 24-year-old woman was struck while crossing Corlear Avenue at West 230th Street in the Bronx. According to the police report, she was crossing with the signal when a 2022 SUV, driven by a licensed driver, made a left turn and hit her with the left front bumper. The impact caused head injuries and apparent death at the scene. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as the primary contributing factor. The narrative notes, 'The bumper struck her head. She fell. Blood pooled. She did not move.' The SUV sustained no visible damage. The victim’s action—crossing with the signal—is documented in the report, but the focus remains on the driver’s failure to yield. The crash unfolded in a moment, leaving the street quiet and the danger of left turns unmitigated.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4774091 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
20
SUV Overturns, Passenger Injured on Expressway

Nov 20 - SUV flipped on Major Deegan. Roof crushed. Front passenger hurt—back injury, bleeding, shock. Police cite vehicle-related driver error. No pedestrians or cyclists involved.

According to the police report, a 2006 Nissan SUV traveling southbound on the Major Deegan Expressway overturned, crushing its roof. The front passenger, a 46-year-old man, suffered back injuries, minor bleeding, and shock. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor, pointing to driver-related errors or vehicle conditions. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The passenger wore a lap belt and was not ejected. The crash highlights the danger of vehicle control failures on high-speed city roads.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4774096 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
20
Rodriguez Supports Safety Boosting Protected Bike Lanes Plan

Nov 20 - Central Park Conservancy urges protected bike lanes on all crosstown transverses. The study calls for fewer car lanes, more space for cyclists, and safer crossings. Advocates cite deadly crashes. City DOT backs the plan. Safety for walkers and riders comes first.

""These recommendations will update the park's drives to prioritize pedestrian safety while also better accommodating cyclists and legal e-mobility options both traveling within the park or through it across Manhattan,"" -- Ydanis A. Rodriguez

On November 20, 2024, the Central Park Conservancy released a study proposing protected bike lanes on the park’s four crosstown transverses—66th, 79th, 86th, and 96th Streets—starting with both directions on 86th. The study, endorsed by the Conservancy and supported by the Department of Transportation, recommends reducing vehicle lanes to expand space for cyclists. The matter title reads: "Central Park Study Calls for Bike Lanes on the Transverses." The report also suggests a two-way protected lane on Fifth Avenue, converting Central Park West’s lane to two-way, and adding protected crosstown lanes on 59th and 110th. Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez said, "These recommendations will update the park's drives to prioritize pedestrian safety while also better accommodating cyclists and legal e-mobility options." Advocates and city officials point to past deaths, like Daniel Cammerman’s in 2019, as evidence of urgent need. The plan aims to shield the most vulnerable from harm.


13
Rodriguez Praises Safety Boosting Queens Boulevard Redesign

Nov 13 - Queens Boulevard, once the Boulevard of Death, now boasts protected bike lanes and safer crossings. Pedestrian injuries dropped 35 percent. Traffic deaths fell 68 percent. Cyclists fill the lanes. Concrete upgrades loom, but mountable curbs may let cars intrude.

On November 13, 2024, the Department of Transportation celebrated a decade of safety improvements on Queens Boulevard. The event marked the completion of protected bike lanes along nearly the entire corridor, except for one block. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez said, "Several elements of this redesign aim at enhancing safety for all road users: Curbside bike lanes to enhance cyclist safety, pedestrian islands to shorten crossing distances while encouraging slower, safe turns, and additional adjustments to traffic signal timing to allow more time for pedestrians to cross before the lights turn green." The project, begun in 2015 under Mayor Bill de Blasio, faced local opposition and political delays but persisted. The city reports a 68 percent drop in traffic fatalities and a 35 percent reduction in pedestrian injuries since the redesign began. Cyclist numbers surged by 450 percent. DOT plans to upgrade bike lanes with concrete, but mountable curbs could leave lanes exposed to cars. Families for Safe Streets activist Lizi Rahman called the redesign a model for dangerous roads everywhere.