Crash Count for Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 1,428
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 828
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 200
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 4
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 5
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025
Carnage in Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills
Killed 5
Crush Injuries 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Severe Bleeding 1
Head 1
Severe Lacerations 1
Whole body 1
Concussion 8
Head 6
+1
Back 1
Whole body 1
Whiplash 18
Back 5
Neck 5
Head 4
Whole body 2
Chest 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Contusion/Bruise 35
Lower leg/foot 13
+8
Head 7
+2
Lower arm/hand 6
+1
Back 3
Hip/upper leg 3
Abdomen/pelvis 2
Neck 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Whole body 1
Abrasion 32
Lower leg/foot 13
+8
Face 5
Lower arm/hand 5
Head 4
Shoulder/upper arm 4
Whole body 2
Pain/Nausea 15
Neck 4
Lower leg/foot 3
Shoulder/upper arm 3
Whole body 3
Back 2
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Chest 1
Head 1
Hip/upper leg 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills?

Preventable Speeding in Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills School Zones

(since 2022)
Right turn, crosswalk, death at 30th Street

Right turn, crosswalk, death at 30th Street

Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills: Jan 1, 2022 - Sep 5, 2025

Just before 1 PM on Aug 31, at 30 St and 39 Ave, a 38‑year‑old woman in a marked crosswalk was hit by a right‑turning SUV. Police coded the cause as failure to yield. She died (NYC Open Data).

This Week

  • Aug 25: At Queens Plaza N and 21 St, a pedestrian crossing with the signal was struck. The driver disregarded traffic control and failed to yield, police records say (NYC Open Data).
  • Aug 8: A pedestrian was injured by a sedan; police cited driver distraction and limited view (NYC Open Data).
  • July 16: A 22‑year‑old on a bike was hit by an SUV and ejected (NYC Open Data).

They were one of 5 people killed on the streets of Queensbridge–Ravenswood–Dutch Kills since 2022, alongside 657 injuries in 1,135 crashes (NYC Open Data). Year to date, this area has 219 crashes, 1 death, and 140 injuries, little changed from the same period last year (224, 1, 149) (NYC Open Data).

Hylan at Bay it is not. But this corner bleeds all the same.

Street corners that don’t forgive

  • 21 St is a hotspot, with 25 injuries and 2 serious injuries logged at one location alone (NYC Open Data).
  • Deaths are recorded at 40 Avenue, 34 Avenue, and 30 St in this small map square (NYC Open Data).

Failure to yield keeps showing up. The Aug 31 death: failure to yield on a right turn in a marked crosswalk. The Aug 25 injury at Queens Plaza N: a pedestrian crossing with the signal, struck by a driver who ignored traffic control and failed to yield (NYC Open Data).

The hours we break people

Crashes pile up in the day’s crush. Injuries peak about 2 PM with 49 cases, and stay high through the evening rush — 45 around 5 PM (NYC Open Data). Night brings its own hurt, with serious injuries logged around 9 PM and 10 PM. The clock does not spare anyone.

“We need universal daylighting.”

That’s what Council Member Julie Won said: “Universal daylighting and hardening at intersections will keep all New Yorkers safe whether they are driving, walking or biking” (AMNY). She has pushed a bill to clear parking at crosswalks citywide, a measure her caucus pressed this summer (City & State NY).

On our blocks, the need is plain. A woman in a crosswalk. A right turn. A body left still.

Who is moving the levers

  • State Senator Kristen Gonzalez co‑sponsors the bill to require speed limiters for repeat violators and voted yes in committee (Open States). She also voted yes to extend school speed‑zone protections (Open States).
  • Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani was excused on a key school speed‑zone vote this June, according to the record (Open States).
  • Council Member Julie Won is on the record backing universal daylighting to clear sight lines at corners (AMNY; City & State NY).

What will stop the next right turn

  • Clear the corners: pass universal daylighting to remove parking at crosswalks and harden turns on 21 St, 39 Ave, 34 Ave, and 40 Ave — the sites with the worst harm in this area (NYC Open Data; AMNY).
  • Give people a head start: deploy leading pedestrian intervals and no‑turn‑on‑red at the 21 St and Queens Plaza N junction and other high‑injury corners identified above (targets from NYC Open Data).
  • Curb the worst drivers: move the Senate’s speed‑limiter bill, S 4045, and keep school‑zone protections in force, S 8344.

Citywide, slower speeds and fewer blind corners save lives. The woman at 30 St never got a second chance.

Take one step now. Tell City Hall and Albany to act. Start here.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened at 30 St and 39 Ave on Aug 31?
Police records show a right‑turning SUV hit a 38‑year‑old woman in a marked crosswalk just before 1 PM. The listed cause was failure to yield. She died. Source: NYC Open Data crash records.
How bad is traffic violence in Queensbridge–Ravenswood–Dutch Kills?
From 2022‑01‑01 to 2025‑09‑05, there were 1,135 crashes, 5 deaths, and 657 injuries recorded in this area. Source: NYC Open Data (Motor Vehicle Collisions).
Where are the worst local danger spots?
21 St is a hotspot with 25 injuries and 2 serious injuries at one location. Deaths are also recorded at 40 Ave, 34 Ave, and 30 St. Source: NYC Open Data small‑area rollups.
Who represents this area and what have they done?
Council Member Julie Won backs universal daylighting. State Sen. Kristen Gonzalez co‑sponsors the speed‑limiter bill S 4045 and voted yes, and voted yes on S 8344 for school speed zones. Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani was excused on the June 17 S 8344 vote. Sources: AMNY; City & State NY; Open States.
How were these numbers calculated?
We used NYC Open Data’s Motor Vehicle Collisions datasets (Crashes h9gi‑nx95, Persons f55k‑p6yu, Vehicles bm4k‑52h4), filtered for the Queensbridge–Ravenswood–Dutch Kills area from 2022‑01‑01 to 2025‑09‑05. We counted total crashes, people injured, and people killed, and noted contributing factors and locations as coded by NYPD. Data accessed Sep 5, 2025. Explore the source datasets here.
What is CrashCount?
We’re a tool for helping hold local politicians and other actors accountable for their failure to protect you when you’re walking or cycling in NYC. We update our site constantly to provide you with up to date information on what’s happening in your neighborhood.

Citations

Citations

Other Representatives

Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani

District 36

Council Member Julie Won

District 26

State Senator Kristen Gonzalez

District 59

Other Geographies

Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills sits in Queens, Precinct 114, District 26, AD 36, SD 59, Queens CB1.

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

Traffic Safety Timeline for Queensbridge-Ravenswood-Dutch Kills

28
Int 0173-2024 Won co-sponsors bill creating parking permit enforcement, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council moves to create a parking permit enforcement unit. The bill targets city-issued permit misuse. Streets clogged by illegal parking put walkers and riders at risk. Action now sits with the transportation committee.

Int 0173-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the establishment of a parking permit enforcement unit within the department of transportation," would require DOT to form a unit dedicated to enforcing laws against misuse of city-issued parking permits. Council Member Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by Amanda Farías, Erik D. Bottcher, Julie Won, Rita C. Joseph, Crystal Hudson, and Farah N. Louis. The bill aims to curb illegal parking that endangers pedestrians and cyclists. It awaits further action in committee.


28
Int 0346-2024 Won co-sponsors bill easing jaywalking rules, boosting pedestrian safety.

Feb 28 - Council ends jaywalking penalties. Pedestrians win the right to cross anywhere, signals or not. The law strips police of power to ticket walkers. Streets shift. The city must now teach all road users the new rules.

Int 0346-2024, now enacted, amends city code to let pedestrians cross streets at any point, even against signals. The Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure passed it on October 26, 2024. The bill states: 'crossing against a traffic signal or outside a crosswalk will not be a violation.' Council Member Tiffany Cabán led, joined by Narcisse, Won, Hanif, Hudson, Restler, Mealy, Louis, and Bottcher. The law bans summonses for jaywalking and orders the Department of Transportation to educate the public on new rights and responsibilities. The mayor returned it unsigned. This law removes a tool long used to target vulnerable New Yorkers.


28
Int 0270-2024 Won co-sponsors bill expanding Open Streets, boosting pedestrian and cyclist safety.

Feb 28 - Council moves to expand Open Streets on busy holidays. More hours. More car-free blocks. Pedestrians and cyclists get space when crowds surge. Streets shift from traffic to people. Danger drops. The city listens to neighborhoods.

Bill Int 0270-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it amends city code to require the Department of Transportation to expand Open Streets hours on holidays with heavy foot traffic—Memorial Day, Juneteenth, July 4th, Labor Day, Halloween, and others. The bill reads: 'special activation of the Open Streets program on certain holidays and time periods with significant pedestrian traffic.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads as primary sponsor, joined by Rivera, Brooks-Powers, Louis, Nurse, Ossé, Sanchez, Cabán, Banks, Avilés, Riley, Salaam, Hanif, Feliz, Won, Restler, and Joseph. Community groups can suggest more dates. The city must review all requests under the same standards as regular Open Streets. This bill aims to give people the street when they need it most.


28
Int 0255-2024 Won co-sponsors bill increasing transparency on police vehicle force incidents.

Feb 28 - Council bill demands NYPD track every time cops use cars as weapons. No more hiding behind vague stats. Each crash, each injury, must be counted. The city moves closer to truth.

Int 0255-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety. Introduced February 28, 2024, by Council Member Lincoln Restler and co-sponsored by Hudson, Won, Hanif, Bottcher, Brewer, Avilés, Abreu, Ossé, Krishnan, Williams, Cabán, Nurse, Sanchez, and at the Brooklyn Borough President's request. The bill reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code... in relation to use of force incidents involving police department use of a motor vehicle.' It forces the NYPD to report every use of a car to control a subject. No more lumping these acts with other force. The bill aims for hard numbers and real accountability. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—will no longer be invisible in police data.


28
Int 0114-2024 Won co-sponsors bill requiring DOT to study commercial vehicle street design.

Feb 28 - Council wants DOT to study how street design can keep commercial trucks out of residential blocks. The bill sits in committee. Streets should shelter people, not heavy traffic.

Int 0114-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to report on 'the utility and feasibility of using street design as a means to limit or reduce the use by commercial vehicles of streets in residential neighborhoods.' Jennifer Gutiérrez leads as primary sponsor, joined by Avilés, the Public Advocate, and others. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It demands a clear look at how design can push trucks off streets where people walk, bike, and live.


28
Int 0271-2024 Won co-sponsors bill speeding up protected bike lanes, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council wants 100 miles of protected bike lanes each year. Cyclists need steel and concrete, not paint. The bill sits in committee. Streets could change. Lives hang in the balance.

Int 0271-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the installation of protected bicycle lanes.' Council Member Lincoln Restler leads, joined by Rivera, Louis, Hanif, Ossé, Brewer, Cabán, Nurse, Hudson, Salaam, Bottcher, Gutiérrez, Feliz, Won, and Joseph. The bill demands the Department of Transportation install 100 miles of protected bike lanes per year for six years. The aim: real protection for cyclists and a safer city grid.


28
Int 0177-2024 Won co-sponsors bill targeting fake plates, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.

Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.


28
Int 0263-2024 Won co-sponsors bill to boost crash investigations, improving street safety.

Feb 28 - Council bill orders DOT to probe crashes. Expands what counts as serious. Sets tight deadlines. Demands detailed reports. Pushes city to face the wreckage, not hide it.

Int 0263-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, by Council Members Lincoln Restler (primary), Joseph, Feliz, Louis, Won, Salaam, Riley, and Banks. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring the department of transportation to investigate vehicle collisions,' expands the definition of serious crashes, forces DOT to start investigations within a week, finish in a month, and publish detailed findings. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It aims to expose the facts behind every deadly impact, demanding the city account for the toll on streets.


28
Int 0264-2024 Won co-sponsors bill to create parking enforcement unit, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council moves to create a DOT parking squad. The bill targets illegal parking. Sponsors say it will enforce rules. Streets choke on blocked lanes. Pedestrians and cyclists pay the price.

Bill Int 0264-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it would require the Department of Transportation to form a unit focused on parking violations. The matter title reads: 'Establishment of a parking enforcement unit within the department of transportation.' Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by Crystal Hudson, Erik D. Bottcher, and others. The bill aims to crack down on illegal parking, a known threat to people on foot and bike. No safety analyst has yet weighed in, but blocked lanes endanger all who travel outside a car.


28
Int 0262-2024 Won co-sponsors bill to require speed humps near parks, improving street safety.

Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.

Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.


28
Res 0079-2024 Won co-sponsors Open Streets 5 mph limit, boosting pedestrian and cyclist safety.

Feb 28 - Council calls for five mile per hour speed limit on Open Streets. The move aims to slow cars where people walk, bike, and gather. Resolution adopted. Streets may breathe easier. Danger may shrink.

Resolution 0079-2024, adopted June 6, 2024 by the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to let New York City set a five mile per hour speed limit on Open Streets. The matter title reads: 'authorize New York City to set a five mile per hour speed limit on streets participating in the Open Streets program.' Council Member Shahana K. Hanif led as primary sponsor, joined by Amanda Farías, Crystal Hudson, Julie Won, and Carlina Rivera. The Council's action follows rising traffic deaths and growing use of Open Streets. The bill targets streets where people walk, bike, and gather, aiming to cut speed and risk for all vulnerable users.


28
Res 0090-2024 Won co-sponsors SAFE Streets Act, boosting pedestrian and cyclist safety citywide.

Feb 28 - Council urges Albany to pass SAFE Streets Act. Lower speed limits. Rights for crash victims. Safe passing for cyclists. Complete streets. City demands action as deaths rise. Streets remain deadly. Lawmakers must act.

Resolution 0090-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it calls on the state to pass S.2422 ('Sammy’s Law') and A.1901, part of the SAFE Streets Act. The matter title: 'Resolution calling on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, S.2422... allowing New York city to establish a lower speed limit, and A.1901, enacting a crash victims bill of rights.' Council Member Shahana K. Hanif leads, joined by Gutiérrez, Hudson, Nurse, and others. The resolution demands lower speed limits, crash victim rights, safe passing for cyclists, and complete street design. It cites rising traffic deaths and the failure of current measures. The Council wants Albany to give the city real power to protect people on its streets.


28
Int 0193-2024 Won co-sponsors taxi warning decal bill with neutral safety impact.

Feb 28 - Council passed a law forcing taxis and for-hire cars to post bold warnings on doors. The signs tell passengers: look for cyclists before you open up. A small step. The city hands out the decals. No cost to drivers.

Int 0193-2024 became law on May 31, 2025, after action by the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring taxis and for-hire vehicles to display a decal warning passengers to look for cyclists when opening the door,' was sponsored by Lincoln Restler and co-sponsored by over twenty council members, including Gutiérrez, Hudson, and Rivera. The law mandates clear warning decals on all rear passenger doors of taxis and for-hire vehicles. The Taxi and Limousine Commission will provide the signs at no cost. The measure aims to cut down on 'dooring'—a threat to cyclists citywide. The mayor returned the bill unsigned, but it became law.


28
Int 0411-2024 Won sponsors bill to end private parking permits, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council bill targets private car permits. Only elected officials, disabled drivers, and union contracts keep parking perks. Streets may clear. Danger shifts. Committee weighs next step.

Int 0411-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after its February 28, 2024 introduction. The bill, sponsored by Julie Won, Lincoln Restler, Gale Brewer, Christopher Marte, Erik Bottcher, Alexa Avilés, and the Brooklyn Borough President, aims to 'prohibit any city agency from issuing parking permits to private vehicles that do not have an elected official license plate, and would provide for the revocation of such parking permits.' Exemptions remain for people with disabilities and collective bargaining agreements. The bill seeks to cut back on private car privileges, a move that could reshape curb space and city streets.


28
Int 0474-2024 Won sponsors dynamic parking zones bill with no major safety impact.

Feb 28 - Council bill pushes demand-based parking in crowded boroughs. DOT must set rates, tweak with notice. Exempt vehicles dodge new fees. Streets may shift. Pedestrians and cyclists watch the curb.

Int 0474-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, by Julie Won and co-sponsored by Williams, Restler, Salaam, Bottcher, Riley, Brewer, Farías, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill orders DOT to create at least one dynamic parking zone per borough, with rates rising or falling by real-time demand. DOT must set the range before launch and give a week’s notice for changes. Vehicles with special permits stay exempt. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to establishing dynamic parking zones.' No safety analyst has assessed the impact on vulnerable road users.


27
Gonzalez Demands Safety Boosting Laws After Fatal Crash

Feb 27 - A truck killed Danielle Aber in a Greenpoint crosswalk. The driver had a record of speeding. Kristen Gonzalez demanded tougher laws for repeat offenders and urgent safety fixes on Nassau Avenue. Officials say policy failure and missing infrastructure left Aber exposed.

On February 27, 2024, State Senator Kristen Gonzalez responded to the death of Danielle Aber, who was struck and killed by a truck in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. The driver, Stanley Manel, was charged with failure to yield and failure to exercise due care. Gonzalez, representing District 59, called for the state to pass stricter traffic laws targeting drivers with multiple school zone speed camera violations, noting Manel's history of speeding. Assembly Member Emily Gallagher joined Gonzalez, highlighting the lack of traffic calming on Nassau Avenue, where Aber was killed. Gallagher stated, 'Nothing to slow traffic on Nassau: no signal, stop sign, even a painted crosswalk.' The officials urged immediate installation of pedestrian safety measures and renewed calls for policy changes to protect vulnerable road users. The incident marks the first traffic fatality in Northern Brooklyn in 2024, underscoring systemic failures in street design and enforcement.


25
Gonzalez Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limits and Infrastructure

Feb 25 - Danielle Aber died on Nassau Avenue. The driver, Stanley Manel, had 26 speed camera tickets. He faced minor charges. Officials demand action: lower speed limits, force repeat offenders to install speed controls, and redesign deadly streets. The city’s inaction kills.

On February 25, 2024, after Danielle Aber was killed by a repeat speeding driver in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, a coalition of elected officials demanded sweeping changes. The group—Assembly Member Emily Gallagher, State Senator Kristen Gonzalez, Council Member Lincoln Restler, and U.S. Rep. Nydia Velázquez—called for passage of two state bills: one mandating intelligent speed assistance devices for drivers with six or more speeding tickets in a year, and 'Sammy’s Law,' which would let the City Council lower speed limits. Their statement read, 'We’re calling on the New York State legislature to pass two critical bills that would lead to fewer incidents of traffic violence.' They also urged the Department of Transportation to install raised crosswalks and daylighting at intersections, and to convert Nassau and Norman avenues to one-way streets. The officials’ push highlights the deadly gap in accountability and infrastructure that leaves vulnerable road users at risk.


23
Gonzalez Supports Safety Boosting Speed Controls and Sammy’s Law

Feb 23 - A truck hit a woman crossing Sutton Street in Greenpoint. She lies in critical condition. The driver, with a long record of violations, faces charges. Council Member Restler and others demand safer streets, calling out reckless driving and deadly intersections.

On February 23, 2024, Council Member Lincoln Restler (District 33) joined other officials in a public statement after a truck struck a pedestrian at Sutton Street and Nassau Avenue in Greenpoint. The incident left a 49-year-old woman in critical condition. The driver, Stanley Manel, was arrested and charged with failure to yield and failure to exercise due care. The officials' statement read: 'We’re deeply saddened and outraged at the news of yet another pedestrian being struck by an unsafe driver in Greenpoint.' Restler and colleagues highlighted the intersection's dangers and the driver's history—35 tickets since 2019, including 26 speed camera violations. They urged support for bills requiring speed control devices for repeat offenders and for Sammy’s Law, which would let NYC set its own speed limits. The group called on the Department of Transportation to install raised crosswalks and daylighting to protect pedestrians.


22
Gonzalez Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limit and Enforcement Bills

Feb 22 - A reckless driver with a long record struck a woman in a Greenpoint crosswalk. She clings to life. Officials demand action: lower speed limits, mandate speed devices, redesign streets. The city’s system failed to stop a repeat offender. Streets remain deadly.

On February 22, 2024, a woman was struck and critically injured by Stanley Manel, a driver with 26 prior speed camera violations, at Sutton Street and Nassau Avenue in Greenpoint. Manel was charged with failure to yield and failure to exercise due care. Nassau Avenue, a two-way street used by cyclists, lacks protective infrastructure. Following the crash, Assembly Member Emily Gallagher, State Senator Kristen Gonzalez, Council Member Lincoln Restler, and U.S. Rep. Nydia Velázquez called for passage of two state bills: one requiring repeat speeding offenders to install intelligent speed assistance devices, and Sammy's Law, which would let the City Council lower speed limits. They also urged the Department of Transportation to install raised crosswalks and daylighting at intersections. Their statement reads: “Lowering the speed limit and enforcing real accountability for dangerous drivers are urgent steps we must take to protect New Yorkers.”


14
Sedan Hits Pedestrian in Marked Queens Crosswalk

Feb 14 - A sedan struck a 61-year-old man crossing 41 Avenue in Queens. The man suffered head injuries and bruises. Driver visibility was blocked. The car’s front bumper was destroyed.

According to the police report, a 2018 Toyota sedan heading north on 41 Avenue in Queens hit a 61-year-old male pedestrian who was crossing in a marked crosswalk. The pedestrian suffered head injuries and bruising but remained conscious. The sedan’s right front bumper was demolished in the crash. The report lists 'View Obstructed/Limited' and 'Obstruction/Debris' as contributing factors, showing that the driver’s visibility was compromised. These driver-related errors played a central role in the collision. The pedestrian’s actions were noted but not cited as a cause.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4703325 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19