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 3
▸ Crush Injuries 5
▸ Severe Bleeding 4
▸ Severe Lacerations 1
▸ Concussion 7
▸ Whiplash 22
▸ Contusion/Bruise 72
▸ Abrasion 17
▸ Pain/Nausea 9
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
Ridgewood’s daily toll: bikes down, bodies up
Ridgewood: Jan 1, 2022 - Aug 24, 2025
Another corner. Same ending.
Since 2022 in Ridgewood, 2 people were killed and 774 injured across 1,568 crashes. Pedestrians took 169 injuries, cyclists 95. Afternoon hits hardest: injuries spike at 3 p.m. and 4 p.m., with a death at 4 p.m. and another at 7 p.m. NYC Open Data
The streets that keep breaking
Fresh Pond Road. Myrtle Avenue. Forest. Cypress. Together they account for hundreds of injuries. NYC Open Data
- Fresh Pond Rd: 18 injuries; two serious.
- Myrtle Ave: 37 injuries; one death.
Contributing factors stack up as “other,” with recorded roles for failure to yield, disregarded signals, distraction, and improper passing. Speed shows in the bodies: one local pedestrian killed on Myrtle had “unsafe speed” listed, paired with distraction. NYC Open Data
Afternoon surge, same pain
From lunch to dusk the numbers climb. 3 p.m.: 47 injured. 4 p.m.: 87 injured and one death. 7 p.m.: 31 injured and one death. People walking get hit most often by sedans and SUVs. NYC Open Data
A food cart, two men, and a curb
Queens lost two men at a food truck in Astoria. Police said an 84‑year‑old driver “careened at a high speed” and “mowed down two pedestrians.” Three dead. Streets littered with debris. amNY
A few miles away, a 52‑year‑old man crossing near JFK was struck and left to die. “The driver sped off without stopping,” police said. No arrests. NY Daily News
“Police were looking … for a driver,” another report said. Gothamist
These are not Ridgewood addresses. They are Queens streets. Same borough. Same blood.
What City Hall knows — and when
The Council is moving small tools. One bill would force DOT to install school‑zone safety devices within 60 days of a study. It is in committee. Legistar
Council Member Robert F. Holden backs another bill to revoke city parking permits for drivers caught with obscured or defaced plates — a dodge that erases accountability. It sits in committee. Legistar
The state is pushing on repeat speeders. In June, Senators voted yes in committee on S4045, to require intelligent speed assistance for drivers who stack violations. Open States
Three corners. One fix.
- Fresh Pond Rd at Gates Ave: a cyclist injured in a multi‑vehicle tangle. Harden the right turns. Add a protected bike lane across the conflict. NYC Open Data
- Myrtle Ave: a pedestrian killed with unsafe speed and distraction recorded. Daylight the corners. Set a leading pedestrian interval. Enforce turning speed. NYC Open Data
- Forest and Cypress corridors: recurring injuries. Build raised crossings and concrete refuge. Narrow the lanes. NYC Open Data
The worst drivers, the widest roads
A small slice of motorists do oversized harm. Lawmakers cite repeat speeding as a killer pattern; the Senate advanced the speed‑limiter bill in June votes. Open States
School‑zone cameras run around the clock through 2030. The tools exist. The gaps remain. Take Action
Do the simple, proven things
- Lower the default city speed limit. Slower streets save lives. Take Action
- Install limiters on cars owned by repeat speeders. End the streaks. Open States
One body at 4 p.m. Another at 7. Fresh Pond, Myrtle, Forest, Cypress. Different days. Same story. NYC Open Data
—
Act: Tell City Hall to drop speeds and install protection now. Take Action
Citations
▸ Citations
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – Crashes - Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-24
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – Persons - Crashes , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-24
- Queens Crash Kills Two Pedestrians, Driver, amny, Published 2025-08-13
- Queens Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK, NY Daily News, Published 2025-08-13
- Hit-And-Run Kills Pedestrian Near JFK, Gothamist, Published 2025-08-13
- NYC Council Legislative Site, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-08-14
- S4045 – Intelligent Speed Assistance for Repeat Offenders, Open States, Published 2025-06-11
- Take Action: Slow the Speed, Stop the Carnage, CrashCount, Published 0001-01-01
- Lawsuit Challenges Removal Of Bike Barriers, Gothamist, Published 2025-06-17
Other Representatives

District 37
45-10 Skillman Ave. 1st Floor, Sunnyside, NY 11104
Room 427, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248

District 30
64-69 Dry Harbor Road, Middle Village, NY 11379
718-366-3900
250 Broadway, Suite 1558, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7381

District 12
22-07 45th St. Suite 1008, Astoria, NY 11105
Albany, NY 12247
▸ Other Geographies
Ridgewood Ridgewood sits in Queens, Precinct 104, District 30, AD 37, SD 12, Queens CB5.
▸ See also
Traffic Safety Timeline for Ridgewood
11
Brooklyn Parents Demand Safer School Streets▸Jun 11 - Parents in Greenpoint want cars out. A cyclist died at Monitor and Driggs. Children walk and bike to PS 110. The street stays dangerous. The city has not acted. Families wait. The threat of cars remains.
Streetsblog NYC reported on June 11, 2025, that parents at Public School 110 in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, are calling for a Paris-style school street to protect children. Their plan would turn Monitor Street into a cul-de-sac with a pedestrian plaza, add mid-block crossings, and close a slip lane to block cut-through traffic from the BQE. The push follows a fatal crash at Monitor and Driggs, where a driver killed 73-year-old cyclist Teddy Orzechowski. Streetsblog notes, 'Streets outside schools have higher crash and injury rates than the city average.' Most PS 110 families walk or bike, but the city has not responded to the proposal. The article highlights the persistent risk from drivers using local streets as shortcuts.
-
Brooklyn Parents Demand Safer School Streets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 4045
Gianaris co-sponsors bill to boost street safety with speed limiters.▸Jun 11 - Senate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
Senate bill S 4045, sponsored by Andrew Gounardes and co-sponsored by over two dozen senators, passed committee votes on June 11 and June 12, 2025. The bill, titled 'Relates to requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits,' mandates these devices for drivers who rack up eleven or more points in 24 months, or six speed or red light camera tickets in a year. The measure aims to curb repeat dangerous driving. Senators including Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, and others voted yes. The bill targets drivers with a pattern of violations, seeking to cut risk for pedestrians and cyclists by limiting repeat speeding.
-
File S 4045,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 4045
Gianaris votes yes in committee, boosting street safety by curbing repeat speeders.▸Jun 11 - Senate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
Senate bill S 4045, sponsored by Andrew Gounardes and co-sponsored by over two dozen senators, passed committee votes on June 11 and June 12, 2025. The bill, titled 'Relates to requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits,' mandates these devices for drivers who rack up eleven or more points in 24 months, or six speed or red light camera tickets in a year. The measure aims to curb repeat dangerous driving. Senators including Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, and others voted yes. The bill targets drivers with a pattern of violations, seeking to cut risk for pedestrians and cyclists by limiting repeat speeding.
-
File S 4045,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7678
Gianaris votes yes to expand school speed cameras, boosting pedestrian safety.▸Jun 11 - White Plains gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers move fast. Most vote yes. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. Program ends 2030. Streets may slow. Danger faces children every day.
Senate Bill S 7678, sponsored by Shelley Mayer, establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in White Plains. The bill passed the Senate on June 11, 2025, and the Assembly on June 16, 2025. The matter reads: 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the city of White Plains; repeals authorization of program December 31, 2030.' Mayer led the push. Most senators and assembly members voted yes. The bill aims to catch speeding drivers near schools, a known threat to children and families. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File S 7678,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11Int 1304-2025
Gutiérrez co-sponsors bill requiring micromobility share systems to display safety rules.▸Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
-
File Int 1304-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 11 - Parents in Greenpoint want cars out. A cyclist died at Monitor and Driggs. Children walk and bike to PS 110. The street stays dangerous. The city has not acted. Families wait. The threat of cars remains.
Streetsblog NYC reported on June 11, 2025, that parents at Public School 110 in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, are calling for a Paris-style school street to protect children. Their plan would turn Monitor Street into a cul-de-sac with a pedestrian plaza, add mid-block crossings, and close a slip lane to block cut-through traffic from the BQE. The push follows a fatal crash at Monitor and Driggs, where a driver killed 73-year-old cyclist Teddy Orzechowski. Streetsblog notes, 'Streets outside schools have higher crash and injury rates than the city average.' Most PS 110 families walk or bike, but the city has not responded to the proposal. The article highlights the persistent risk from drivers using local streets as shortcuts.
- Brooklyn Parents Demand Safer School Streets, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-06-11
11S 4045
Gianaris co-sponsors bill to boost street safety with speed limiters.▸Jun 11 - Senate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
Senate bill S 4045, sponsored by Andrew Gounardes and co-sponsored by over two dozen senators, passed committee votes on June 11 and June 12, 2025. The bill, titled 'Relates to requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits,' mandates these devices for drivers who rack up eleven or more points in 24 months, or six speed or red light camera tickets in a year. The measure aims to curb repeat dangerous driving. Senators including Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, and others voted yes. The bill targets drivers with a pattern of violations, seeking to cut risk for pedestrians and cyclists by limiting repeat speeding.
-
File S 4045,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 4045
Gianaris votes yes in committee, boosting street safety by curbing repeat speeders.▸Jun 11 - Senate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
Senate bill S 4045, sponsored by Andrew Gounardes and co-sponsored by over two dozen senators, passed committee votes on June 11 and June 12, 2025. The bill, titled 'Relates to requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits,' mandates these devices for drivers who rack up eleven or more points in 24 months, or six speed or red light camera tickets in a year. The measure aims to curb repeat dangerous driving. Senators including Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, and others voted yes. The bill targets drivers with a pattern of violations, seeking to cut risk for pedestrians and cyclists by limiting repeat speeding.
-
File S 4045,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7678
Gianaris votes yes to expand school speed cameras, boosting pedestrian safety.▸Jun 11 - White Plains gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers move fast. Most vote yes. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. Program ends 2030. Streets may slow. Danger faces children every day.
Senate Bill S 7678, sponsored by Shelley Mayer, establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in White Plains. The bill passed the Senate on June 11, 2025, and the Assembly on June 16, 2025. The matter reads: 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the city of White Plains; repeals authorization of program December 31, 2030.' Mayer led the push. Most senators and assembly members voted yes. The bill aims to catch speeding drivers near schools, a known threat to children and families. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File S 7678,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11Int 1304-2025
Gutiérrez co-sponsors bill requiring micromobility share systems to display safety rules.▸Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
-
File Int 1304-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 11 - Senate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
Senate bill S 4045, sponsored by Andrew Gounardes and co-sponsored by over two dozen senators, passed committee votes on June 11 and June 12, 2025. The bill, titled 'Relates to requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits,' mandates these devices for drivers who rack up eleven or more points in 24 months, or six speed or red light camera tickets in a year. The measure aims to curb repeat dangerous driving. Senators including Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, and others voted yes. The bill targets drivers with a pattern of violations, seeking to cut risk for pedestrians and cyclists by limiting repeat speeding.
- File S 4045, Open States, Published 2025-06-11
11S 4045
Gianaris votes yes in committee, boosting street safety by curbing repeat speeders.▸Jun 11 - Senate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
Senate bill S 4045, sponsored by Andrew Gounardes and co-sponsored by over two dozen senators, passed committee votes on June 11 and June 12, 2025. The bill, titled 'Relates to requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits,' mandates these devices for drivers who rack up eleven or more points in 24 months, or six speed or red light camera tickets in a year. The measure aims to curb repeat dangerous driving. Senators including Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, and others voted yes. The bill targets drivers with a pattern of violations, seeking to cut risk for pedestrians and cyclists by limiting repeat speeding.
-
File S 4045,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7678
Gianaris votes yes to expand school speed cameras, boosting pedestrian safety.▸Jun 11 - White Plains gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers move fast. Most vote yes. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. Program ends 2030. Streets may slow. Danger faces children every day.
Senate Bill S 7678, sponsored by Shelley Mayer, establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in White Plains. The bill passed the Senate on June 11, 2025, and the Assembly on June 16, 2025. The matter reads: 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the city of White Plains; repeals authorization of program December 31, 2030.' Mayer led the push. Most senators and assembly members voted yes. The bill aims to catch speeding drivers near schools, a known threat to children and families. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File S 7678,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11Int 1304-2025
Gutiérrez co-sponsors bill requiring micromobility share systems to display safety rules.▸Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
-
File Int 1304-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 11 - Senate backs S 4045. Repeat speeders face forced installation of speed assistance tech. Eleven points or six camera tickets triggers action. Law targets reckless drivers. Streets may get safer for those outside the car.
Senate bill S 4045, sponsored by Andrew Gounardes and co-sponsored by over two dozen senators, passed committee votes on June 11 and June 12, 2025. The bill, titled 'Relates to requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits,' mandates these devices for drivers who rack up eleven or more points in 24 months, or six speed or red light camera tickets in a year. The measure aims to curb repeat dangerous driving. Senators including Jamaal Bailey, Jabari Brisport, and others voted yes. The bill targets drivers with a pattern of violations, seeking to cut risk for pedestrians and cyclists by limiting repeat speeding.
- File S 4045, Open States, Published 2025-06-11
11S 7678
Gianaris votes yes to expand school speed cameras, boosting pedestrian safety.▸Jun 11 - White Plains gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers move fast. Most vote yes. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. Program ends 2030. Streets may slow. Danger faces children every day.
Senate Bill S 7678, sponsored by Shelley Mayer, establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in White Plains. The bill passed the Senate on June 11, 2025, and the Assembly on June 16, 2025. The matter reads: 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the city of White Plains; repeals authorization of program December 31, 2030.' Mayer led the push. Most senators and assembly members voted yes. The bill aims to catch speeding drivers near schools, a known threat to children and families. No safety analyst note was provided.
-
File S 7678,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11Int 1304-2025
Gutiérrez co-sponsors bill requiring micromobility share systems to display safety rules.▸Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
-
File Int 1304-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 11 - White Plains gets speed cameras near schools. Lawmakers move fast. Most vote yes. Cameras catch drivers who endanger kids. Program ends 2030. Streets may slow. Danger faces children every day.
Senate Bill S 7678, sponsored by Shelley Mayer, establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in White Plains. The bill passed the Senate on June 11, 2025, and the Assembly on June 16, 2025. The matter reads: 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the city of White Plains; repeals authorization of program December 31, 2030.' Mayer led the push. Most senators and assembly members voted yes. The bill aims to catch speeding drivers near schools, a known threat to children and families. No safety analyst note was provided.
- File S 7678, Open States, Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11Int 1304-2025
Gutiérrez co-sponsors bill requiring micromobility share systems to display safety rules.▸Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
-
File Int 1304-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
- File S 7785, Open States, Published 2025-06-11
11S 7785
Gianaris votes yes to weaken bus rules, increasing pedestrian and cyclist risk.▸Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
-
File S 7785,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-11
11Int 1304-2025
Gutiérrez co-sponsors bill requiring micromobility share systems to display safety rules.▸Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
-
File Int 1304-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 11 - Senate passed S 7785. The bill carves out large Mitchell-Lama housing from bus traffic rules. Lawmakers voted yes. The carve-out weakens enforcement. Streets grow less safe for people on foot and bike.
Bill S 7785, titled 'Relates to bus operation-related traffic regulations,' passed the Senate and Assembly in June 2025. The measure, sponsored by Senator Jamaal Bailey, excludes violations in cooperative housing developments with at least 10,000 Mitchell-Lama units from bus operation traffic regulations. The bill advanced through committee and received broad support in both chambers. By exempting these large complexes, the law weakens traffic enforcement where thousands live. This move increases risk to pedestrians and cyclists, stripping away protections that save lives. Vulnerable road users lose another layer of safety in dense city streets.
- File S 7785, Open States, Published 2025-06-11
11Int 1304-2025
Gutiérrez co-sponsors bill requiring micromobility share systems to display safety rules.▸Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
-
File Int 1304-2025,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 11 - Council bill orders bike and scooter share firms to show road rules at docks and in apps. Riders must review rules yearly. No extra fees. Aim: clear, visible reminders. Committee review underway.
Bill Int 1304-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on June 11, 2025. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...requiring micromobility share system operators to display rules of the road for safe operation," demands operators post rules at stations and in apps. Riders must review these rules at least once a year before unlocking a device. The law bars operators from charging for the review time. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Hanif, Brewer, Restler, Louis, Narcisse, Lee, Marte, Hanks, Banks, Gutiérrez, Ariola, and Morano. The measure aims for clear, accessible safety information but does not address street design or enforcement.
- File Int 1304-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-06-11
10S 8117
Gianaris votes yes on school speed cameras, boosting safety for children.▸Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
-
File S 8117,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 10 - Senate backs S 8117. Oneida County gets school speed zone cameras. Law sunsets in 2030. Lawmakers act. Streets near schools may slow. Children walk safer. Drivers face new eyes.
Senate bill S 8117, titled 'Establishes a school speed zone camera demonstration program in the county of Oneida,' passed committee votes on May 27 and June 10, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph A. Griffo (District 53), sets up speed cameras near schools in Oneida County. The program ends December 31, 2030. The Senate voted yes, with only two no votes and several excused. The measure aims to slow drivers near schools and protect children. No safety analyst note was provided. The bill now moves forward in the legislative process.
- File S 8117, Open States, Published 2025-06-10
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
- File S 915, Open States, Published 2025-06-09
9S 915
Gianaris votes yes, boosting street safety and access for everyone.▸Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
-
File S 915,
Open States,
Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 9 - Senate passes S 915. Bill demands safe roads for all. Complete street design at its core. Cyclists, walkers, and riders get a fighting chance. Vote split, but the message is clear: streets must serve people, not just cars.
Senate Bill S 915, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee on June 9, 2025. The bill, sponsored by Sean Ryan (District 61) with co-sponsors Joseph P. Addabbo Jr., Samra Brouk, Leroy Comrie, Patricia Fahy, Pete Harckham, Robert Jackson, Liz Krueger, and Christopher Ryan, pushes for roads built for everyone. The Senate voted, with most in favor and a block opposed. The bill's language is blunt: roads must be safe for all, not just drivers. No safety analyst note was provided, but the intent is clear—prioritize vulnerable road users in every street plan.
- File S 915, Open States, Published 2025-06-09
5
SUV Driver Distracted, Cyclist Injured on Myrtle Ave▸Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 5 - SUV struck cyclist on Myrtle Ave. Driver distracted. Cyclist hit, leg bruised. Impact left bike undamaged. Streets unforgiving. System failed to protect.
A 49-year-old cyclist was injured when an SUV struck him on Myrtle Ave at St Nicholas Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the SUV driver was distracted at the time of the crash. The cyclist suffered a contusion to his lower leg and was wearing a helmet. The SUV’s right front bumper made contact, but the bike showed no damage. Driver inattention is listed as the contributing factor. No injuries were reported for the SUV’s occupants. The crash highlights the danger faced by cyclists when drivers fail to pay attention.
3
Gianaris 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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
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
2
Motorcyclist Ejected After Traffic Control Disregarded▸Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 2 - A motorcycle slammed into the center front end on Woodward Ave. The rider, twenty-five, was ejected. He struck his head. He was conscious but hurt. Police say traffic control was ignored. The street stayed loud and dangerous.
A 25-year-old man riding a motorcycle was injured on Woodward Ave in Queens. According to the police report, the crash happened when traffic control was disregarded. The rider was ejected from the motorcycle and suffered a head contusion. He was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as a contributing factor. No other vehicles or persons were identified as injured. The rider was not using any safety equipment, but this is noted only after the driver error. The crash underscores the risk when traffic rules are ignored, as documented by the police.
2
Cyclist Injured by Parked Sedan Door on Palmetto▸Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
Jun 2 - A sedan door swung open on Palmetto Street. The cyclist struck it. Metal met flesh. The rider went down. His leg and foot scraped and bruised. The street stayed silent. The car stayed parked. The cyclist bore the impact.
A cyclist was injured when he collided with the left side doors of a parked Ford sedan on Palmetto Street in Queens. According to the police report, the sedan was stationary when the crash occurred. The cyclist, a 48-year-old man, suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists 'Other Vehicular' as a contributing factor. No driver errors such as 'Failure to Yield' or 'Disregard Traffic Control' were specified in the data. The cyclist was partially ejected and was not using any safety equipment, as noted after the contributing factors. No injuries were reported for the sedan's occupants.
28Int 1288-2025
Gutiérrez 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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
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
Gutiérrez 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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
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
26
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run▸May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run,
New York Post,
Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
May 26 - A pregnant woman stepped from her car after a crash. The other driver floored it, struck her, dragged her, then fled. She died at the hospital. The driver vanished into the night. Police search. Grief lingers on Van Buren Street.
According to the New York Post (published May 26, 2025), Tiffany Cifuni, 32, was killed after a minor collision at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard in Brooklyn. Cifuni exited her Toyota 4Runner to check for damage. The driver of a Chevy Trax then accelerated, struck her from behind, dragged her, and sped away against traffic on a one-way street. The article states, "the driver of the Trax gunned it and struck Cifuni from behind, dragging her before speeding away." The suspect crashed into two more vehicles before fleeing on foot, leaving behind a car with temporary plates. The driver remains at large. The incident highlights the lethal risk of hit-and-run drivers and the dangers posed by unchecked reckless driving on city streets.
- Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Hit-And-Run, New York Post, Published 2025-05-26
25
SUVs Collide on Fresh Pond Road; Three Hurt▸May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
May 25 - Two SUVs slammed together at Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue. Metal crumpled. Three people hurt. Pain and bruises. Drivers ignored traffic controls. The street stayed open. The system failed to protect those inside.
Two sport utility vehicles crashed at the intersection of Fresh Pond Road and 70th Avenue in Queens. Three people were injured: a 34-year-old rear passenger suffered leg pain, a 48-year-old driver had chest pain, and a 27-year-old driver was bruised. According to the police report, both drivers disregarded traffic controls and failed to yield the right-of-way. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors. All injured persons were conscious. The crash involved a Ford SUV traveling north and a Nissan SUV traveling east. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The police report does not mention any helmet or signal violations.
25
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash▸May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
-
Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash,
ABC7,
Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
May 25 - A pregnant woman stood in the street after a fender bender. The other driver hit her, dragged her, then sped off. She died at the scene. The driver fled on foot. Family waits for answers. The street holds the silence.
ABC7 reported on May 25, 2025, that a 32-year-old pregnant woman was killed in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, after a traffic incident at Van Buren Street and Marcus Garvey Boulevard. The article states, "Authorities say a female driver slammed into the victim as she stood in the roadway after a traffic incident." The victim, Tiffany Cifuni, had exited her SUV following a minor collision and approached the other vehicle. The driver then accelerated, dragging Cifuni and driving the wrong way before striking parked cars and fleeing on foot. The crash highlights the dangers of post-collision interactions and reckless driving. Police continue to search for the suspect.
- Pregnant Woman Killed In Brooklyn Crash, ABC7, Published 2025-05-25
23
Sedans Collide on Greene Avenue, Two Drivers Hurt▸May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.
May 23 - Two sedans crashed on Greene Avenue in Queens. Both drivers suffered injuries. Passengers, including a 14-year-old, were shaken. Police cite traffic control ignored and failure to yield. The street bore the brunt. Metal twisted. Lives jarred.
According to the police report, two sedans collided at Greene Avenue and Seneca Avenue in Queens. Two drivers, a 72-year-old man and a 46-year-old woman, were injured. Both were conscious, with one suffering back injuries and the other chest injuries. Five passengers, including a 14-year-old boy, reported unspecified injuries. The report lists 'Traffic Control Disregarded' and 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' as contributing factors for all involved. No mention of helmet or signal violations appears. The crash left both vehicles damaged, with impacts to the front and side. The collision underscores the danger when drivers ignore traffic controls and fail to yield.