Crash Count for Rosedale
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 1,184
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 845
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 129
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 2
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 6
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Jul 30, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Rosedale?

Rosedale Bleeds While Leaders Hide: Demand Safe Streets Now

Rosedale Bleeds While Leaders Hide: Demand Safe Streets Now

Rosedale: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 4, 2025

The Deaths Keep Coming

In Rosedale, the numbers do not lie. Six people dead. Seven hundred seventy-three injured. Two left with injuries so severe they may never walk the same. These are not numbers. They are mothers, sons, neighbors. The disaster moves slow, but it does not stop.

A minivan veered off Brookville Boulevard and struck a tree. Four seniors inside. One woman in her seventies did not make it out alive. The others were rushed to the hospital. The police said only, “A woman was killed and three other people were hospitalized when a trip from a Queens senior residential home turned deadly early Friday.” No comfort. No answers. Just the facts.

The Pattern: Cars, Trucks, and Broken Bodies

Pedestrians are not safe. In the last twelve months, five people died. Three were over 75. One was a pedestrian, hit by a truck. Another, a woman, struck by an SUV. A 21-year-old died behind the wheel, the crash blamed on speed. The rest were passengers, their lives ended by a van that left the road.

The injuries pile up. 285 people hurt in the last year. Most were in cars, but some were walking. Some were just in the wrong place. The street does not care.

Leadership: Words, Not Action

The city talks about Vision Zero. They talk about speed cameras and lower limits. But in Rosedale, the carnage continues. No local leader has stood on Brookville Boulevard and promised change. No new law has slowed the cars or protected the old and the young. The silence is as loud as the sirens.

What You Can Do

This does not have to go on. Call your council member. Demand lower speed limits. Demand more cameras. Demand streets that put people before cars. If you wait, the next number could be someone you love. Take action now.

Citations

Citations

Other Representatives

Alicia Hyndman
Assembly Member Alicia Hyndman
District 29
District Office:
232-06A Merrick Blvd., Springfield Gardens, NY 11413
Legislative Office:
Room 717, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Selvena N. Brooks-Powers
Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers
District 31
District Office:
1931 Mott Avenue, Suite 410, Far Rockaway, NY 11691
718-471-7014
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1865, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7216
James Sanders
State Senator James Sanders
District 10
District Office:
142-01 Rockaway Blvd., South Ozone Park, NY 11436
Legislative Office:
Room 711, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies

Rosedale Rosedale sits in Queens, Precinct 116, District 31, AD 29, SD 10, Queens CB13.

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

Traffic Safety Timeline for Rosedale

Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Transparency and Missed Safety Targets

A hit-and-run truck killed an 82-year-old cyclist on Northern Boulevard. The driver fled. This marks the 29th cyclist death in 2023. Councilmember Brooks-Powers blasted DOT for missing legal bike lane targets. Streets remain deadly. Progress is slow. Accountability is lacking.

On December 28, 2023, Council Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers responded to the death of an 82-year-old cyclist killed by a hit-and-run truck on Northern Boulevard. This incident marked the 29th cyclist fatality in 2023, a grim milestone in a year of rising traffic violence. Brooks-Powers criticized the Adams administration and the Department of Transportation for failing to meet the Streets Plan's legal requirement of 50 miles of protected bike lanes, achieving only about 30 miles. She stated, 'Thirty-plus miles of completed new bike lane is of course better than none, but falls far short of Streets Plan requirements.' Brooks-Powers also condemned the missed bus lane targets and called out DOT's lack of transparency, pledging to hold the agency accountable and push for safer, more equitable streets. The city faces more cars, more crashes, and more injuries, while vulnerable road users pay the price.


Richards Urges Safety Boosting Conduit Avenue Redesign

Conduit Avenue kills. Brooklyn and Queens borough presidents call it urgent. They want DOT to turn this deadly, crash-heavy road into a safe corridor. In less than two years, 1,321 crashes. Seventy pedestrians and 14 cyclists hurt. Five dead. DOT silent.

On December 14, 2023, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and Queens Borough President Donovan Richards pressed the Department of Transportation to overhaul Conduit Avenue. Their letter called for a transformation of the avenue, described as "one of the most dangerous and non-inclusive roadways in the entire city." The officials urged DOT to prioritize traffic safety, cycling and mass transit infrastructure, pedestrian walkability, and green space. Between January 2022 and December 2023, Conduit Avenue saw 1,321 crashes, injuring 880 people—including 70 pedestrians and 14 cyclists—and killing five. Three intersections are listed as DOT pedestrian safety priorities, but the corridor itself is not. Richards and Reynoso have formed a task force and are pushing for action. DOT has not commented.


Brooks-Powers Expresses Concerns Over Queens Bus Redesign Safety

MTA plans $30 million for Queens bus overhaul. Eight new routes. More frequent service for thousands. Stops spaced farther apart. Most riders keep their stops. Councilmember Brooks-Powers doubts gains for her district. Borough President Richards backs the plan. Rollout not before 2025.

The MTA’s Queens Bus Network Redesign, announced December 12, 2023, proposes $30 million in service upgrades and expands local routes from 83 to 91. The plan, under review since 2020, aims to boost 10-minute-or-better service for 200,000 more residents, raising coverage from 60.1% to 68.9%. The official summary states the redesign will 'streamline and speed up service.' Council Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers voiced 'serious concerns' about disadvantages for her district, especially with congestion pricing. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards, once critical, now supports the draft after public outreach. State Senator Leroy Comrie noted Brooks-Powers wants clarity for her community, not outright rejection. The redesign awaits further input and is expected no sooner than 2025. No safety analyst has assessed the impact on vulnerable road users.


Brooks-Powers Raises Concerns Over Queens Bus Redesign Impact

MTA revealed its final Queens bus overhaul. Routes shift. Stops thin out. Riders brace for longer walks. Council Member Brooks-Powers warns of harm to her district. The city lags on bus lanes. Public review looms. Vulnerable riders face uncertainty.

On December 12, 2023, the MTA released its final proposal for the Queens bus network redesign. The plan, shaped by two years of outreach, proposes 121 routes—eight more than before—but cuts and combines stops, aiming for straighter lines and faster trips. The matter summary states the redesign seeks 'improved travel speed and reliability.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, voiced 'serious concerns about the proposal’s impact on her constituents, especially with the looming arrival of congestion pricing.' She called for an 'equitable and balanced' approach. The plan faces backlash over wider stop spacing and fewer stops, which could force longer walks for riders—many of them elderly or disabled. The city has failed to meet its legal mandate for new bus lanes, building only 18 miles this year. The proposal enters public review ahead of a 2025 rollout.


Brooks-Powers Praises Safety-Boosting Intersection Daylighting Plan

Mayor Adams will ban parking near 1,000 intersections each year. The city aims to clear corners, boost sightlines, and protect people on foot. Advocates pushed for this. The plan outpaces current law but leaves thousands of corners untouched for decades.

On December 1, 2023, Mayor Eric Adams announced a new executive policy: New York City will remove car parking near 1,000 intersections annually, far exceeding the 100 intersections required by recent Council law. The effort, known as daylighting, aims to improve visibility and pedestrian safety. Adams said, 'Protecting New Yorkers is my most sacred responsibility as mayor.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers praised daylighting as 'a proven safety measure.' DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez stressed that daylighting must include physical infrastructure to prevent reckless turns. The Department of Transportation will also add raised crosswalks, extended sidewalks, and leading pedestrian signals at 1,000 intersections next year. The city will expand speed restriction technology in its fleet and increase data transparency. Advocates and community boards have long called for these changes. With nearly 47,000 intersections citywide, the plan will take decades to reach every corner.


Brooks-Powers Warns Toll Hardship for Constituents Driving

Mayor Adams wavers on congestion pricing. He questions the $15 toll, stirring opposition. Experts slam his stance. Councilmember Brooks-Powers voices concern for drivers, but data shows most benefit. The mayor’s shift weakens support for safer, saner streets.

On December 1, 2023, Mayor Eric Adams publicly questioned New York City’s incoming congestion pricing plan, specifically the proposed $15 peak toll. The matter, covered by Streetsblog NYC, quotes Adams: the fee is 'the beginning of the conversation' and exemptions must be considered. Councilmember Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, echoed concerns, saying the toll 'is going to put definitely a hardship on many of my constituents.' Experts Bruce Schaller and Danny Pearlstein criticized Adams, urging him to champion the program’s benefits for transit riders and the environment. The mayor’s office later clarified his comments focused on city workers in city vehicles. The article notes that while a small fraction of Brooks-Powers’s constituents drive into Manhattan, all would benefit from improved transit. Adams’s wavering undermines momentum for a policy proven to reduce traffic and protect vulnerable road users.


2
Queens Sedans Collide on 134 Avenue

Two sedans crashed on 134 Avenue in Queens. The front passenger suffered a fractured elbow and dislocation. The driver complained of pain and nausea. Both were semiconscious. The crash involved improper lane usage and aggressive driving by one driver.

According to the police report, two sedans collided on 134 Avenue in Queens. The front passenger, a 20-year-old female, was injured with a fractured elbow and dislocation, and was semiconscious. The 21-year-old male driver was also semiconscious and complained of pain and nausea. The report lists 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper' and 'Aggressive Driving/Road Rage' as contributing factors. The driver was licensed and traveling north, while the other vehicle was making a left turn. The impact occurred at the center front end and left front quarter panel of the vehicles. The passenger was not wearing safety equipment; the driver used a lap belt and harness. No victim fault is indicated.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4679352 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-06
Donovan J Richards Supports Electric Mopeds Despite Safety Concerns

Revel pulls the plug on shared mopeds. The company pivots to electric taxis. Car-free travel options shrink. Riders lose a fast, nimble way to move. Revel’s exit marks another blow to micro-mobility in New York. Streets grow less free.

On November 3, 2023, Revel, the Brooklyn-based electric moped company, announced it will end its moped rental service in New York City and San Francisco. The company’s founders, Frank Reig and Paul Suhey, shared the news, citing a 30 percent drop in ridership and financial strain. Revel’s mopeds, once hailed as a lifeline during transit disruptions, will disappear from city streets by November 18. The company now focuses on its growing electric taxi fleet, boasting 500 Teslas and over 1,500 drivers. Advocates mourned the loss, calling it a bad day for car-free travel. Revel’s mopeds were legal, registered, and barred from bike lanes by geo-fencing. Their departure leaves fewer options for vulnerable road users seeking safe, efficient alternatives to cars.


3-Year-Old Pedestrian Injured on Weller Lane

A 3-year-old boy was hit while crossing a marked crosswalk on Weller Lane in Queens. The SUV driver failed to yield right-of-way. The child suffered a facial contusion but remained conscious. No vehicle damage was reported.

According to the police report, a 3-year-old pedestrian was injured on Weller Lane in Queens after being struck by a 2018 Jeep SUV traveling north. The child was crossing a marked crosswalk without a signal when the collision occurred. The report lists 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way' and 'Traffic Control Disregarded' as contributing factors. The pedestrian sustained a facial contusion and was conscious at the scene. The SUV driver, a licensed female, was going straight ahead and the vehicle showed no damage. The incident highlights driver error in yielding to pedestrians at intersections.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4675490 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-06
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Daylighting at Intersections

A boy died. The city promises change. Officials tout daylighting and new signals. Critics say action comes too late. Nine children dead this year. Cyclist deaths set records. The mayor defends his record. Parents and advocates demand more. The street stays dangerous.

On November 1, 2023, following the death of 7-year-old Kamari Hughes, Mayor Adams and his administration announced plans to redesign the fatal Brooklyn intersection. The Department of Transportation adjusted signal timing and promised more robust changes, including daylighting and loading zones. Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers called daylighting 'a proven safety measure.' Deputy Mayor Meera Joshi said the city will target high-crash and school-adjacent corners, using barriers to keep cars from blocking sightlines. Critics like Danny Harris of Transportation Alternatives condemned the city’s reactive approach, demanding daylighting at every intersection. Officials claim 299 intersections have been daylighted this year, surpassing Council mandates. Despite these steps, advocates argue the city acts only after tragedy, leaving vulnerable road users at risk.


Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Daylighting at Intersections

A boy died under the wheels of an NYPD tow truck. Council Member Brooks-Powers pushed a bill to daylight intersections. The law passed despite the mayor’s silence. Advocates demand the city erase parking exemptions. They want clear corners. They want no more deaths.

Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the transportation committee, introduced legislation requiring the Department of Transportation to study and implement daylighting at a minimum of 100 intersections each year. The bill became law even though the mayor did not sign it. The measure, described as 'a proven safety measure that increases visibility to oncoming traffic at intersections and reduces danger for pedestrians and drivers alike,' responds to the death of a young boy struck by an NYPD tow truck. Brooks-Powers and advocates like Danny Harris of Transportation Alternatives called for urgent action, criticizing Mayor Adams for scaling back street safety improvements. Community boards and advocates urge the city to remove parking exemptions near crosswalks, arguing that lack of daylighting leads to preventable deaths. The push is clear: daylight every intersection, save lives, stop traffic violence.


Pedestrian Bleeds After Midnight Yield Failure

A 61-year-old man lay bleeding on Brookville Boulevard. Struck at midnight. The driver failed to yield. Blood pooled on the pavement. No car, no name, just silence and pain in the dark Queens street.

A 61-year-old pedestrian was struck and injured on Brookville Boulevard near 130th Avenue in Queens. According to the police report, the man was conscious but suffered severe head bleeding after being hit at midnight. The report states, 'The driver failed to yield.' The only listed contributing factor is 'Failure to Yield Right-of-Way.' No details about the vehicle or driver were provided. The victim’s injuries were serious, but the report does not specify further. The crash left blood on the street and a silence that lingered.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4672737 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-06
Brooks-Powers Demands Safety Boosting Investments in Outer Boroughs

Bike riders keep dying. Twenty-five lost since January. Most killed on streets without protection. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls for urgent investment in safer roads, especially in outer boroughs. Activists demand the city build protected bike lanes now. Promises have failed. Lives are lost.

On October 17, 2023, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31) highlighted the deadly toll facing cyclists in New York City. The event, covered by amny.com, cited a study showing 25 bike riders killed since January, making this the deadliest year for cyclists since 1999. The matter summary states: 'New York City is on pace to see the deadliest year for bike riders since 1999.' Brooks-Powers stressed the urgent need for investments in street infrastructure, especially in outer-borough communities. She joined advocates and fellow Council Member Diana Ayala in demanding the city fulfill legal requirements to build safe streets. The analysis found 94% of cyclist deaths occurred on streets without protected bike lanes. Activists and analysts called for immediate action to fast track the NYC Streets Plan and expand protected lanes, noting that only 3% of city streets have them, despite an 18.1% drop in injuries and deaths where they exist.


Brooks-Powers Opposes Delays Supports Safety-Boosting Bike Lane Bill

Cyclist deaths in New York City hit a grim peak in 2023. Most victims died on streets without protected bike lanes. Advocates blame city delays. Councilmember Brooks-Powers faces pressure to speed up safety fixes. Lives hang in the balance. Promises are not enough.

On October 17, 2023, a report spotlighted a deadly surge in cyclist fatalities across New York City, with District 31—represented by Council Transportation Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers—bearing the highest toll. The matter, titled 'Crunching the Data on the Record-Setting Year For Cyclist Deaths,' details that 94 percent of victims died on streets lacking protected bike lanes. Transportation Alternatives called on Brooks-Powers and her Council colleagues to pass Intro 417, which would eliminate a three-month wait and speed up bike lane construction. Brooks-Powers, mentioned as district representative, faces mounting pressure as advocates decry delays and demand urgent action. The report states: 'Promises won’t keep bike riders safe – but completed, fully protected bike lanes will. The time to act is now.' The city’s failure to meet the NYC Streets Plan benchmarks has left vulnerable road users exposed, with advocates urging immediate follow-through on essential street redesigns.


Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Intro 417 Bike Lane Bill

Cyclist deaths soared in 2023. Most died on streets without protection. The mayor broke his promise on bike lanes. Projects stalled. Advocates blame City Hall. Council urged to pass Intro 417. The city touts progress. Riders keep dying.

A new report from Transportation Alternatives, published October 17, 2023, slams Mayor Adams for failing to meet the City Council-mandated NYC Streets Plan. The report states, 'Traffic crashes in New York City killed more cyclists through the first nine months of 2023 than all but one other year on record.' Adams promised 75 miles of new protected bike lanes each year but delivered just 26.3 miles in 2022, missing the 30-mile benchmark and falling far short of the 50-mile requirement for 2023. Danny Harris, executive director of Transportation Alternatives, accused Adams of putting 'politics over people' and called on Council Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers and colleagues to pass Intro 417, which would eliminate a three-month delay in bike lane construction. DOT spokesman Chris Browne defended the administration, citing nearly 100 street projects. But the report is clear: delays and broken promises leave cyclists exposed and dying.


Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting E-Scooter Expansion in Queens

DOT will expand e-scooter sharing to eastern Queens next year. Bronx rollout saw millions of rides, no deaths. Advocates back the move but demand real safety infrastructure. City officials tout equity and climate benefits. Riders wait for safer streets.

On October 13, 2023, the Department of Transportation announced the expansion of its e-scooter share program to eastern Queens. The program, which launched in the Bronx in 2021, logged nearly 3 million trips with zero fatalities and few serious injuries in its first year. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez said, "Shared e-scooter service can play an important role in providing sustainable options to connect eastern Queens commuters to transit hubs, commercial corridors, and other neighborhood destinations." Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers and Queens Borough President Donovan Richards both voiced support, highlighting the program's focus on underserved communities and environmental benefits. Elizabeth Adams of Transportation Alternatives urged the city to pair the expansion with protected infrastructure, warning that safe streets must come with new mobility. The DOT will continue outreach ahead of the launch, expected in the second half of 2024.


Richards Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens E Scooter Expansion

DOT will expand e-scooter sharing to eastern Queens next year. Bronx rollout saw millions of rides, no deaths. Advocates back the move but demand real safety infrastructure. City officials tout equity and climate benefits. Riders wait for safer streets.

On October 13, 2023, the Department of Transportation announced the expansion of its e-scooter share program to eastern Queens. The program, which launched in the Bronx in 2021, logged nearly 3 million trips with zero fatalities and few serious injuries in its first year. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez said, "Shared e-scooter service can play an important role in providing sustainable options to connect eastern Queens commuters to transit hubs, commercial corridors, and other neighborhood destinations." Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers and Queens Borough President Donovan Richards both voiced support, highlighting the program's focus on underserved communities and environmental benefits. Elizabeth Adams of Transportation Alternatives urged the city to pair the expansion with protected infrastructure, warning that safe streets must come with new mobility. The DOT will continue outreach ahead of the launch, expected in the second half of 2024.


SUV Left Turn Hits Sedan on 144 Avenue

A Ford SUV made a left turn and struck a Toyota sedan on 144 Avenue in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 44-year-old woman, suffered facial bruising. Police cited traffic control disregard as the cause. Both vehicles sustained left and front-end damage.

According to the police report, a 2017 Ford SUV traveling northwest made a left turn and collided with a 2003 Toyota sedan going straight southwest on 144 Avenue in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 44-year-old woman, was injured with facial contusions but remained conscious and was restrained by a lap belt and harness. The point of impact was the left side doors of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. The report lists "Traffic Control Disregarded" as the contributing factor, indicating a failure to obey traffic signals or signs. No other driver errors or victim factors were noted.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4668821 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-06
Two Sedans Collide on South Conduit Avenue

Two sedans crashed head-to-tail on South Conduit Avenue in Queens. The female driver of the rear vehicle suffered head injuries and whiplash. Both vehicles traveled north. Driver inexperience was a factor. The injured driver was conscious and restrained.

According to the police report, two sedans traveling north on South Conduit Avenue collided, with the rear vehicle striking the front vehicle's center back end. The female driver of the rear sedan, age 29, was injured with head trauma and whiplash but remained conscious and was restrained by a lap belt and harness. The report lists driver inexperience as a contributing factor. Both drivers were licensed and driving straight ahead at the time of impact. The collision caused damage to the center front end of the lead vehicle and the center back end of the rear vehicle. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4669455 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-06
Distracted Sedan Slams Stopped SUV in Queens

A sedan rear-ended a stopped SUV on South Conduit Avenue. The SUV’s front passenger, a 53-year-old woman, suffered neck injuries. Police cite driver distraction as the cause.

According to the police report, a sedan traveling east on South Conduit Avenue struck a stopped SUV from behind. The sedan’s left front bumper hit the SUV’s right rear. The SUV’s front passenger, a 53-year-old woman, was injured with neck pain and whiplash. She was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other errors or contributing factors are noted. The sedan was damaged at the front; the SUV showed no damage.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4666118 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-06