About these crash totals
Counts come from NYC police crash reports (NYC Open Data). We sum all crashes, injuries, and deaths for this area across the selected time window shown on the card. Injury severity follows the official definitions in the NYPD dataset.
- Crashes: number of police‑reported collisions (all road users).
- All injuries: total injured people in those crashes.
- Moderate / Serious: subcategories reported by officers (e.g., broken bones vs. life‑threatening trauma).
- Deaths: people who died due to a crash.
Notes: Police reports can be corrected after initial publication. Minor incidents without a police report are not included.
Close▸ Killed 2
▸ Crush Injuries 2
▸ Severe Lacerations 4
▸ Concussion 3
▸ Whiplash 28
▸ Contusion/Bruise 31
▸ Abrasion 35
▸ 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.
Caught Speeding Recently in Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere
- 2020 Gray Kia Sedan (JRY9088) – 49 times • 1 in last 90d here
- 2024 Hyundai Sedan (MNM9002) – 47 times • 1 in last 90d here
- 2021 White Chevrolet Suburban (LEA3397) – 38 times • 1 in last 90d here
- 2020 Gray Toyota Suburban (T705202C) – 37 times • 1 in last 90d here
- 2021 Black Chevrolet Suburban (LDF1686) – 22 times • 2 in last 90d here
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
Rockaway Bleeds While City Sleeps
Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere: Jan 1, 2022 - Aug 5, 2025
The Crashes Keep Coming
No one died here last year. But the blood never dries. In the past twelve months, 158 people were hurt in 293 crashes across Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere. Four suffered serious injuries. Children are not spared: 14 kids were injured, one seriously. These numbers are not just statistics—they are broken bones, hospital beds, and families waiting for news that never gets better.
Just weeks ago, a cyclist was left with severe cuts to his face after a crash at Beach Channel Drive and Beach 73rd Street. In February, a woman crossing with the signal was crushed by an SUV turning left at the same intersection. She survived, but the pain lingers. Data from NYC Open Data shows the toll.
Sirens, Steel, and Silence
The danger is not just for those on foot or bike. On August 4, two NYPD cruisers collided at Rockaway Freeway and Beach 35th Street while racing to a shots-fired call. Four officers were sent to the hospital. As ABC7 reported, “The officers were responding to a call for shots fired nearby when they crashed.” No civilians were hurt this time. But the risk is always there. Steel meets flesh, and flesh loses.
Leaders Talk, Streets Bleed
Local leaders know the score. Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers called the city’s greenway plan “a real opportunity… to make a profound impact” (amNY). She has backed bills to ban parking near crosswalks and expand protected bike lanes. But the pace is slow. The committee laid over the daylighting bill in April (NYC Council Legistar). Promises pile up. The crashes do too.
What Now? Demand More
Every day without action is another day of risk. Call your council member. Demand a citywide 20 mph speed limit. Push for the Stop Super Speeders Act (Open States). Tell them: enough waiting. The next crash is coming. Don’t let it be your family.
Frequently Asked Questions
▸ Where does Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere sit politically?
▸ What types of vehicles caused injuries and deaths to pedestrians in Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere?
▸ Are these crashes just 'accidents'?
▸ What can local politicians do to stop traffic violence?
▸ What is CrashCount?
▸ How many people were seriously hurt or killed here in the last year?
▸ What should I do if I want safer streets?
Citations
▸ Citations
- Man Killed By Car In Queens Dispute, ABC7, Published 2025-08-01
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4752713 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-05
- Police Cruisers Collide In Rockaways Crash, ABC7, Published 2025-08-05
- Comprehensive NYC Greenway plan for bike, pedestrian infrastructure passes City Council, amny.com, Published 2022-10-27
- File Int 1138-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-12-05
- NYPD Vehicles Collide In Queens Response, CBS New York, Published 2025-08-05
- NYPD Cruiser Crash Injures Three In Queens, CBS New York, Published 2025-08-05
- Two Killed In Separate E-Vehicle Crashes, NY Daily News, Published 2025-08-03
- Man Killed By Car In Queens Dispute, ABC7, Published 2025-08-01
- File S 4045, Open States, Published 2025-06-12
- A ‘Boulevard of Life’ transformation: DOT announces completion of Queens Boulevard Redesign, amny.com, Published 2024-11-12
- Ye Shall Know Their Names! Meet the Dirty Dozen City Pols Who Voted Against Speed Camera Program, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-06-23
- Can New York City Fix Its Deadly ‘Conduit’ to JFK Airport?, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-13
- As NYPD’s Criminal Crackdown on Cyclists Expands, It Grows More Absurd: Victims, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2025-05-06
- Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-01-20
Other Representatives

District 31
131-15 Rockaway Blvd. 1st Floor, South Ozone Park, NY 11420
Room 742, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248

District 31
1931 Mott Avenue, Suite 410, Far Rockaway, NY 11691
718-471-7014
250 Broadway, Suite 1865, New York, NY 10007
212-788-7216

District 10
142-01 Rockaway Blvd., South Ozone Park, NY 11436
Room 711, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
▸ Other Geographies
Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere sits in Queens, Precinct 100, District 31, AD 31, SD 10, Queens CB14.
▸ See also
Traffic Safety Timeline for Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere
28Int 0450-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill boosting street safety by expanding community use of outdoor spaces.▸Feb 28 - Council bill pushes DOT to let schools, centers, and institutions use streets outside their doors. More people, less traffic. Streets shift from cars to community. Still in committee.
Int 0450-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure since February 28, 2024. The bill orders DOT to create a program letting community centers, schools, arts, and religious institutions use adjacent outdoor spaces. The matter title reads: 'requiring the department of transportation to establish a program to allow community centers, schools, arts and cultural institutions and religious institutions to use adjacent outdoor spaces.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads, joined by Stevens, Restler, Won, and others. The bill has not yet passed. If enacted, it could reclaim space from cars, giving it to people. No formal safety analysis yet, but the measure could mean safer, more vibrant streets for all.
-
File Int 0450-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0448-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill creating crossing guard advisory board, no safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council moves to form a board on school crossing guard deployment. NYPD, DOT, and DOE must report twice a year. The aim: more eyes on street danger where kids cross.
Bill Int 0448-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to an advisory board on crossing guard deployment," calls for NYPD, DOT, and DOE to join an advisory board. The board must send biannual reports on crossing guard needs to the Mayor, Council Speaker, and Police Commissioner. Council Member Kamillah Hanks leads as primary sponsor, joined by Stevens, Schulman, Salaam, and others. The Bronx Borough President requested the bill. The board’s reports could spotlight gaps and push for better protection at dangerous crossings.
-
File Int 0448-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0270-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill expanding Open Streets, boosting pedestrian and cyclist safety.▸Feb 28 - Council moves to expand Open Streets on busy holidays. More hours. More car-free blocks. Pedestrians and cyclists get space when crowds surge. Streets shift from traffic to people. Danger drops. The city listens to neighborhoods.
Bill Int 0270-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it amends city code to require the Department of Transportation to expand Open Streets hours on holidays with heavy foot traffic—Memorial Day, Juneteenth, July 4th, Labor Day, Halloween, and others. The bill reads: 'special activation of the Open Streets program on certain holidays and time periods with significant pedestrian traffic.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads as primary sponsor, joined by Rivera, Brooks-Powers, Louis, Nurse, Ossé, Sanchez, Cabán, Banks, Avilés, Riley, Salaam, Hanif, Feliz, Won, Restler, and Joseph. Community groups can suggest more dates. The city must review all requests under the same standards as regular Open Streets. This bill aims to give people the street when they need it most.
-
File Int 0270-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0144-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring bollards, improving pedestrian and cyclist safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and ramps. DOT must study bollard impact in crowded zones. Aim: shield walkers, especially those with disabilities, from car incursion.
Int 0144-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill mandates the Department of Transportation to install bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and pedestrian ramps to improve access for people with disabilities. It also requires a study on bollard effectiveness in high pedestrian traffic areas and the creation of installation guidelines within six months. The matter title reads: 'installation of bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions and pedestrian ramps.' Council Members Shekar Krishnan (primary), Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Shahana K. Hanif, and Crystal Hudson sponsor the bill. The committee last acted on June 25, 2024, laying it over for further review.
-
File Int 0144-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0114-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring DOT to study commercial vehicle street design.▸Feb 28 - Council wants DOT to study how street design can keep commercial trucks out of residential blocks. The bill sits in committee. Streets should shelter people, not heavy traffic.
Int 0114-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to report on 'the utility and feasibility of using street design as a means to limit or reduce the use by commercial vehicles of streets in residential neighborhoods.' Jennifer Gutiérrez leads as primary sponsor, joined by Avilés, the Public Advocate, and others. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It demands a clear look at how design can push trucks off streets where people walk, bike, and live.
-
File Int 0114-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0262-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill to require speed humps near parks, improving street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.
Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.
-
File Int 0262-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0143-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors hit-and-run reward bill with no direct safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
-
File Int 0143-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council bill pushes DOT to let schools, centers, and institutions use streets outside their doors. More people, less traffic. Streets shift from cars to community. Still in committee.
Int 0450-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure since February 28, 2024. The bill orders DOT to create a program letting community centers, schools, arts, and religious institutions use adjacent outdoor spaces. The matter title reads: 'requiring the department of transportation to establish a program to allow community centers, schools, arts and cultural institutions and religious institutions to use adjacent outdoor spaces.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads, joined by Stevens, Restler, Won, and others. The bill has not yet passed. If enacted, it could reclaim space from cars, giving it to people. No formal safety analysis yet, but the measure could mean safer, more vibrant streets for all.
- File Int 0450-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0448-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill creating crossing guard advisory board, no safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council moves to form a board on school crossing guard deployment. NYPD, DOT, and DOE must report twice a year. The aim: more eyes on street danger where kids cross.
Bill Int 0448-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to an advisory board on crossing guard deployment," calls for NYPD, DOT, and DOE to join an advisory board. The board must send biannual reports on crossing guard needs to the Mayor, Council Speaker, and Police Commissioner. Council Member Kamillah Hanks leads as primary sponsor, joined by Stevens, Schulman, Salaam, and others. The Bronx Borough President requested the bill. The board’s reports could spotlight gaps and push for better protection at dangerous crossings.
-
File Int 0448-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0270-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill expanding Open Streets, boosting pedestrian and cyclist safety.▸Feb 28 - Council moves to expand Open Streets on busy holidays. More hours. More car-free blocks. Pedestrians and cyclists get space when crowds surge. Streets shift from traffic to people. Danger drops. The city listens to neighborhoods.
Bill Int 0270-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it amends city code to require the Department of Transportation to expand Open Streets hours on holidays with heavy foot traffic—Memorial Day, Juneteenth, July 4th, Labor Day, Halloween, and others. The bill reads: 'special activation of the Open Streets program on certain holidays and time periods with significant pedestrian traffic.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads as primary sponsor, joined by Rivera, Brooks-Powers, Louis, Nurse, Ossé, Sanchez, Cabán, Banks, Avilés, Riley, Salaam, Hanif, Feliz, Won, Restler, and Joseph. Community groups can suggest more dates. The city must review all requests under the same standards as regular Open Streets. This bill aims to give people the street when they need it most.
-
File Int 0270-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0144-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring bollards, improving pedestrian and cyclist safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and ramps. DOT must study bollard impact in crowded zones. Aim: shield walkers, especially those with disabilities, from car incursion.
Int 0144-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill mandates the Department of Transportation to install bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and pedestrian ramps to improve access for people with disabilities. It also requires a study on bollard effectiveness in high pedestrian traffic areas and the creation of installation guidelines within six months. The matter title reads: 'installation of bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions and pedestrian ramps.' Council Members Shekar Krishnan (primary), Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Shahana K. Hanif, and Crystal Hudson sponsor the bill. The committee last acted on June 25, 2024, laying it over for further review.
-
File Int 0144-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0114-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring DOT to study commercial vehicle street design.▸Feb 28 - Council wants DOT to study how street design can keep commercial trucks out of residential blocks. The bill sits in committee. Streets should shelter people, not heavy traffic.
Int 0114-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to report on 'the utility and feasibility of using street design as a means to limit or reduce the use by commercial vehicles of streets in residential neighborhoods.' Jennifer Gutiérrez leads as primary sponsor, joined by Avilés, the Public Advocate, and others. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It demands a clear look at how design can push trucks off streets where people walk, bike, and live.
-
File Int 0114-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0262-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill to require speed humps near parks, improving street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.
Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.
-
File Int 0262-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0143-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors hit-and-run reward bill with no direct safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
-
File Int 0143-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council moves to form a board on school crossing guard deployment. NYPD, DOT, and DOE must report twice a year. The aim: more eyes on street danger where kids cross.
Bill Int 0448-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to an advisory board on crossing guard deployment," calls for NYPD, DOT, and DOE to join an advisory board. The board must send biannual reports on crossing guard needs to the Mayor, Council Speaker, and Police Commissioner. Council Member Kamillah Hanks leads as primary sponsor, joined by Stevens, Schulman, Salaam, and others. The Bronx Borough President requested the bill. The board’s reports could spotlight gaps and push for better protection at dangerous crossings.
- File Int 0448-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0270-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill expanding Open Streets, boosting pedestrian and cyclist safety.▸Feb 28 - Council moves to expand Open Streets on busy holidays. More hours. More car-free blocks. Pedestrians and cyclists get space when crowds surge. Streets shift from traffic to people. Danger drops. The city listens to neighborhoods.
Bill Int 0270-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it amends city code to require the Department of Transportation to expand Open Streets hours on holidays with heavy foot traffic—Memorial Day, Juneteenth, July 4th, Labor Day, Halloween, and others. The bill reads: 'special activation of the Open Streets program on certain holidays and time periods with significant pedestrian traffic.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads as primary sponsor, joined by Rivera, Brooks-Powers, Louis, Nurse, Ossé, Sanchez, Cabán, Banks, Avilés, Riley, Salaam, Hanif, Feliz, Won, Restler, and Joseph. Community groups can suggest more dates. The city must review all requests under the same standards as regular Open Streets. This bill aims to give people the street when they need it most.
-
File Int 0270-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0144-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring bollards, improving pedestrian and cyclist safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and ramps. DOT must study bollard impact in crowded zones. Aim: shield walkers, especially those with disabilities, from car incursion.
Int 0144-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill mandates the Department of Transportation to install bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and pedestrian ramps to improve access for people with disabilities. It also requires a study on bollard effectiveness in high pedestrian traffic areas and the creation of installation guidelines within six months. The matter title reads: 'installation of bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions and pedestrian ramps.' Council Members Shekar Krishnan (primary), Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Shahana K. Hanif, and Crystal Hudson sponsor the bill. The committee last acted on June 25, 2024, laying it over for further review.
-
File Int 0144-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0114-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring DOT to study commercial vehicle street design.▸Feb 28 - Council wants DOT to study how street design can keep commercial trucks out of residential blocks. The bill sits in committee. Streets should shelter people, not heavy traffic.
Int 0114-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to report on 'the utility and feasibility of using street design as a means to limit or reduce the use by commercial vehicles of streets in residential neighborhoods.' Jennifer Gutiérrez leads as primary sponsor, joined by Avilés, the Public Advocate, and others. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It demands a clear look at how design can push trucks off streets where people walk, bike, and live.
-
File Int 0114-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0262-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill to require speed humps near parks, improving street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.
Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.
-
File Int 0262-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0143-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors hit-and-run reward bill with no direct safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
-
File Int 0143-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council moves to expand Open Streets on busy holidays. More hours. More car-free blocks. Pedestrians and cyclists get space when crowds surge. Streets shift from traffic to people. Danger drops. The city listens to neighborhoods.
Bill Int 0270-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it amends city code to require the Department of Transportation to expand Open Streets hours on holidays with heavy foot traffic—Memorial Day, Juneteenth, July 4th, Labor Day, Halloween, and others. The bill reads: 'special activation of the Open Streets program on certain holidays and time periods with significant pedestrian traffic.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads as primary sponsor, joined by Rivera, Brooks-Powers, Louis, Nurse, Ossé, Sanchez, Cabán, Banks, Avilés, Riley, Salaam, Hanif, Feliz, Won, Restler, and Joseph. Community groups can suggest more dates. The city must review all requests under the same standards as regular Open Streets. This bill aims to give people the street when they need it most.
- File Int 0270-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0144-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring bollards, improving pedestrian and cyclist safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and ramps. DOT must study bollard impact in crowded zones. Aim: shield walkers, especially those with disabilities, from car incursion.
Int 0144-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill mandates the Department of Transportation to install bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and pedestrian ramps to improve access for people with disabilities. It also requires a study on bollard effectiveness in high pedestrian traffic areas and the creation of installation guidelines within six months. The matter title reads: 'installation of bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions and pedestrian ramps.' Council Members Shekar Krishnan (primary), Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Shahana K. Hanif, and Crystal Hudson sponsor the bill. The committee last acted on June 25, 2024, laying it over for further review.
-
File Int 0144-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0114-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring DOT to study commercial vehicle street design.▸Feb 28 - Council wants DOT to study how street design can keep commercial trucks out of residential blocks. The bill sits in committee. Streets should shelter people, not heavy traffic.
Int 0114-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to report on 'the utility and feasibility of using street design as a means to limit or reduce the use by commercial vehicles of streets in residential neighborhoods.' Jennifer Gutiérrez leads as primary sponsor, joined by Avilés, the Public Advocate, and others. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It demands a clear look at how design can push trucks off streets where people walk, bike, and live.
-
File Int 0114-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0262-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill to require speed humps near parks, improving street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.
Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.
-
File Int 0262-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0143-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors hit-and-run reward bill with no direct safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
-
File Int 0143-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council bill orders bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and ramps. DOT must study bollard impact in crowded zones. Aim: shield walkers, especially those with disabilities, from car incursion.
Int 0144-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill mandates the Department of Transportation to install bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions, and pedestrian ramps to improve access for people with disabilities. It also requires a study on bollard effectiveness in high pedestrian traffic areas and the creation of installation guidelines within six months. The matter title reads: 'installation of bollards at reconstructed sidewalks, curb extensions and pedestrian ramps.' Council Members Shekar Krishnan (primary), Selvena N. Brooks-Powers, Shahana K. Hanif, and Crystal Hudson sponsor the bill. The committee last acted on June 25, 2024, laying it over for further review.
- File Int 0144-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0114-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill requiring DOT to study commercial vehicle street design.▸Feb 28 - Council wants DOT to study how street design can keep commercial trucks out of residential blocks. The bill sits in committee. Streets should shelter people, not heavy traffic.
Int 0114-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to report on 'the utility and feasibility of using street design as a means to limit or reduce the use by commercial vehicles of streets in residential neighborhoods.' Jennifer Gutiérrez leads as primary sponsor, joined by Avilés, the Public Advocate, and others. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It demands a clear look at how design can push trucks off streets where people walk, bike, and live.
-
File Int 0114-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0262-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill to require speed humps near parks, improving street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.
Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.
-
File Int 0262-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0143-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors hit-and-run reward bill with no direct safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
-
File Int 0143-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council wants DOT to study how street design can keep commercial trucks out of residential blocks. The bill sits in committee. Streets should shelter people, not heavy traffic.
Int 0114-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to report on 'the utility and feasibility of using street design as a means to limit or reduce the use by commercial vehicles of streets in residential neighborhoods.' Jennifer Gutiérrez leads as primary sponsor, joined by Avilés, the Public Advocate, and others. The bill was referred to committee on the day of introduction. It demands a clear look at how design can push trucks off streets where people walk, bike, and live.
- File Int 0114-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0262-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors bill to require speed humps near parks, improving street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.
Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.
-
File Int 0262-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0143-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors hit-and-run reward bill with no direct safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
-
File Int 0143-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council bill orders speed humps on roads beside parks over one acre. DOT can skip spots if safety or rules demand. Law aims to slow cars where families walk, run, and play.
Int 0262-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: “requiring the installation of speed humps on roadways adjacent to any park equal or greater than one acre.” Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by eighteen co-sponsors. The Department of Transportation must install speed humps unless the commissioner finds a risk to safety or a conflict with DOT guidelines. The law would take effect 180 days after passage. The measure targets streets where parks meet traffic, aiming to slow cars and shield people outside vehicles.
- File Int 0262-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0143-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors hit-and-run reward bill with no direct safety impact.▸Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
-
File Int 0143-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council bill would pay up to $1,000 for tips that help catch hit-and-run drivers who injure or kill. Police and city workers are barred from rewards. The measure targets unsolved crashes that leave victims behind.
Int 0143-2024, now in the Committee on Public Safety, was introduced February 28, 2024. The bill states: 'establishing a reward for individuals who provide information leading to the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person who seriously injures or kills another individual in a hit-and-run accident.' Council Member Rita C. Joseph leads as primary sponsor, joined by Brooks-Powers, Narcisse, Vernikov, Louis, Bottcher, Hudson, Gennaro, and Williams. The bill excludes law enforcement and city employees from eligibility. The aim is to mobilize the public to help solve hit-and-run cases, many of which remain unsolved, and bring justice for victims.
- File Int 0143-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28Res 0060-2024
Brooks-Powers co-sponsors school scramble crosswalks, boosting student pedestrian safety.▸Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
-
File Res 0060-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council backs scramble crosswalks at schools. Cars stop. Kids cross in all directions. Fewer deadly conflicts. Bill aims to shield students at arrival and dismissal. Action now sits in committee.
Resolution 0060-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, urges Albany to pass A.5001-A/S.2515-B. The measure, introduced February 28, 2024, calls for scramble crosswalks at school entrances during arrival and dismissal. The resolution states: 'establishing scramble crosswalks leading to and from school buildings.' Council Members Shahana K. Hanif (primary sponsor) and Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (co-sponsor) lead the push. Scramble crosswalks halt all vehicles, letting pedestrians cross in every direction. This design cuts car-pedestrian conflicts, especially for children. The council's action follows years of crashes near schools and a drop in crossing guards. The bill aims to protect the city's most vulnerable road users—its students.
- File Res 0060-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Emphasizes DOT Responsibility for Street Safety Projects▸Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.
On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.
- Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2024-02-28
28
Brooks-Powers Opposes DOT Failure on Safety Benchmarks▸Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
-
Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.
On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.
- Divorce NY Style: The Council and DOT Have Moved to Splitsville, streetsblog.org, Published 2024-02-28
28Int 0177-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to ban fake or expired plates, boosting street safety.▸Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
-
File Int 0177-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.
Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.
- File Int 0177-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-28
26
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT Failure to Meet Legal Mandates▸Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
-
DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 26 - DOT missed legal targets for bike and bus lanes. Only 58.2 miles of bike lanes and 9.6 miles of bus lanes built. Council and advocates slam the agency. Vulnerable road users left exposed. The law demands more. DOT promises effort, not results.
On February 26, 2024, the Department of Transportation released its status report on the NYC Streets Plan, a law passed in 2019. The plan required 80 miles of protected bike lanes and 50 miles of protected bus lanes in the first two years of the Adams administration. DOT delivered only 58.2 miles of bike lanes (72%) and 9.6 miles of bus lanes (19%). Only 68 of 1,000 bus stop upgrades were completed. Transportation Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers said, "The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations." DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez called the benchmarks "aggressive" but promised to keep trying. Mayor Adams has refused to be bound by the law’s targets. Riders Alliance demanded a real plan for bus lanes. The city’s failure leaves pedestrians, cyclists, and bus riders at risk.
- DOT Spins Bus- and Bike-Lane Failure as ‘Streets Plan’ Success, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2024-02-26
25
Brooks-Powers Criticizes DOT for Failing Legal Bike Bus Mandates▸Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
-
Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 25 - For the second year, DOT failed to meet legal targets for new protected bike and bus lanes. Council Member Brooks-Powers slammed the slow pace. Cyclist deaths hit a 21st-century high. Promises broken. Streets remain deadly. Progress stalls. Riders pay the price.
On February 25, 2024, the City Council, led by Transportation Committee Chair Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), publicly criticized the Department of Transportation for missing legal mandates on new bus and bike lane construction. The matter, titled 'Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows,' revealed DOT built only 31.9 miles of protected bike lanes and 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes in 2023—far short of the 50 and 30 miles required by the Streets Master Plan. Brooks-Powers stated, 'The Streets Plan is the law, and the Department of Transportation is still failing to fulfill its legal obligations.' She promised to hold DOT accountable at an upcoming budget hearing. The city also lagged on bus stop upgrades, completing just 54 out of 500 required. Cyclist fatalities soared to 30 in 2023, the highest this century. Advocates and council members warn that continued delays and weakened projects put vulnerable road users at greater risk.
- Spinning wheels: Adams admin misses legal benchmarks for new bus, bike lanes for second year in a row, DOT data shows, amny.com, Published 2024-02-25
17
Brooks-Powers Supports Speed Cameras Faces Family Ticket Controversy▸Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
-
NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing,
nypost.com,
Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 17 - Councilwoman Brooks-Powers, head of the Transportation Committee, backs speed cameras and safer streets. Her family car racked up 25 tickets in 16 months—20 for speeding near schools. Critics call her actions hypocritical. Advocates say public trust and lives are at stake.
On February 17, 2024, Councilwoman Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the City Council’s Transportation Committee, came under fire after media reports revealed her family car received 25 traffic tickets in 16 months, including 20 for speeding near schools. The controversy centers on officials’ personal compliance with traffic laws while publicly supporting measures like speed cameras and congestion pricing. Brooks-Powers, who has promoted speed cameras and legislation to reward reporting hit-and-run drivers, claims her husband was responsible for the violations and that she has not used the car in over a year. Councilman Robert Holden called her a 'hypocrite,' while safe streets advocate Adam White stressed, 'Public officials and their families need to abide by speed cameras and red lights... people’s lives are at risk.' The incident highlights the gap between public safety advocacy and personal conduct, raising questions about accountability and public trust.
- NYC transportation bigwigs rack up speeding tickets, traffic violations while backing anti-car agenda, congestion pricing, nypost.com, Published 2024-02-17
9
Unlicensed Driver Hits Elderly Pedestrian Crossing▸Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 9 - An unlicensed male driver made a left turn and struck an 80-year-old woman crossing with the signal. The pedestrian suffered serious leg injuries. The crash exposed driver failure to yield and inattention, underscoring systemic dangers at intersections.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Beach Boulevard near Beach 73 Street in Queens at 5:50 PM. A 2010 Nissan sedan, driven by an unlicensed male driver making a left turn, struck an 80-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at an intersection. The pedestrian sustained a fractured and dislocated injury to her knee, lower leg, and foot, classified as injury severity 3. The report cites the driver's failure to yield right-of-way and driver inattention or distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle impacted the pedestrian at the center front end, yet the vehicle sustained no damage. The driver’s unlicensed status and distracted left turn created a hazardous condition that led to serious injury, highlighting systemic risks posed by driver errors at intersections.
8Int 0079-2024
Brooks-Powers sponsors bill to boost sidewalk lighting, improving street safety.▸Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
-
File Int 0079-2024,
NYC Council – Legistar,
Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 8 - Council moves to force brighter sidewalks. Bill orders 500 corridors lit each year. Shadows shrink. Pedestrians gain ground. Committee holds the bill. Streets wait.
Int 0079-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 8, 2024. The bill demands the city install pedestrian lighting in at least 500 commercial corridors per year, aiming for a minimum of 1 footcandle (11 lux) on every sidewalk. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installation of pedestrian lighting fixtures.' Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Restler, Krishnan, Bottcher, and others. The committee has not yet voted. The bill’s text sets clear targets for coverage and contiguity, but action is stalled. Vulnerable road users remain in the dark until the city acts.
- File Int 0079-2024, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2024-02-08
8
Brooks-Powers Supports Safety-Boosting Citizen Reporting for Blocked Lanes▸Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
-
Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2024-02-08
6
Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
-
NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
2
Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 8 - Restler’s bill puts power in the hands of New Yorkers. Citizen reporters can ticket drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The 25% bounty returns. No more hoops. Streets could clear. Cyclists and pedestrians stand to gain. NYPD loses its grip.
Council Member Lincoln Restler has re-introduced his bill to restore a 25% bounty for New Yorkers who report drivers blocking bike and bus lanes. The bill, announced on February 8, 2024, removes prior compromises—no phased rollout, no mandatory training, no ID hurdles. The measure, previously stripped down in committee, now returns to its original form. The matter title: 'Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets.' Restler vows to push hard for passage, saying, 'This bill would make a tremendous difference in making our streets safer for cyclists and pedestrians.' Activists like Sara Lind back the bounty, arguing, 'More reporting, more enforcement, will lead to fewer violations.' The bill’s fate is uncertain after Restler’s removal from the Transportation Committee, but the intent is clear: shift enforcement from NYPD to the people, and clear the way for vulnerable road users.
- Prophet Motive: Restler Bill Would Restore 25% Bounty for Blocked Bike and Bus Lane Tickets, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2024-02-08
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Brooks-Powers Critiques Vision Zero Unequal Safety Gains▸Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
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NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says,
amny.com,
Published 2024-02-06
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Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
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Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 6 - Vision Zero made streets safer, but not for all. Black and Latino neighborhoods saw deaths rise. White, wealthy areas got more bike lanes, better Open Streets. Council Member Brooks-Powers calls out the disparity. DOT claims new plans target equity, but gaps remain.
On February 6, 2024, Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers (District 31), chair of the Transportation Committee, criticized Vision Zero’s uneven impact. The report, titled "NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially if you live in a white neighborhood," found that while traffic fatalities dropped citywide, majority-Black communities saw a 13% increase and Latino areas a 30% rise. Brooks-Powers said, "It is deeply concerning that communities of color are experiencing fatalities at higher rates." The report states, "It's clear the program has not been fully or effectively implemented in neighborhoods of color and with lower incomes." DOT spokesperson Anna Correa responded that recent plans focus more resources on high-poverty, non-white neighborhoods, but the safety gap persists. The data shows Vision Zero’s benefits depend on where you live—and who the city prioritizes.
- NYC streets have gotten safer under Vision Zero – especially you live in a white neighborhood, report says, amny.com, Published 2024-02-06
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Queens SUV and Sedan Collide Amid Driver Distraction▸Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
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Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Feb 2 - A Queens crash on Rockaway Freeway injured a 42-year-old female SUV driver. Both vehicles collided frontally as the SUV traveled east and the sedan turned right northbound. The SUV driver suffered fractures and pelvic injuries, trapped in her vehicle.
According to the police report, the crash occurred on Rockaway Freeway near Beach 47 Street in Queens at 13:48. A 42-year-old female driver of a 2020 Nissan SUV traveling east collided with a 2015 Mitsubishi sedan making a right turn northbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV and the left front bumper of the sedan. The SUV driver was injured with fractures, dislocations, and abdomen-pelvis trauma, trapped inside her vehicle despite wearing a lap belt and harness. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' and 'Unsafe Speed' as contributing factors for the SUV driver. Both vehicles sustained front-end damage. The sedan had three occupants, and its male driver was licensed in New York. The crash highlights driver errors, particularly inattention and unsafe speed, as central causes of this violent collision.
30
Sedan Strikes Parked Car, Passenger Injured▸Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.
Jan 30 - A speeding sedan collided with a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The impact struck the left side doors of the parked car, injuring a 32-year-old female passenger with hip and upper leg trauma and whiplash.
According to the police report, at 20:21 on Beach Channel Drive in Queens, a 2022 Honda sedan traveling east struck a parked sedan on its left side doors. The collision was caused by the driver's unsafe speed, as noted in the contributing factors. The parked vehicle had two occupants, including a 32-year-old female passenger who sustained injuries to her hip and upper leg and complained of whiplash. She was conscious and not ejected from the vehicle. The driver of the moving sedan was licensed and traveling straight ahead before impact. The damage was concentrated on the right side doors of the moving sedan and the left side doors of the parked car. No victim behaviors were cited as contributing factors in the report.