Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Rockaway Beach-Arverne-Edgemere?

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
Richards Urges Persistence Against DOT Safety Denials▸Council passed a law forcing DOT to install stop signs or signals at every school intersection. Pols slammed DOT for dragging its feet and hiding behind federal rules. Parents and boards want action, not excuses. Kids cross streets. Cars kill.
""What I've learned is that even when they deny you, keep coming back."" -- Donovan J. Richards
On March 16, 2022, the City Council passed a school zone traffic safety law. The bill, introduced by Inez Barron, requires the Department of Transportation to install traffic control devices at every intersection next to a school by September 30, 2024. Council Member Justin Brannan, representing District 47, called the law a 'no-brainer,' saying, 'Some of our biggest victories have been getting a traffic signal installed near a busy intersection near a school – that shouldn't be some huge colossal victory.' The law aims to bypass restrictive federal guidelines that block safety fixes. Council members and residents blasted DOT for slow, arbitrary action and years of denied requests, sometimes only reversed after tragedy. The Adams administration promises to redesign 1,000 more intersections, but families and advocates demand faster, decisive protection for children.
-
New Law May Make School Zones Safer — But Why Does DOT Act So Slowly, Pols Ask,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-03-16
Brooks-Powers Champions Safety Boosting Equity and Accessible Transit▸Councilmember Brooks-Powers called out deadly streets in Southeast Queens. She demanded safe roads and good transit for every neighborhood, not just the rich. She vowed to center equity, listen to the unheard, and fix danger where it hits hardest.
On March 8, 2022, Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers made a public statement on transportation equity. She declared, 'Equity in transportation means addressing the needs of neighborhoods that have suffered from long and dangerous commutes after decades of under-investment.' Brooks-Powers, representing Southeast Queens, highlighted high rates of pedestrian and motorist danger in her district. She pledged to shift the city's focus from transit-rich areas to those left behind, stressing the need for accessible streets, protection for children, and investment in minority and women-owned businesses. Brooks-Powers opposed enforcement-heavy approaches, promising instead to prioritize improvements and community input. Her leadership signals a push to measure DOT success by safety and access for all, especially the most vulnerable.
-
Council Transportation Chair: Street Safety, Good Transit, City Funding — It’s All About Equity,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-03-08
Queens SUV Chain Collision Injures Driver▸Three SUVs collided on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The lead driver suffered neck injuries and whiplash. All vehicles struck each other from behind. Police cited following too closely as the cause. The injured driver was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, three SUVs traveling east on Beach Channel Drive in Queens collided in a chain reaction. The lead vehicle's driver, a 41-year-old woman, was injured with neck pain and whiplash but remained conscious and was wearing a lap belt and harness. The report lists 'Following Too Closely' as a contributing factor for the crash, indicating that the drivers failed to maintain safe distances. All vehicles impacted each other at their center front or back ends. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash caused injuries to the lead driver only, with no ejections reported.
S 5130Sanders supports committee progress on complete streets bill improving road safety.▸Senate passed S 5130. The bill pushes complete street design. It aims for safe access for all. Pedestrians and cyclists get a shot at safer roads. The vote was split, but the bill moved forward.
Senate bill S 5130, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee votes on March 2 and May 16, 2022. Senator Kennedy sponsored the bill. Support came from members like Jeremy Cooney, Anna Kaplan, and John Liu. Dissent came from Patrick Gallivan and Susan Serino. The bill pushes cities to design roads for everyone—pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers. It marks a shift from car-first planning. The measure aims to cut risk for people outside cars. Full vote details and text are at the New York Senate website.
-
File S 5130,
Open States,
Published 2022-03-02
Richards Warns Delays Harm Working Class Bus Riders▸Advocates and Councilmember Restler rallied for faster buses. They called out slow speeds, illegal driving, and lack of city action. Bus riders, mostly working-class and people of color, remain stranded. City promises more bus lanes, but plans lag. Riders wait.
On February 28, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) joined transit advocates at a rally demanding urgent improvements to New York City's bus system. The event, covered by amny.com, highlighted the Bus Turnaround coalition's renewed push for dedicated busways, more bus lanes, and increased funding. Restler said, 'We need a real busway on Jay Street,' citing rampant illegal driving and slow service. The rally criticized City Hall for ambitious targets but no concrete plans. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez promised 150 new miles of bus lanes, but advocates noted delays and lack of enforcement. The recommendations aim to speed up buses for vulnerable riders—working-class, immigrant, and communities of color—who rely on slow, unreliable service. The rally underscored the urgent need for action to protect and prioritize those most at risk on city streets.
-
Transit advocates call on Adams, Hochul to speed up NYC buses,
amny.com,
Published 2022-02-28
Richards Praises Safety Boosting Bike Lane Upgrades▸DOT starts to harden bike lanes, but the 100-day pledge is broken. Only 5.5 miles get upgrades now. The rest will wait until late 2023. Advocates and officials praise the move but slam the slow pace. Cyclists remain exposed.
On February 18, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a delay in its plan to bolster protected bike lanes. The Adams administration had promised to harden 20 miles of bike lanes within its first 100 days. Now, DOT says the work will finish by the end of 2023. The first phase covers just 5.5 miles in Manhattan and Queens. DOT Commissioner Rodriguez said, “We have an actionable, concrete plan to protect cyclists and we are going to deliver on this work to keep our lanes clear.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the upgrades, calling for safe biking citywide. Community Board 3’s Michelle Kuppersmith highlighted the need for political will. Still, the delay leaves vulnerable road users at risk, as the city also postponed pedestrian space on the Queensboro Bridge. The slow rollout means danger lingers for cyclists and walkers.
-
Bike Lane Bolstering Begins — But it Won’t Be Done in 100 Days, As Promised,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-18
Donovan Richards Supports Speed Cameras As Non Discriminatory Enforcement▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Council passed a law forcing DOT to install stop signs or signals at every school intersection. Pols slammed DOT for dragging its feet and hiding behind federal rules. Parents and boards want action, not excuses. Kids cross streets. Cars kill.
""What I've learned is that even when they deny you, keep coming back."" -- Donovan J. Richards
On March 16, 2022, the City Council passed a school zone traffic safety law. The bill, introduced by Inez Barron, requires the Department of Transportation to install traffic control devices at every intersection next to a school by September 30, 2024. Council Member Justin Brannan, representing District 47, called the law a 'no-brainer,' saying, 'Some of our biggest victories have been getting a traffic signal installed near a busy intersection near a school – that shouldn't be some huge colossal victory.' The law aims to bypass restrictive federal guidelines that block safety fixes. Council members and residents blasted DOT for slow, arbitrary action and years of denied requests, sometimes only reversed after tragedy. The Adams administration promises to redesign 1,000 more intersections, but families and advocates demand faster, decisive protection for children.
- New Law May Make School Zones Safer — But Why Does DOT Act So Slowly, Pols Ask, streetsblog.org, Published 2022-03-16
Brooks-Powers Champions Safety Boosting Equity and Accessible Transit▸Councilmember Brooks-Powers called out deadly streets in Southeast Queens. She demanded safe roads and good transit for every neighborhood, not just the rich. She vowed to center equity, listen to the unheard, and fix danger where it hits hardest.
On March 8, 2022, Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers made a public statement on transportation equity. She declared, 'Equity in transportation means addressing the needs of neighborhoods that have suffered from long and dangerous commutes after decades of under-investment.' Brooks-Powers, representing Southeast Queens, highlighted high rates of pedestrian and motorist danger in her district. She pledged to shift the city's focus from transit-rich areas to those left behind, stressing the need for accessible streets, protection for children, and investment in minority and women-owned businesses. Brooks-Powers opposed enforcement-heavy approaches, promising instead to prioritize improvements and community input. Her leadership signals a push to measure DOT success by safety and access for all, especially the most vulnerable.
-
Council Transportation Chair: Street Safety, Good Transit, City Funding — It’s All About Equity,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-03-08
Queens SUV Chain Collision Injures Driver▸Three SUVs collided on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The lead driver suffered neck injuries and whiplash. All vehicles struck each other from behind. Police cited following too closely as the cause. The injured driver was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, three SUVs traveling east on Beach Channel Drive in Queens collided in a chain reaction. The lead vehicle's driver, a 41-year-old woman, was injured with neck pain and whiplash but remained conscious and was wearing a lap belt and harness. The report lists 'Following Too Closely' as a contributing factor for the crash, indicating that the drivers failed to maintain safe distances. All vehicles impacted each other at their center front or back ends. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash caused injuries to the lead driver only, with no ejections reported.
S 5130Sanders supports committee progress on complete streets bill improving road safety.▸Senate passed S 5130. The bill pushes complete street design. It aims for safe access for all. Pedestrians and cyclists get a shot at safer roads. The vote was split, but the bill moved forward.
Senate bill S 5130, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee votes on March 2 and May 16, 2022. Senator Kennedy sponsored the bill. Support came from members like Jeremy Cooney, Anna Kaplan, and John Liu. Dissent came from Patrick Gallivan and Susan Serino. The bill pushes cities to design roads for everyone—pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers. It marks a shift from car-first planning. The measure aims to cut risk for people outside cars. Full vote details and text are at the New York Senate website.
-
File S 5130,
Open States,
Published 2022-03-02
Richards Warns Delays Harm Working Class Bus Riders▸Advocates and Councilmember Restler rallied for faster buses. They called out slow speeds, illegal driving, and lack of city action. Bus riders, mostly working-class and people of color, remain stranded. City promises more bus lanes, but plans lag. Riders wait.
On February 28, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) joined transit advocates at a rally demanding urgent improvements to New York City's bus system. The event, covered by amny.com, highlighted the Bus Turnaround coalition's renewed push for dedicated busways, more bus lanes, and increased funding. Restler said, 'We need a real busway on Jay Street,' citing rampant illegal driving and slow service. The rally criticized City Hall for ambitious targets but no concrete plans. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez promised 150 new miles of bus lanes, but advocates noted delays and lack of enforcement. The recommendations aim to speed up buses for vulnerable riders—working-class, immigrant, and communities of color—who rely on slow, unreliable service. The rally underscored the urgent need for action to protect and prioritize those most at risk on city streets.
-
Transit advocates call on Adams, Hochul to speed up NYC buses,
amny.com,
Published 2022-02-28
Richards Praises Safety Boosting Bike Lane Upgrades▸DOT starts to harden bike lanes, but the 100-day pledge is broken. Only 5.5 miles get upgrades now. The rest will wait until late 2023. Advocates and officials praise the move but slam the slow pace. Cyclists remain exposed.
On February 18, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a delay in its plan to bolster protected bike lanes. The Adams administration had promised to harden 20 miles of bike lanes within its first 100 days. Now, DOT says the work will finish by the end of 2023. The first phase covers just 5.5 miles in Manhattan and Queens. DOT Commissioner Rodriguez said, “We have an actionable, concrete plan to protect cyclists and we are going to deliver on this work to keep our lanes clear.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the upgrades, calling for safe biking citywide. Community Board 3’s Michelle Kuppersmith highlighted the need for political will. Still, the delay leaves vulnerable road users at risk, as the city also postponed pedestrian space on the Queensboro Bridge. The slow rollout means danger lingers for cyclists and walkers.
-
Bike Lane Bolstering Begins — But it Won’t Be Done in 100 Days, As Promised,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-18
Donovan Richards Supports Speed Cameras As Non Discriminatory Enforcement▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Councilmember Brooks-Powers called out deadly streets in Southeast Queens. She demanded safe roads and good transit for every neighborhood, not just the rich. She vowed to center equity, listen to the unheard, and fix danger where it hits hardest.
On March 8, 2022, Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers made a public statement on transportation equity. She declared, 'Equity in transportation means addressing the needs of neighborhoods that have suffered from long and dangerous commutes after decades of under-investment.' Brooks-Powers, representing Southeast Queens, highlighted high rates of pedestrian and motorist danger in her district. She pledged to shift the city's focus from transit-rich areas to those left behind, stressing the need for accessible streets, protection for children, and investment in minority and women-owned businesses. Brooks-Powers opposed enforcement-heavy approaches, promising instead to prioritize improvements and community input. Her leadership signals a push to measure DOT success by safety and access for all, especially the most vulnerable.
- Council Transportation Chair: Street Safety, Good Transit, City Funding — It’s All About Equity, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-03-08
Queens SUV Chain Collision Injures Driver▸Three SUVs collided on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The lead driver suffered neck injuries and whiplash. All vehicles struck each other from behind. Police cited following too closely as the cause. The injured driver was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, three SUVs traveling east on Beach Channel Drive in Queens collided in a chain reaction. The lead vehicle's driver, a 41-year-old woman, was injured with neck pain and whiplash but remained conscious and was wearing a lap belt and harness. The report lists 'Following Too Closely' as a contributing factor for the crash, indicating that the drivers failed to maintain safe distances. All vehicles impacted each other at their center front or back ends. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash caused injuries to the lead driver only, with no ejections reported.
S 5130Sanders supports committee progress on complete streets bill improving road safety.▸Senate passed S 5130. The bill pushes complete street design. It aims for safe access for all. Pedestrians and cyclists get a shot at safer roads. The vote was split, but the bill moved forward.
Senate bill S 5130, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee votes on March 2 and May 16, 2022. Senator Kennedy sponsored the bill. Support came from members like Jeremy Cooney, Anna Kaplan, and John Liu. Dissent came from Patrick Gallivan and Susan Serino. The bill pushes cities to design roads for everyone—pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers. It marks a shift from car-first planning. The measure aims to cut risk for people outside cars. Full vote details and text are at the New York Senate website.
-
File S 5130,
Open States,
Published 2022-03-02
Richards Warns Delays Harm Working Class Bus Riders▸Advocates and Councilmember Restler rallied for faster buses. They called out slow speeds, illegal driving, and lack of city action. Bus riders, mostly working-class and people of color, remain stranded. City promises more bus lanes, but plans lag. Riders wait.
On February 28, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) joined transit advocates at a rally demanding urgent improvements to New York City's bus system. The event, covered by amny.com, highlighted the Bus Turnaround coalition's renewed push for dedicated busways, more bus lanes, and increased funding. Restler said, 'We need a real busway on Jay Street,' citing rampant illegal driving and slow service. The rally criticized City Hall for ambitious targets but no concrete plans. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez promised 150 new miles of bus lanes, but advocates noted delays and lack of enforcement. The recommendations aim to speed up buses for vulnerable riders—working-class, immigrant, and communities of color—who rely on slow, unreliable service. The rally underscored the urgent need for action to protect and prioritize those most at risk on city streets.
-
Transit advocates call on Adams, Hochul to speed up NYC buses,
amny.com,
Published 2022-02-28
Richards Praises Safety Boosting Bike Lane Upgrades▸DOT starts to harden bike lanes, but the 100-day pledge is broken. Only 5.5 miles get upgrades now. The rest will wait until late 2023. Advocates and officials praise the move but slam the slow pace. Cyclists remain exposed.
On February 18, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a delay in its plan to bolster protected bike lanes. The Adams administration had promised to harden 20 miles of bike lanes within its first 100 days. Now, DOT says the work will finish by the end of 2023. The first phase covers just 5.5 miles in Manhattan and Queens. DOT Commissioner Rodriguez said, “We have an actionable, concrete plan to protect cyclists and we are going to deliver on this work to keep our lanes clear.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the upgrades, calling for safe biking citywide. Community Board 3’s Michelle Kuppersmith highlighted the need for political will. Still, the delay leaves vulnerable road users at risk, as the city also postponed pedestrian space on the Queensboro Bridge. The slow rollout means danger lingers for cyclists and walkers.
-
Bike Lane Bolstering Begins — But it Won’t Be Done in 100 Days, As Promised,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-18
Donovan Richards Supports Speed Cameras As Non Discriminatory Enforcement▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Three SUVs collided on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The lead driver suffered neck injuries and whiplash. All vehicles struck each other from behind. Police cited following too closely as the cause. The injured driver was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, three SUVs traveling east on Beach Channel Drive in Queens collided in a chain reaction. The lead vehicle's driver, a 41-year-old woman, was injured with neck pain and whiplash but remained conscious and was wearing a lap belt and harness. The report lists 'Following Too Closely' as a contributing factor for the crash, indicating that the drivers failed to maintain safe distances. All vehicles impacted each other at their center front or back ends. No pedestrians or cyclists were involved. The crash caused injuries to the lead driver only, with no ejections reported.
S 5130Sanders supports committee progress on complete streets bill improving road safety.▸Senate passed S 5130. The bill pushes complete street design. It aims for safe access for all. Pedestrians and cyclists get a shot at safer roads. The vote was split, but the bill moved forward.
Senate bill S 5130, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee votes on March 2 and May 16, 2022. Senator Kennedy sponsored the bill. Support came from members like Jeremy Cooney, Anna Kaplan, and John Liu. Dissent came from Patrick Gallivan and Susan Serino. The bill pushes cities to design roads for everyone—pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers. It marks a shift from car-first planning. The measure aims to cut risk for people outside cars. Full vote details and text are at the New York Senate website.
-
File S 5130,
Open States,
Published 2022-03-02
Richards Warns Delays Harm Working Class Bus Riders▸Advocates and Councilmember Restler rallied for faster buses. They called out slow speeds, illegal driving, and lack of city action. Bus riders, mostly working-class and people of color, remain stranded. City promises more bus lanes, but plans lag. Riders wait.
On February 28, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) joined transit advocates at a rally demanding urgent improvements to New York City's bus system. The event, covered by amny.com, highlighted the Bus Turnaround coalition's renewed push for dedicated busways, more bus lanes, and increased funding. Restler said, 'We need a real busway on Jay Street,' citing rampant illegal driving and slow service. The rally criticized City Hall for ambitious targets but no concrete plans. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez promised 150 new miles of bus lanes, but advocates noted delays and lack of enforcement. The recommendations aim to speed up buses for vulnerable riders—working-class, immigrant, and communities of color—who rely on slow, unreliable service. The rally underscored the urgent need for action to protect and prioritize those most at risk on city streets.
-
Transit advocates call on Adams, Hochul to speed up NYC buses,
amny.com,
Published 2022-02-28
Richards Praises Safety Boosting Bike Lane Upgrades▸DOT starts to harden bike lanes, but the 100-day pledge is broken. Only 5.5 miles get upgrades now. The rest will wait until late 2023. Advocates and officials praise the move but slam the slow pace. Cyclists remain exposed.
On February 18, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a delay in its plan to bolster protected bike lanes. The Adams administration had promised to harden 20 miles of bike lanes within its first 100 days. Now, DOT says the work will finish by the end of 2023. The first phase covers just 5.5 miles in Manhattan and Queens. DOT Commissioner Rodriguez said, “We have an actionable, concrete plan to protect cyclists and we are going to deliver on this work to keep our lanes clear.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the upgrades, calling for safe biking citywide. Community Board 3’s Michelle Kuppersmith highlighted the need for political will. Still, the delay leaves vulnerable road users at risk, as the city also postponed pedestrian space on the Queensboro Bridge. The slow rollout means danger lingers for cyclists and walkers.
-
Bike Lane Bolstering Begins — But it Won’t Be Done in 100 Days, As Promised,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-18
Donovan Richards Supports Speed Cameras As Non Discriminatory Enforcement▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Senate passed S 5130. The bill pushes complete street design. It aims for safe access for all. Pedestrians and cyclists get a shot at safer roads. The vote was split, but the bill moved forward.
Senate bill S 5130, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' passed committee votes on March 2 and May 16, 2022. Senator Kennedy sponsored the bill. Support came from members like Jeremy Cooney, Anna Kaplan, and John Liu. Dissent came from Patrick Gallivan and Susan Serino. The bill pushes cities to design roads for everyone—pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers. It marks a shift from car-first planning. The measure aims to cut risk for people outside cars. Full vote details and text are at the New York Senate website.
- File S 5130, Open States, Published 2022-03-02
Richards Warns Delays Harm Working Class Bus Riders▸Advocates and Councilmember Restler rallied for faster buses. They called out slow speeds, illegal driving, and lack of city action. Bus riders, mostly working-class and people of color, remain stranded. City promises more bus lanes, but plans lag. Riders wait.
On February 28, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) joined transit advocates at a rally demanding urgent improvements to New York City's bus system. The event, covered by amny.com, highlighted the Bus Turnaround coalition's renewed push for dedicated busways, more bus lanes, and increased funding. Restler said, 'We need a real busway on Jay Street,' citing rampant illegal driving and slow service. The rally criticized City Hall for ambitious targets but no concrete plans. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez promised 150 new miles of bus lanes, but advocates noted delays and lack of enforcement. The recommendations aim to speed up buses for vulnerable riders—working-class, immigrant, and communities of color—who rely on slow, unreliable service. The rally underscored the urgent need for action to protect and prioritize those most at risk on city streets.
-
Transit advocates call on Adams, Hochul to speed up NYC buses,
amny.com,
Published 2022-02-28
Richards Praises Safety Boosting Bike Lane Upgrades▸DOT starts to harden bike lanes, but the 100-day pledge is broken. Only 5.5 miles get upgrades now. The rest will wait until late 2023. Advocates and officials praise the move but slam the slow pace. Cyclists remain exposed.
On February 18, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a delay in its plan to bolster protected bike lanes. The Adams administration had promised to harden 20 miles of bike lanes within its first 100 days. Now, DOT says the work will finish by the end of 2023. The first phase covers just 5.5 miles in Manhattan and Queens. DOT Commissioner Rodriguez said, “We have an actionable, concrete plan to protect cyclists and we are going to deliver on this work to keep our lanes clear.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the upgrades, calling for safe biking citywide. Community Board 3’s Michelle Kuppersmith highlighted the need for political will. Still, the delay leaves vulnerable road users at risk, as the city also postponed pedestrian space on the Queensboro Bridge. The slow rollout means danger lingers for cyclists and walkers.
-
Bike Lane Bolstering Begins — But it Won’t Be Done in 100 Days, As Promised,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-18
Donovan Richards Supports Speed Cameras As Non Discriminatory Enforcement▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Advocates and Councilmember Restler rallied for faster buses. They called out slow speeds, illegal driving, and lack of city action. Bus riders, mostly working-class and people of color, remain stranded. City promises more bus lanes, but plans lag. Riders wait.
On February 28, 2022, Councilmember Lincoln Restler (District 33) joined transit advocates at a rally demanding urgent improvements to New York City's bus system. The event, covered by amny.com, highlighted the Bus Turnaround coalition's renewed push for dedicated busways, more bus lanes, and increased funding. Restler said, 'We need a real busway on Jay Street,' citing rampant illegal driving and slow service. The rally criticized City Hall for ambitious targets but no concrete plans. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez promised 150 new miles of bus lanes, but advocates noted delays and lack of enforcement. The recommendations aim to speed up buses for vulnerable riders—working-class, immigrant, and communities of color—who rely on slow, unreliable service. The rally underscored the urgent need for action to protect and prioritize those most at risk on city streets.
- Transit advocates call on Adams, Hochul to speed up NYC buses, amny.com, Published 2022-02-28
Richards Praises Safety Boosting Bike Lane Upgrades▸DOT starts to harden bike lanes, but the 100-day pledge is broken. Only 5.5 miles get upgrades now. The rest will wait until late 2023. Advocates and officials praise the move but slam the slow pace. Cyclists remain exposed.
On February 18, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a delay in its plan to bolster protected bike lanes. The Adams administration had promised to harden 20 miles of bike lanes within its first 100 days. Now, DOT says the work will finish by the end of 2023. The first phase covers just 5.5 miles in Manhattan and Queens. DOT Commissioner Rodriguez said, “We have an actionable, concrete plan to protect cyclists and we are going to deliver on this work to keep our lanes clear.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the upgrades, calling for safe biking citywide. Community Board 3’s Michelle Kuppersmith highlighted the need for political will. Still, the delay leaves vulnerable road users at risk, as the city also postponed pedestrian space on the Queensboro Bridge. The slow rollout means danger lingers for cyclists and walkers.
-
Bike Lane Bolstering Begins — But it Won’t Be Done in 100 Days, As Promised,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-18
Donovan Richards Supports Speed Cameras As Non Discriminatory Enforcement▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
DOT starts to harden bike lanes, but the 100-day pledge is broken. Only 5.5 miles get upgrades now. The rest will wait until late 2023. Advocates and officials praise the move but slam the slow pace. Cyclists remain exposed.
On February 18, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced a delay in its plan to bolster protected bike lanes. The Adams administration had promised to harden 20 miles of bike lanes within its first 100 days. Now, DOT says the work will finish by the end of 2023. The first phase covers just 5.5 miles in Manhattan and Queens. DOT Commissioner Rodriguez said, “We have an actionable, concrete plan to protect cyclists and we are going to deliver on this work to keep our lanes clear.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards praised the upgrades, calling for safe biking citywide. Community Board 3’s Michelle Kuppersmith highlighted the need for political will. Still, the delay leaves vulnerable road users at risk, as the city also postponed pedestrian space on the Queensboro Bridge. The slow rollout means danger lingers for cyclists and walkers.
- Bike Lane Bolstering Begins — But it Won’t Be Done in 100 Days, As Promised, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-02-18
Donovan Richards Supports Speed Cameras As Non Discriminatory Enforcement▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. City data proves it. But wide, dangerous roads run through these communities. Tickets pile up. So do injuries. Cameras catch speeders, but bad design breeds violence. Leaders demand street fixes, not just enforcement.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
This Streetsblog NYC analysis, published February 14, 2022, reviews New York’s speed and red light camera programs. The report finds, “New York City's speed cameras are evenly distributed and not disproportionately concentrated in low-income communities of color.” Queens Borough President Donovan Richards says, “Cameras don't discriminate.” Marco Conner DiAquoi of Transportation Alternatives adds, “We don’t see any correlation between the demographics of a zip code and the number of speeding violations there.” Council Member Gale Brewer calls for more red light cameras. Wilfredo Florentino, Brooklyn Community Board 5, says, “Just placing cameras ain't gonna cut it.” The analysis shows that dangerous, wide arterials in communities of color drive up traffic violence. Advocates and officials agree: automated enforcement helps, but only street redesigns will end the bloodshed. The Department of Transportation still withholds exact camera locations.
- Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-02-14
Richards Supports Speed Cameras To Boost Street Safety▸Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
-
Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Speed cameras do not target Black or Brown neighborhoods. Data shows crashes drop where cameras go. But unsafe roads remain. Leaders demand more cameras and street redesigns. Council Member Adrienne Adams backs calls for action. Cameras alone cannot stop traffic violence.
""Cameras don't discriminate. Either you're speeding or you're not. This data certainly proves what we've been saying all along,"" -- Donovan J. Richards
On February 14, 2022, Council Member Adrienne Adams (District 28) was mentioned in a Streetsblog analysis titled, "New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is." The report, not tied to a specific bill, reviewed automated enforcement and street design. It found speed cameras are evenly distributed and reduce crashes, but dangerous road design still puts lives at risk. Adams and other leaders called for more cameras and urgent street redesigns, echoing the article’s summary: 'Cameras have led to fewer crashes, injuries, and fatalities, but high numbers of tickets in some neighborhoods are attributed to unsafe road design, not camera placement.' Community voices stressed that automated enforcement helps, but cannot replace permanent fixes to deadly streets. The Department of Transportation’s lack of transparency on camera locations remains a concern. Adams and others demand systemic change to protect vulnerable New Yorkers.
- Analysis: New York’s Speed Cameras Aren’t Racist — But the City’s Road Design Is, streetsblog.org, Published 2022-02-14
Brooks-Powers Supports Addressing Transportation Inequities and Safety▸A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
-
Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
A 10-year-old girl died. An SUV jumped the curb in Far Rockaway. The driver sped from a parking lot, struck the child and a woman. No arrest. Leaders condemned the crash. They blamed unsafe exits, lax enforcement, and city neglect. Calls for urgent change rose.
On February 10, 2022, a driver in an SUV killed a 10-year-old girl and injured a woman on a Queens sidewalk after speeding out of a grocery store parking lot. The incident, described as 'another child on a sidewalk in Far Rockaway,' drew swift condemnation. Queens Borough President Donovan Richards called the crash a wake-up call, saying, 'There is nothing more imperative than street safety.' Council Member Selvena Brooks-Powers, chair of the Transportation Committee, called the deaths 'senseless' and blamed years of underinvestment and neglect. She pledged to work with Mayor Adams to address transportation inequities and ensure safer streets. The crash highlighted the danger of parking lot exits that funnel cars onto sidewalks and the rise in pedestrian deaths involving SUVs. Advocates demanded proven solutions to slow drivers and protect vulnerable road users.
- Reckless SUV Driver Kills Another Child on a Sidewalk in Far Rockaway, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-02-10
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Beach Channel Drive▸A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
A Toyota SUV struck a Lexus sedan from behind on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s female driver, 55, suffered hip and upper leg injuries. Police cited following too closely and driver distraction as causes. Both vehicles damaged at rear center.
According to the police report, a 2007 Toyota SUV rear-ended a 2013 Lexus sedan on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The sedan’s driver, a 55-year-old woman, was injured with contusions to her hip and upper leg but was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. The crash involved two vehicles traveling westbound. The report lists driver errors as following too closely and driver inattention or distraction. The impact occurred at the center back end of the sedan and the center front end of the SUV. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
Sedan Rear-Ends Stopped Vehicle in Queens▸A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
A sedan traveling north on Beach Channel Drive rear-ended a stopped vehicle. The 21-year-old male driver suffered abdominal and pelvic injuries. The crash happened on slippery pavement. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness.
According to the police report, a 21-year-old male driver in a 2013 sedan was injured when his vehicle struck the rear of a stopped vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver sustained contusions and bruises to the abdomen and pelvis but was not ejected and remained conscious. The report lists slippery pavement as a contributing factor. The sedan was slowing or stopping before impact, while the other vehicle was stopped in traffic. The point of impact was the center front end of the sedan and the center back end of the other vehicle. No driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were specified in the report.
Brooks-Powers Condemns Deadly Vision Zero Failures▸Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
-
NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Vision Zero failed in 2021. Two hundred seventy-three people died on New York streets. Hit-and-runs soared. SUVs killed more. Brooklyn bled most. Leaders promise fixes. Streets remain deadly. Urgency fills the air. Vulnerable lives hang in the balance.
A final analysis released January 26, 2022, revealed 2021 as the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative, with 273 road deaths—a 32 percent jump from 2018. The Transportation Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, faces mounting pressure. The matter summary states: 'A final analysis of 2021 crash statistics revealed that it was the deadliest year in the eight-year history of New York City's Vision Zero initiative.' Transportation Alternatives demanded urgent action: reclaiming street space from cars, redesigning intersections, upgrading bike lanes, and more. Mayor Adams and DOT Commissioner Rodriguez pledged intersection redesigns and stronger bike lanes, but no changes have rolled out. Brooks-Powers called every death 'an avoidable tragedy' and vowed to push for safer streets. The city stands at a crossroads. Vulnerable road users pay the price for delay.
- NUMBER CRUNCH: Inside the Deadliest Year in Vision Zero History, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-01-26
Richards Supports Safety Boosting Interborough Express Transit Project▸Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
-
ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Gov. Hochul backs a new train line linking Queens and Brooklyn. The Interborough Express uses old tracks for new rapid transit. Borough presidents Richards and Reynoso support it. The plan faces cost, freight, and construction hurdles. Public review comes next.
On January 21, 2022, Gov. Hochul announced the Interborough Express (IBX) project, a new train line connecting Bay Ridge in Brooklyn to Jackson Heights in Queens. The project is in early stages, with environmental review and public input ahead. The MTA’s feasibility study considered light rail, commuter rail, and bus rapid transit, aiming for a 45-minute end-to-end trip. The matter summary states: 'New York City is getting a new train line, the Interborough Express (IBX), thanks to Gov. Hochul's support for passenger service on the rail right of way connecting Queens and Brooklyn.' Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso voiced support at the announcement. The project uses existing right-of-way, avoiding eminent domain, but faces challenges with freight integration, track upgrades, and uncertain costs. Modular station designs aim to keep expenses down. No formal safety analysis for vulnerable road users has been published.
- ANALYSIS: Gov. Hochul’s ‘Bi-Boro’ Train Line: How Will it Work?, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-01-21
Council Appoints Brooks-Powers as Transportation Chair, Eyes Equity▸Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
-
Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
Selvena Brooks-Powers takes the helm of the Council’s Transportation Committee. She pledges to tackle traffic violence and congestion. Her district lacks bike lanes and Citi Bike docks. She supports more ferries, bus lanes, and open streets. Advocates watch closely.
On January 20, 2022, Selvena Brooks-Powers became chair of the City Council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. She represents District 31 in southeast Queens, an area with limited transit and high car use. The committee oversees key street safety and mobility issues. Brooks-Powers said, 'Historically in New York City in particular, the transportation system has had many barriers for communities that live in transportation deserts from reaching economic opportunity.' She supports expanding protected bike lanes, bus lanes, open streets, and ferry access, but has mixed views on dedicated bus lanes due to local bottlenecks. Brooks-Powers plans to consult with colleagues, advocates, and experts in her first 100 days to address traffic violence and congestion. Advocates are optimistic, citing her record fighting for communities and workers. No formal safety analyst assessment was provided.
- Meet the Council’s Transportation Committee Chair: Selvena Brooks-Powers, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-01-20
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Emerging from Parked Car▸A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.
A 59-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while stepping out from behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The driver was distracted and failed to notice the pedestrian. She suffered back abrasions and remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 59-year-old female pedestrian was injured after emerging from in front of or behind a parked vehicle on Beach Channel Drive in Queens. The vehicle involved was a 2009 SUV traveling westbound. The point of impact was the center front end of the SUV, which struck the pedestrian. The pedestrian sustained back abrasions and was conscious at the scene. The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor to the crash. There is no indication of helmet use or signaling involved. The driver was licensed and traveling straight ahead when the collision occurred.