About these crash totals
Counts come from NYC police crash reports (NYC Open Data). We sum all crashes, injuries, and deaths for this area across the selected time window shown on the card. Injury severity follows the official definitions in the NYPD dataset.
- Crashes: number of police‑reported collisions (all road users).
- All injuries: total injured people in those crashes.
- Moderate / Serious: subcategories reported by officers (e.g., broken bones vs. life‑threatening trauma).
- Deaths: people who died due to a crash.
Notes: Police reports can be corrected after initial publication. Minor incidents without a police report are not included.
Close▸ Crush Injuries 1
▸ Severe Bleeding 3
▸ Concussion 3
▸ Whiplash 11
▸ Contusion/Bruise 11
▸ Abrasion 7
▸ Pain/Nausea 2
About this chart
We group pedestrian injuries and deaths by the vehicle type that struck them (as recorded in police reports). Use the dropdown to view totals, serious injuries, or deaths.
- Trucks/Buses, SUVs/Cars, Mopeds, and Bikes reflect the reporting categories in the crash dataset.
- Counts include people on foot only; crashes with no injured pedestrians are not shown here.
Notes: Police classification can change during investigations. Small categories may have year‑to‑year variance.
CloseAbout these numbers
These totals count vehicles with at least the shown number of camera‑issued speeding violations (school‑zone speed cameras) in any rolling 12‑month window in this district. Totals are summed from 2022 to the present for this geography.
- ≥ 6 (6+): advocates’ standard for repeat speeding offenders who should face escalating consequences.
- ≥ 16 (16+): threshold in the current edited bill awaiting State Senate action.
Caught Speeding Recently in St. George-New Brighton
- 2022 White RAM Pickup (LFC3742) – 208 times • 6 in last 90d here
- 2019 Gray BMW Sedan (LUK2290) – 130 times • 1 in last 90d here
- 2023 Gray Toyota Suburban (LFB3194) – 81 times • 1 in last 90d here
- 2023 Black Toyota Suburban (LFB4140) – 72 times • 1 in last 90d here
- 2021 Nissan Seda (E13UVE) – 42 times • 1 in last 90d here
About this list
This ranks vehicles by the number of NYC school‑zone speed‑camera violations they received in the last 12 months anywhere in the city. The smaller note shows how many times the same plate was caught in this area in the last 90 days.
Camera violations are issued by NYC DOT’s program. Counts reflect issued tickets and may omit dismissed or pending cases. Plate text is shown verbatim as recorded.
Close
No Deaths, No Excuses: Injured Lives Demand Action Now
St. George-New Brighton: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 4, 2025
No Deaths, But the Toll Grows
In St. George-New Brighton, the numbers hide the pain. No one died in a crash here in the last year. But 71 people were hurt. Two were seriously injured. The wounds linger in bodies and families. In three years, 219 have been injured on these streets. The youngest was a child. The oldest, someone’s grandparent.
Cars and SUVs did most of the harm. In the last year, sedans alone injured seven pedestrians. No bikes killed or seriously hurt anyone. The street is not safe for the slow or the small.
Crashes Keep Coming
The news does not stop. In March, two police officers crashed their cruiser into a closed restaurant while swerving to avoid a U-turning car. Both went to the hospital. Hours earlier, a Dodge Charger spun out, hit a sanitation car, and then pinned a police officer. The chaos was plain. “It was pretty, pretty fast and then he crashed into a sanitation car. He crashed over there and then he’s doing circles and then he crashed out with a police car,” said witness Abi Aguirre. The sound of metal and fear filled the street. “The sound of the car, when he was doing circles it was pretty, pretty heavy,” Aguirre said.
Leadership: Progress and Delay
City leaders talk about Vision Zero. They say one life lost is too many. They point to new speed cameras, intersection redesigns, and the power to lower speed limits. But the pace is slow. Sammy’s Law lets the city set 20 mph limits, but most streets remain unchanged. The Dangerous Vehicle Abatement Program lapsed. The city calls for Albany to act, but the clock ticks. The streets do not wait.
What Comes Next
This is not fate. Every injury is a choice made by leaders who delay. Call your council member. Demand a 20 mph speed limit. Demand more cameras, more safe crossings, more action. Do not wait for the next siren. Take action now.
Citations
▸ Citations
- Police Cruisers Crash In Two Boroughs, NY Daily News, Published 2025-03-15
- Police Cruiser Slams Into Staten Island Store, NY Daily News, Published 2025-03-15
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4805550 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-06-04
Other Representatives

District 61
250 Broadway 22nd Floor Suite 2203, New York, NY 10007
Room 729, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248

District 49
130 Stuyvesant Place, 6th Floor, Staten Island, NY 10301
718-556-7370
250 Broadway, Suite 1813, New York, NY 10007
212-788-6972

District 23
2875 W. 8th St. Unit #3, Brooklyn, NY 11224
Room 617, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
▸ Other Geographies
St. George-New Brighton St. George-New Brighton sits in Staten Island, Precinct 120, District 49, AD 61, SD 23, Staten Island CB1.
▸ See also
Traffic Safety Timeline for St. George-New Brighton
20
Fall Supports Containerized Trash Collection Amid Pilot Issues▸Jul 20 - Steel-and-bamboo trash bins in Times Square leak, overflow, and attract rats. Doors stay unlocked. Garbage juice pools on sidewalks. The $1.3 million Clean Curbs pilot strains under heavy use. Sanitation vows more cleaning, better maintenance, and fixes. Streets stay cluttered.
The Clean Curbs pilot, launched by the Sanitation Department and Times Square Alliance, rolled out steel-and-bamboo trash enclosures at Eighth Avenue and 43rd Street in April 2022. By July 20, bins showed leaks, unlocked doors, and garbage overflow. The pilot, costing $1.3 million, aims to 'test methods for getting garbage bags off the streets.' Sanitation spokesman Vincent Gragnani promised daily cleaning and improved maintenance, saying, 'If this is a recurring issue, it will be taken into account as we expand the program.' CITIBIN owner Liz Picarazzi admitted the bins are over-capacity and need more frequent cleaning. Critics call the pilot too small for New York’s scale. Streets remain hazardous for walkers, who still dodge trash and puddles.
-
GROSS: ‘Clean Curbs’ Bins Show Growing Pains in Times Square,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
20
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Gas Price Driving Reduction▸Jul 20 - Gas prices rise. Driving falls. State fuel tax receipts show a sharp drop. Fewer cars on the road mean less danger for those on foot or bike. The link is clear. Pricing shapes streets. The numbers do not lie.
This editorial, published July 20, 2022, by Charles Komanoff in Streetsblog NYC, examines the effect of high gas prices on driving in New York State. Komanoff, a longtime advocate for congestion pricing and carbon taxes, analyzes state motor fuel tax receipts from 2019 to 2022. He finds a 16 percent drop in fuel sales, with April 2022 showing a stark 40 percent decline compared to April 2019. The piece, titled 'High Gas Prices Are Reducing Driving!', challenges claims that Americans are immune to price signals. Komanoff writes, 'Pricing has power. Changes in the prices of goods and services affect demand for those items.' No council bill or vote is involved. The analysis underscores that fewer cars mean safer streets for vulnerable road users, though no formal safety assessment is provided.
-
KOMANOFF: High Gas Prices <i>Are</i> Reducing Driving!,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
19
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Doyers Street Pedestrian Plaza▸Jul 19 - Doyers Street in Chinatown will close to cars and become a permanent pedestrian plaza. The city will add gravel, markings, and planters. The move follows years of temporary closures. Locals and businesses welcome the change. Streets once deadly for walkers now belong to them.
On July 19, 2022, the NYC Department of Transportation announced the full pedestrianization of Doyers Street in Chinatown, formalizing its status as a car-free plaza. The project builds on the success of Covid-era open streets and seasonal closures. DOT spokesman Vin Barone said, "DOT is proud to build on the success of our Open Streets with proposals to formalize spaces like the Doyers Open Street as a permanent pedestrian plaza." Wellington Chen, executive director of the Chinatown Partnership, praised the move, calling it "healthier and safer for both shopkeepers and customers." The plan includes new plaza features and changes to nearby parking for commercial loading. The effort is part of a broader city push, with BIDs leading similar projects across New York. The conversion gives crowded Chinatown a rare, needed refuge for pedestrians and local businesses.
-
Chinatown’s Doyers Open Street to Become a Car-Free Plaza,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-19
15
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Jersey Street▸Jul 15 - A sedan was struck from behind by an SUV on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan driver, a 22-year-old man, suffered whiplash and full-body injuries. The crash involved a reaction to an uninvolved vehicle, causing impact on the sedan’s left side doors.
According to the police report, a 22-year-old male sedan driver was injured when an SUV traveling west struck his vehicle on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan was impacted on the left side doors, with damage to the left front bumper. The SUV hit the sedan’s right rear bumper but sustained no damage. The report lists "Reaction to Uninvolved Vehicle" as a contributing factor, indicating the SUV driver’s response to another vehicle led to the collision. The sedan driver was wearing a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. He suffered whiplash and injuries to his entire body. No other driver errors or victim factors were noted.
15
Fall Opposes Harmful Amtrak Bike Service Cuts▸Jul 15 - Amtrak killed bike service on the Maple Leaf line. Cyclists lost a vital link to upstate trails. Riders scrambled. Advocates fumed. Officials demanded action. Amtrak blamed equipment. No timeline for return. Cyclists now face fewer options, higher costs, and more barriers.
On July 1, 2022, Amtrak abruptly ended bike service on its Maple Leaf line from New York to Toronto. The move left cyclists without a key route to upstate destinations and the Empire State Trail. The matter, described as 'an unexpected blow to cyclists statewide,' drew sharp criticism. Senator Tim Kennedy, chair of the state Senate Transportation Committee, urged Amtrak to reverse the decision and expand bike services. Bike New York’s Jon Orcutt called the cut symptomatic of a national failure to support sustainable transit. Amtrak cited equipment needs for longer trips but gave no date for restoring service. Cyclists now face fewer travel options, higher costs, and new barriers to safe, car-free mobility.
-
Amtrak Abruptly Stops Bike Service on ‘Maple Leaf’ to Upstate and Canada,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-15
14
Charles Fall Warns Gas Tax Holiday Boosts Dangerous Car Dependency▸Jul 14 - New Yorkers keep driving. Gas use climbs. May 2022 saw 235 million gallons burned. The state’s gas tax holiday cuts revenue, hides true fuel use. More driving means more death, more congestion, more poison in the air. Vulnerable road users pay the price.
This report, published July 14, 2022, highlights the impact of New York State’s gas tax holiday, which started June 1 and runs through year’s end. The article states: 'New York State residents continued to drive heavily despite high gas prices, with fuel consumption increasing from March to May 2022.' Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance slams the tax holiday as 'an outrageous windfall for oil profiteers' and warns it deprives New Yorkers of essential services. The article ties increased driving to sprawl and transit neglect, noting, 'Decades of sprawl planning and disinvestment in transit has made it more difficult to get around without a car—at a cost of our lungs, our bodies and our planet.' The surge in driving means more road deaths, more congestion, and more pollution. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—face greater danger as car dependency deepens.
-
Update: New Yorkers are Still Driving Like Crazy,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-14
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 20 - Steel-and-bamboo trash bins in Times Square leak, overflow, and attract rats. Doors stay unlocked. Garbage juice pools on sidewalks. The $1.3 million Clean Curbs pilot strains under heavy use. Sanitation vows more cleaning, better maintenance, and fixes. Streets stay cluttered.
The Clean Curbs pilot, launched by the Sanitation Department and Times Square Alliance, rolled out steel-and-bamboo trash enclosures at Eighth Avenue and 43rd Street in April 2022. By July 20, bins showed leaks, unlocked doors, and garbage overflow. The pilot, costing $1.3 million, aims to 'test methods for getting garbage bags off the streets.' Sanitation spokesman Vincent Gragnani promised daily cleaning and improved maintenance, saying, 'If this is a recurring issue, it will be taken into account as we expand the program.' CITIBIN owner Liz Picarazzi admitted the bins are over-capacity and need more frequent cleaning. Critics call the pilot too small for New York’s scale. Streets remain hazardous for walkers, who still dodge trash and puddles.
- GROSS: ‘Clean Curbs’ Bins Show Growing Pains in Times Square, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-20
20
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Gas Price Driving Reduction▸Jul 20 - Gas prices rise. Driving falls. State fuel tax receipts show a sharp drop. Fewer cars on the road mean less danger for those on foot or bike. The link is clear. Pricing shapes streets. The numbers do not lie.
This editorial, published July 20, 2022, by Charles Komanoff in Streetsblog NYC, examines the effect of high gas prices on driving in New York State. Komanoff, a longtime advocate for congestion pricing and carbon taxes, analyzes state motor fuel tax receipts from 2019 to 2022. He finds a 16 percent drop in fuel sales, with April 2022 showing a stark 40 percent decline compared to April 2019. The piece, titled 'High Gas Prices Are Reducing Driving!', challenges claims that Americans are immune to price signals. Komanoff writes, 'Pricing has power. Changes in the prices of goods and services affect demand for those items.' No council bill or vote is involved. The analysis underscores that fewer cars mean safer streets for vulnerable road users, though no formal safety assessment is provided.
-
KOMANOFF: High Gas Prices <i>Are</i> Reducing Driving!,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
19
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Doyers Street Pedestrian Plaza▸Jul 19 - Doyers Street in Chinatown will close to cars and become a permanent pedestrian plaza. The city will add gravel, markings, and planters. The move follows years of temporary closures. Locals and businesses welcome the change. Streets once deadly for walkers now belong to them.
On July 19, 2022, the NYC Department of Transportation announced the full pedestrianization of Doyers Street in Chinatown, formalizing its status as a car-free plaza. The project builds on the success of Covid-era open streets and seasonal closures. DOT spokesman Vin Barone said, "DOT is proud to build on the success of our Open Streets with proposals to formalize spaces like the Doyers Open Street as a permanent pedestrian plaza." Wellington Chen, executive director of the Chinatown Partnership, praised the move, calling it "healthier and safer for both shopkeepers and customers." The plan includes new plaza features and changes to nearby parking for commercial loading. The effort is part of a broader city push, with BIDs leading similar projects across New York. The conversion gives crowded Chinatown a rare, needed refuge for pedestrians and local businesses.
-
Chinatown’s Doyers Open Street to Become a Car-Free Plaza,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-19
15
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Jersey Street▸Jul 15 - A sedan was struck from behind by an SUV on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan driver, a 22-year-old man, suffered whiplash and full-body injuries. The crash involved a reaction to an uninvolved vehicle, causing impact on the sedan’s left side doors.
According to the police report, a 22-year-old male sedan driver was injured when an SUV traveling west struck his vehicle on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan was impacted on the left side doors, with damage to the left front bumper. The SUV hit the sedan’s right rear bumper but sustained no damage. The report lists "Reaction to Uninvolved Vehicle" as a contributing factor, indicating the SUV driver’s response to another vehicle led to the collision. The sedan driver was wearing a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. He suffered whiplash and injuries to his entire body. No other driver errors or victim factors were noted.
15
Fall Opposes Harmful Amtrak Bike Service Cuts▸Jul 15 - Amtrak killed bike service on the Maple Leaf line. Cyclists lost a vital link to upstate trails. Riders scrambled. Advocates fumed. Officials demanded action. Amtrak blamed equipment. No timeline for return. Cyclists now face fewer options, higher costs, and more barriers.
On July 1, 2022, Amtrak abruptly ended bike service on its Maple Leaf line from New York to Toronto. The move left cyclists without a key route to upstate destinations and the Empire State Trail. The matter, described as 'an unexpected blow to cyclists statewide,' drew sharp criticism. Senator Tim Kennedy, chair of the state Senate Transportation Committee, urged Amtrak to reverse the decision and expand bike services. Bike New York’s Jon Orcutt called the cut symptomatic of a national failure to support sustainable transit. Amtrak cited equipment needs for longer trips but gave no date for restoring service. Cyclists now face fewer travel options, higher costs, and new barriers to safe, car-free mobility.
-
Amtrak Abruptly Stops Bike Service on ‘Maple Leaf’ to Upstate and Canada,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-15
14
Charles Fall Warns Gas Tax Holiday Boosts Dangerous Car Dependency▸Jul 14 - New Yorkers keep driving. Gas use climbs. May 2022 saw 235 million gallons burned. The state’s gas tax holiday cuts revenue, hides true fuel use. More driving means more death, more congestion, more poison in the air. Vulnerable road users pay the price.
This report, published July 14, 2022, highlights the impact of New York State’s gas tax holiday, which started June 1 and runs through year’s end. The article states: 'New York State residents continued to drive heavily despite high gas prices, with fuel consumption increasing from March to May 2022.' Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance slams the tax holiday as 'an outrageous windfall for oil profiteers' and warns it deprives New Yorkers of essential services. The article ties increased driving to sprawl and transit neglect, noting, 'Decades of sprawl planning and disinvestment in transit has made it more difficult to get around without a car—at a cost of our lungs, our bodies and our planet.' The surge in driving means more road deaths, more congestion, and more pollution. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—face greater danger as car dependency deepens.
-
Update: New Yorkers are Still Driving Like Crazy,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-14
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
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City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 20 - Gas prices rise. Driving falls. State fuel tax receipts show a sharp drop. Fewer cars on the road mean less danger for those on foot or bike. The link is clear. Pricing shapes streets. The numbers do not lie.
This editorial, published July 20, 2022, by Charles Komanoff in Streetsblog NYC, examines the effect of high gas prices on driving in New York State. Komanoff, a longtime advocate for congestion pricing and carbon taxes, analyzes state motor fuel tax receipts from 2019 to 2022. He finds a 16 percent drop in fuel sales, with April 2022 showing a stark 40 percent decline compared to April 2019. The piece, titled 'High Gas Prices Are Reducing Driving!', challenges claims that Americans are immune to price signals. Komanoff writes, 'Pricing has power. Changes in the prices of goods and services affect demand for those items.' No council bill or vote is involved. The analysis underscores that fewer cars mean safer streets for vulnerable road users, though no formal safety assessment is provided.
- KOMANOFF: High Gas Prices <i>Are</i> Reducing Driving!, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-20
19
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Doyers Street Pedestrian Plaza▸Jul 19 - Doyers Street in Chinatown will close to cars and become a permanent pedestrian plaza. The city will add gravel, markings, and planters. The move follows years of temporary closures. Locals and businesses welcome the change. Streets once deadly for walkers now belong to them.
On July 19, 2022, the NYC Department of Transportation announced the full pedestrianization of Doyers Street in Chinatown, formalizing its status as a car-free plaza. The project builds on the success of Covid-era open streets and seasonal closures. DOT spokesman Vin Barone said, "DOT is proud to build on the success of our Open Streets with proposals to formalize spaces like the Doyers Open Street as a permanent pedestrian plaza." Wellington Chen, executive director of the Chinatown Partnership, praised the move, calling it "healthier and safer for both shopkeepers and customers." The plan includes new plaza features and changes to nearby parking for commercial loading. The effort is part of a broader city push, with BIDs leading similar projects across New York. The conversion gives crowded Chinatown a rare, needed refuge for pedestrians and local businesses.
-
Chinatown’s Doyers Open Street to Become a Car-Free Plaza,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-19
15
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Jersey Street▸Jul 15 - A sedan was struck from behind by an SUV on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan driver, a 22-year-old man, suffered whiplash and full-body injuries. The crash involved a reaction to an uninvolved vehicle, causing impact on the sedan’s left side doors.
According to the police report, a 22-year-old male sedan driver was injured when an SUV traveling west struck his vehicle on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan was impacted on the left side doors, with damage to the left front bumper. The SUV hit the sedan’s right rear bumper but sustained no damage. The report lists "Reaction to Uninvolved Vehicle" as a contributing factor, indicating the SUV driver’s response to another vehicle led to the collision. The sedan driver was wearing a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. He suffered whiplash and injuries to his entire body. No other driver errors or victim factors were noted.
15
Fall Opposes Harmful Amtrak Bike Service Cuts▸Jul 15 - Amtrak killed bike service on the Maple Leaf line. Cyclists lost a vital link to upstate trails. Riders scrambled. Advocates fumed. Officials demanded action. Amtrak blamed equipment. No timeline for return. Cyclists now face fewer options, higher costs, and more barriers.
On July 1, 2022, Amtrak abruptly ended bike service on its Maple Leaf line from New York to Toronto. The move left cyclists without a key route to upstate destinations and the Empire State Trail. The matter, described as 'an unexpected blow to cyclists statewide,' drew sharp criticism. Senator Tim Kennedy, chair of the state Senate Transportation Committee, urged Amtrak to reverse the decision and expand bike services. Bike New York’s Jon Orcutt called the cut symptomatic of a national failure to support sustainable transit. Amtrak cited equipment needs for longer trips but gave no date for restoring service. Cyclists now face fewer travel options, higher costs, and new barriers to safe, car-free mobility.
-
Amtrak Abruptly Stops Bike Service on ‘Maple Leaf’ to Upstate and Canada,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-15
14
Charles Fall Warns Gas Tax Holiday Boosts Dangerous Car Dependency▸Jul 14 - New Yorkers keep driving. Gas use climbs. May 2022 saw 235 million gallons burned. The state’s gas tax holiday cuts revenue, hides true fuel use. More driving means more death, more congestion, more poison in the air. Vulnerable road users pay the price.
This report, published July 14, 2022, highlights the impact of New York State’s gas tax holiday, which started June 1 and runs through year’s end. The article states: 'New York State residents continued to drive heavily despite high gas prices, with fuel consumption increasing from March to May 2022.' Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance slams the tax holiday as 'an outrageous windfall for oil profiteers' and warns it deprives New Yorkers of essential services. The article ties increased driving to sprawl and transit neglect, noting, 'Decades of sprawl planning and disinvestment in transit has made it more difficult to get around without a car—at a cost of our lungs, our bodies and our planet.' The surge in driving means more road deaths, more congestion, and more pollution. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—face greater danger as car dependency deepens.
-
Update: New Yorkers are Still Driving Like Crazy,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-14
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 19 - Doyers Street in Chinatown will close to cars and become a permanent pedestrian plaza. The city will add gravel, markings, and planters. The move follows years of temporary closures. Locals and businesses welcome the change. Streets once deadly for walkers now belong to them.
On July 19, 2022, the NYC Department of Transportation announced the full pedestrianization of Doyers Street in Chinatown, formalizing its status as a car-free plaza. The project builds on the success of Covid-era open streets and seasonal closures. DOT spokesman Vin Barone said, "DOT is proud to build on the success of our Open Streets with proposals to formalize spaces like the Doyers Open Street as a permanent pedestrian plaza." Wellington Chen, executive director of the Chinatown Partnership, praised the move, calling it "healthier and safer for both shopkeepers and customers." The plan includes new plaza features and changes to nearby parking for commercial loading. The effort is part of a broader city push, with BIDs leading similar projects across New York. The conversion gives crowded Chinatown a rare, needed refuge for pedestrians and local businesses.
- Chinatown’s Doyers Open Street to Become a Car-Free Plaza, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-19
15
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Jersey Street▸Jul 15 - A sedan was struck from behind by an SUV on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan driver, a 22-year-old man, suffered whiplash and full-body injuries. The crash involved a reaction to an uninvolved vehicle, causing impact on the sedan’s left side doors.
According to the police report, a 22-year-old male sedan driver was injured when an SUV traveling west struck his vehicle on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan was impacted on the left side doors, with damage to the left front bumper. The SUV hit the sedan’s right rear bumper but sustained no damage. The report lists "Reaction to Uninvolved Vehicle" as a contributing factor, indicating the SUV driver’s response to another vehicle led to the collision. The sedan driver was wearing a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. He suffered whiplash and injuries to his entire body. No other driver errors or victim factors were noted.
15
Fall Opposes Harmful Amtrak Bike Service Cuts▸Jul 15 - Amtrak killed bike service on the Maple Leaf line. Cyclists lost a vital link to upstate trails. Riders scrambled. Advocates fumed. Officials demanded action. Amtrak blamed equipment. No timeline for return. Cyclists now face fewer options, higher costs, and more barriers.
On July 1, 2022, Amtrak abruptly ended bike service on its Maple Leaf line from New York to Toronto. The move left cyclists without a key route to upstate destinations and the Empire State Trail. The matter, described as 'an unexpected blow to cyclists statewide,' drew sharp criticism. Senator Tim Kennedy, chair of the state Senate Transportation Committee, urged Amtrak to reverse the decision and expand bike services. Bike New York’s Jon Orcutt called the cut symptomatic of a national failure to support sustainable transit. Amtrak cited equipment needs for longer trips but gave no date for restoring service. Cyclists now face fewer travel options, higher costs, and new barriers to safe, car-free mobility.
-
Amtrak Abruptly Stops Bike Service on ‘Maple Leaf’ to Upstate and Canada,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-15
14
Charles Fall Warns Gas Tax Holiday Boosts Dangerous Car Dependency▸Jul 14 - New Yorkers keep driving. Gas use climbs. May 2022 saw 235 million gallons burned. The state’s gas tax holiday cuts revenue, hides true fuel use. More driving means more death, more congestion, more poison in the air. Vulnerable road users pay the price.
This report, published July 14, 2022, highlights the impact of New York State’s gas tax holiday, which started June 1 and runs through year’s end. The article states: 'New York State residents continued to drive heavily despite high gas prices, with fuel consumption increasing from March to May 2022.' Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance slams the tax holiday as 'an outrageous windfall for oil profiteers' and warns it deprives New Yorkers of essential services. The article ties increased driving to sprawl and transit neglect, noting, 'Decades of sprawl planning and disinvestment in transit has made it more difficult to get around without a car—at a cost of our lungs, our bodies and our planet.' The surge in driving means more road deaths, more congestion, and more pollution. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—face greater danger as car dependency deepens.
-
Update: New Yorkers are Still Driving Like Crazy,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-14
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 15 - A sedan was struck from behind by an SUV on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan driver, a 22-year-old man, suffered whiplash and full-body injuries. The crash involved a reaction to an uninvolved vehicle, causing impact on the sedan’s left side doors.
According to the police report, a 22-year-old male sedan driver was injured when an SUV traveling west struck his vehicle on Jersey Street, Staten Island. The sedan was impacted on the left side doors, with damage to the left front bumper. The SUV hit the sedan’s right rear bumper but sustained no damage. The report lists "Reaction to Uninvolved Vehicle" as a contributing factor, indicating the SUV driver’s response to another vehicle led to the collision. The sedan driver was wearing a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. He suffered whiplash and injuries to his entire body. No other driver errors or victim factors were noted.
15
Fall Opposes Harmful Amtrak Bike Service Cuts▸Jul 15 - Amtrak killed bike service on the Maple Leaf line. Cyclists lost a vital link to upstate trails. Riders scrambled. Advocates fumed. Officials demanded action. Amtrak blamed equipment. No timeline for return. Cyclists now face fewer options, higher costs, and more barriers.
On July 1, 2022, Amtrak abruptly ended bike service on its Maple Leaf line from New York to Toronto. The move left cyclists without a key route to upstate destinations and the Empire State Trail. The matter, described as 'an unexpected blow to cyclists statewide,' drew sharp criticism. Senator Tim Kennedy, chair of the state Senate Transportation Committee, urged Amtrak to reverse the decision and expand bike services. Bike New York’s Jon Orcutt called the cut symptomatic of a national failure to support sustainable transit. Amtrak cited equipment needs for longer trips but gave no date for restoring service. Cyclists now face fewer travel options, higher costs, and new barriers to safe, car-free mobility.
-
Amtrak Abruptly Stops Bike Service on ‘Maple Leaf’ to Upstate and Canada,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-15
14
Charles Fall Warns Gas Tax Holiday Boosts Dangerous Car Dependency▸Jul 14 - New Yorkers keep driving. Gas use climbs. May 2022 saw 235 million gallons burned. The state’s gas tax holiday cuts revenue, hides true fuel use. More driving means more death, more congestion, more poison in the air. Vulnerable road users pay the price.
This report, published July 14, 2022, highlights the impact of New York State’s gas tax holiday, which started June 1 and runs through year’s end. The article states: 'New York State residents continued to drive heavily despite high gas prices, with fuel consumption increasing from March to May 2022.' Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance slams the tax holiday as 'an outrageous windfall for oil profiteers' and warns it deprives New Yorkers of essential services. The article ties increased driving to sprawl and transit neglect, noting, 'Decades of sprawl planning and disinvestment in transit has made it more difficult to get around without a car—at a cost of our lungs, our bodies and our planet.' The surge in driving means more road deaths, more congestion, and more pollution. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—face greater danger as car dependency deepens.
-
Update: New Yorkers are Still Driving Like Crazy,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-14
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 15 - Amtrak killed bike service on the Maple Leaf line. Cyclists lost a vital link to upstate trails. Riders scrambled. Advocates fumed. Officials demanded action. Amtrak blamed equipment. No timeline for return. Cyclists now face fewer options, higher costs, and more barriers.
On July 1, 2022, Amtrak abruptly ended bike service on its Maple Leaf line from New York to Toronto. The move left cyclists without a key route to upstate destinations and the Empire State Trail. The matter, described as 'an unexpected blow to cyclists statewide,' drew sharp criticism. Senator Tim Kennedy, chair of the state Senate Transportation Committee, urged Amtrak to reverse the decision and expand bike services. Bike New York’s Jon Orcutt called the cut symptomatic of a national failure to support sustainable transit. Amtrak cited equipment needs for longer trips but gave no date for restoring service. Cyclists now face fewer travel options, higher costs, and new barriers to safe, car-free mobility.
- Amtrak Abruptly Stops Bike Service on ‘Maple Leaf’ to Upstate and Canada, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-15
14
Charles Fall Warns Gas Tax Holiday Boosts Dangerous Car Dependency▸Jul 14 - New Yorkers keep driving. Gas use climbs. May 2022 saw 235 million gallons burned. The state’s gas tax holiday cuts revenue, hides true fuel use. More driving means more death, more congestion, more poison in the air. Vulnerable road users pay the price.
This report, published July 14, 2022, highlights the impact of New York State’s gas tax holiday, which started June 1 and runs through year’s end. The article states: 'New York State residents continued to drive heavily despite high gas prices, with fuel consumption increasing from March to May 2022.' Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance slams the tax holiday as 'an outrageous windfall for oil profiteers' and warns it deprives New Yorkers of essential services. The article ties increased driving to sprawl and transit neglect, noting, 'Decades of sprawl planning and disinvestment in transit has made it more difficult to get around without a car—at a cost of our lungs, our bodies and our planet.' The surge in driving means more road deaths, more congestion, and more pollution. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—face greater danger as car dependency deepens.
-
Update: New Yorkers are Still Driving Like Crazy,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-14
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 14 - New Yorkers keep driving. Gas use climbs. May 2022 saw 235 million gallons burned. The state’s gas tax holiday cuts revenue, hides true fuel use. More driving means more death, more congestion, more poison in the air. Vulnerable road users pay the price.
This report, published July 14, 2022, highlights the impact of New York State’s gas tax holiday, which started June 1 and runs through year’s end. The article states: 'New York State residents continued to drive heavily despite high gas prices, with fuel consumption increasing from March to May 2022.' Danny Pearlstein of Riders Alliance slams the tax holiday as 'an outrageous windfall for oil profiteers' and warns it deprives New Yorkers of essential services. The article ties increased driving to sprawl and transit neglect, noting, 'Decades of sprawl planning and disinvestment in transit has made it more difficult to get around without a car—at a cost of our lungs, our bodies and our planet.' The surge in driving means more road deaths, more congestion, and more pollution. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—face greater danger as car dependency deepens.
- Update: New Yorkers are Still Driving Like Crazy, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-14
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 12 - Manhattan’s leaders want Broadway closed to cars. They cite 429 injuries and four deaths from 14th to 42nd streets. They demand a real plan, not piecemeal fixes. The city’s slow pace angers them. Victims wait. Traffic keeps killing.
On July 12, 2022, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera, Erik Bottcher, and Keith Powers urged the Department of Transportation to declare Broadway from 14th to 34th streets a 'limited access open street.' They called for a comprehensive pedestrianization plan, referencing 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along the corridor since 2011. Their letter states, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization... could be a way to positively transform the area.' The officials want a tangible plan by fall and concrete actions by early 2023. Business leaders, including Dan Biederman, now support the move, citing economic benefits. The recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th, injuring six, has fueled urgency. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises pedestrianization from Union Square to Columbus Circle, but advocates and victims’ families demand more, faster.
- ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-12
12
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Broadway Pedestrianization Plan▸Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
-
ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway,
streetsblog.org,
Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 12 - Council Member Keith Powers and allies demand Broadway’s full pedestrianization. They cite 429 injuries, four deaths. They want a corridor-wide plan, not scattered fixes. Business leaders now back the move. Recent crashes fuel urgency. The city promises action.
On July 12, 2022, Council Member Keith Powers (District 4) joined Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and Council Members Carlina Rivera and Erik Bottcher to urge the Department of Transportation to pedestrianize Broadway from 14th to 34th streets, with plans to extend up to 42nd Street. Their letter cites 429 injuries and four pedestrian deaths along Broadway between August 2011 and May 2022. The officials wrote, 'This stretch of Broadway needs to be made safer, and we believe pedestrianization, with limited necessary entries for vehicles that must access certain points along Broadway, could be a way to positively transform the area and benefit all New Yorkers.' Business leaders, including Dan Biederman of the 34th Street Partnership, now support the plan, calling it good for economic development. The push follows a recent taxi crash at Broadway and 29th Street that injured six. The city’s Broadway Vision plan promises to pedestrianize much of the corridor from Union Square to Columbus Circle.
- ANALYSIS: Electeds Seek Much More than Piecemeal Pedestrianization on Broadway, streetsblog.org, Published 2022-07-12
7
Sedan Driver Injured in Staten Island Crash▸Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 7 - A 75-year-old man driving a sedan on York Avenue suffered facial abrasions after a front-end collision. The driver was conscious and restrained by a lap belt. The crash occurred during a right turn. Injuries were moderate but no ejection happened.
According to the police report, a 75-year-old male driver was injured in a collision on York Avenue in Staten Island. The driver was making a right turn when the sedan's center front end was impacted. The driver sustained facial abrasions and was conscious at the scene, wearing a lap belt. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrians or other vehicles were involved, and the driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
5
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Prospect Heights Bike Pedestrian Upgrades▸Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
-
City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 5 - DOT plans to turn Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and add traffic-calming on Vanderbilt. The city will close blocks, add bike lanes, and carve out more space for people. Locals pushed for safer streets. Construction may start this fall.
On July 5, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced a proposal to overhaul Underhill and Vanderbilt Avenues in Prospect Heights. The plan, described as a 'traffic network and public realm plan,' aims to convert Underhill Avenue into a bike boulevard and upgrade Vanderbilt Avenue with new bike lanes, pedestrian islands, and traffic-calming features. The proposal follows community workshops where residents demanded safer, people-first streets and dedicated loading zones. DOT will close the northern-most block of Underhill to cars, add two-way bike lanes, and install pinch-points to slow drivers. On Vanderbilt, sharrows become painted bike lanes, and new pedestrian islands and turn lanes will protect cyclists and walkers. DOT hopes to begin construction in the fall and is reviewing the neighborhood for further changes. Gib Veconi, a local advocate, said, 'The changes will help force drivers to slow down 24/7.'
- City Proposes Bike and Pedestrian Upgrades to Two Prospect Heights Avenues, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-05
1
SUV and Sedan Collide on Richmond Terrace▸Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 1 - Two vehicles crashed on Richmond Terrace in Staten Island. A 25-year-old male passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. The SUV and sedan collided head-on and rear-end. The passenger was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected.
According to the police report, a collision occurred on Richmond Terrace involving a 2014 Kia SUV and a 1996 sedan, both traveling west. The SUV struck the sedan at the center front and center back ends, respectively. A 25-year-old male occupant in the sedan's left rear seat suffered neck injuries and whiplash. He was restrained by a lap belt and was not ejected. The report lists "Physical Disability" as a contributing factor but does not specify driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. Both drivers were licensed and traveling straight ahead before the crash. The crash caused significant damage to both vehicles at the points of impact.
1
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Flatbush Bus Priority Plan▸Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
-
DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jul 1 - DOT and MTA start work on Flatbush Avenue. Seven miles of danger for walkers and cyclists. Bus lanes, signals, and bold changes on the table. Community split. Businesses fear lost parking. Advocates push for safety. No fixes before 2023.
On July 1, 2022, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and MTA kicked off a public process to overhaul bus service and pedestrian safety along Brooklyn’s Flatbush Avenue. The project, part of the Streets Master Plan, faces committee review and community outreach through summer and fall, with implementation not expected before 2023. DOT Director of Bus Priority Kyle Gebhart said, “Everything is on the table.” The agency’s data shows slow buses and high rates of pedestrian and cyclist injuries. The plan divides the corridor into three segments for tailored solutions, including curbside and center-running bus lanes, transit signal priority, and busways. Some business groups voiced anger over possible parking loss, but transit advocates countered that most shoppers do not drive. Riders Alliance’s Danny Pearlstein said, “Busways are great for business, bringing more customers from more neighborhoods more efficiently and affordably.” The project’s outcome will shape safety for thousands who walk, bike, and ride.
- DOT Begins Flatbush Ave. Bus Improvement Project With Everything on the Table, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-01
29
10-Year-Old Bicyclist Injured on Staten Island▸Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 29 - A 10-year-old boy riding a bike was injured on Winter Avenue in Staten Island. The child suffered abrasions and lower leg injuries. The crash involved driver inattention and inexperience. No vehicle damage was reported. The boy remained conscious.
According to the police report, a 10-year-old bicyclist was injured on Winter Avenue, Staten Island. The child sustained abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and driver inexperience as contributing factors. The bicyclist was not ejected and was conscious after the crash. The bike showed no damage despite impact at the center front end. The driver was unlicensed. No other vehicles or pedestrians were involved. The crash occurred while both the bicyclist and the other vehicle were traveling straight ahead. The report does not indicate any helmet use or signaling by the bicyclist.
28
Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Redesign Petition▸Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
-
EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation,
brooklynpaper.com,
Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 28 - Over 2,500 neighbors demand a safer McGuinness Boulevard. The petition calls for fewer lanes, wider sidewalks, and a protected bike lane. Community anger follows deadly crashes. The city’s DOT faces pressure to act. The street remains a danger zone.
On June 28, 2022, Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and over 2,500 residents backed a petition urging a full redesign of McGuinness Boulevard. The Department of Transportation will present its draft plan to Brooklyn Community Board 1’s Transportation Committee on June 30. The petition, described as a call for 'wider sidewalks and a wider median, a protected bike lane, and eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction,' follows the hit-and-run death of teacher Matthew Jensen. Gallagher stated, 'Our community is speaking loud and clear: no more deaths on McGuinness.' The campaign has support from Councilmember Lincoln Restler and Borough President Antonio Reynoso. The street, a busy four-lane truck route, has seen dozens of crashes and injuries in recent years. Organizers and residents demand urgent action to end the deadly toll on vulnerable road users.
- EXCLUSIVE: More than 2,500 sign petition supporting McGuinness Boulevard redesign ahead of DOT presentation, brooklynpaper.com, Published 2022-06-28
27
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Residential Trash Containerization Pilot▸Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
-
EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 27 - City rolls out Clean Curbs pilot in Hells Kitchen. Trash bins take curb space once reserved for cars. Bags move off sidewalks. Pedestrians get room to walk. Rats lose cover. Some drivers grumble. Council Member Bottcher calls it progress. Streets change. Safety follows.
On June 27, 2022, the city launched the Clean Curbs residential pilot on West 45th Street between Ninth and Tenth avenues in Hells Kitchen. The Department of Sanitation will install several dozen rat-proof trash bins for building managers and superintendents to store garbage and recycling, moving bags off sidewalks and into curbside street lanes. The matter summary reads: 'Testing a rat-proof trash container... instead of on the sidewalk.' Council Member Erik Bottcher said he is 'thrilled that our district was the first to be chosen for this exciting advance,' calling it 'another important step.' The pilot takes parking space for bins, sparking complaints from drivers but clearing pedestrian paths. The city plans to expand the $1.3-million program to all five boroughs. Critics note the bins are small and collection methods unchanged, limiting scale. Still, the move marks a shift: less sidewalk trash, more space for people.
- EXCLUSIVE: ‘Clean Curbs’ Residential Bins To Launch in Hells Kitchen, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-06-27
26
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Vision Zero Road Initiatives▸Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
-
Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
-
City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 26 - Three dead. Seven injured. Brooklyn streets ran red this weekend. Drivers struck, dragged, and killed. Victims included a child and an elder. Officials spoke. Promises made. The toll climbs. Vision Zero falters. Blood on the asphalt. The crisis deepens.
On June 26, 2022, Mayor Eric Adams and Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez issued a joint statement after a weekend of deadly crashes in Brooklyn. The statement followed a spate of violence: 'Car drivers killed at least three people and injured seven others, including an 11-year-old boy.' The carnage included hit-and-runs, reckless driving, and unlicensed operators. Adams and Rodriguez said they are 'working every day to deliver true public safety for pedestrians, cyclists, and everyone who uses our streets.' They acknowledged recent progress but warned, 'the disturbing incidents we've seen in recent weeks and the last 48 hours remind us just how fragile those positive steps are and how much more work remains.' The city faces one of its most violent years since Vision Zero began. The numbers: 106 killed citywide in the first half of 2022, surpassing 2015. The crisis is not over. The danger remains.
- Weekend Road Carnage Kills Three, Injures at Least Seven, as Bad Old Days Return, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-06-26
23
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Eastern Queens Protected Bike Lanes▸Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
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City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
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Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
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MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 23 - DOT’s plan adds nine miles of protected bike lanes in Eastern Queens. Activists say it falls short. Gaps remain. Cyclists still risk death. Community Board 11 debates. Some call it progress. Others demand more. The fight for safe streets continues.
The Department of Transportation’s proposal for a protected bike-lane network in Eastern Queens, updated after Community Board 11 feedback, now includes about nine miles of protected lanes. The plan, described as 'crucial for providing protected access to parks and greenways,' faces criticism from activists and residents who say it lacks key connections and leaves cyclists exposed. CB11 member John Kelly, speaking personally, voiced fear for his child’s safety and called for a shift in car culture. Victor Dadras, chair of the CB11 Transportation Committee, called the plan 'a step in the right direction' but admitted it is incomplete. The committee will discuss the proposal further, with a full board vote expected in September. DOT may begin marking lanes in the fall. Activists cite recent cyclist deaths and demand a stronger, safer network.
- City’s Proposed Eastern Queens Bike Network Needs Work, Activists Say, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-06-23
22
Charles Fall Opposes Harmful Staten Island Bus Service Cuts▸Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
-
Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 22 - Staten Island buses vanish from schedules more than any in New York. Riders wait. They miss work. They give up. The MTA blames a driver shortage. Service lags behind the rest of the city. The fix is slow. The danger grows.
On June 22, 2022, Streetsblog NYC reported that Staten Island buses are canceled more than any other borough’s, citing MTA data. The matter highlights that 'Staten Island has the city's lowest rate of Service Delivered.' Riders like Kayla and Brandon Grada spoke of constant cancellations and unreliable schedules. Janno Lieber, MTA Chairman and CEO, said hiring is underway to address the shortage. Staten Island’s service delivery rate was 92 percent in April, compared to 97 percent citywide. The MTA’s hiring freeze and pandemic losses hit Staten Island hardest. Riders report missed work and abandoning transit. The MTA promises improvement, but for now, vulnerable road users face longer waits and greater risk.
- Staten Island’s Buses are the Most-Canceled in New York City, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-06-22
22
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting City Worker Crash Accountability▸Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
-
Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 22 - City workers behind the wheel keep hitting people. Taxpayers bleed. In 2021, New York paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 crash claims. Cops, sanitation, fire, and transit agencies drive the toll. The city’s own cars are a menace. Victims pay the price.
On June 22, 2022, the city Comptroller released the annual Claims Report, revealing that in fiscal year 2021, New York City paid $138.5 million to settle 4,143 cases involving city workers crashing city-owned vehicles. The report states: 'City-owned motor vehicles cause the largest share of personal injury and property damage settlements.' Comptroller Brad Lander sounded the alarm, saying, 'These payouts cost over a hundred of million dollars a year, and can never account for the damage to traffic victims and their families. Traffic violence has a price NYC cannot afford.' The NYPD, Department of Sanitation, FDNY, Department of Environmental Protection, and DOT accounted for nearly all payouts. Only Sanitation and DOT responded to the report. The city’s own fleet remains a threat to vulnerable road users. The cost is measured in blood and dollars.
- Crashes By City Workers — Especially Cops — Are Still Costing Taxpayers Dearly, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-06-22
22
Fall Highlights Need for Safety Boosting Transit Funding▸Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
-
MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-06-22
Jun 22 - MTA chief Janno Lieber drew a hard line. No congestion pricing means no new subway, no e-buses, no ADA fixes. The $15 billion gap looms. Advocates say there’s no backup plan. Riders and vulnerable users wait, exposed, as funding stalls.
""It's going to be the ... Second Avenue subway. It's a lot of ADA [accessibility improvements to] stations. It's a lot of zero emissions buses. It's a lot of state-of-good-repair to make sure our system continues to function well and doesn't fall apart. We need that $15 billion."" -- Charles Fall
On June 22, 2022, MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber issued a stark warning about the fate of the agency’s capital plan. Speaking publicly, Lieber said, "If it doesn't happen, at some point we can't award contracts that are dependent on having capital, the cash a couple of years later." The matter centers on congestion pricing, which Lieber and advocates call the largest, most environmentally beneficial funding source for the MTA. Projects at risk include the Second Avenue Subway, ADA accessibility improvements, and zero-emissions buses. Lieber opposes broad exemptions, arguing carve-outs weaken the plan. Rachel Fauss, a transit advocate, stressed, "There is no other source to fill that $15 billion hole." The MTA’s five-year capital plan remains stalled, leaving vulnerable riders—especially those needing accessible stations—at risk as the city waits for action.
- MTA CEO Puts it in Blunt Terms: ‘Without Congestion Pricing, Forget 2nd Ave. Subway, E-Buses or ADA Work’, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-06-22