Crash Count for Port Richmond
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 720
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 348
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 90
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 4
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Aug 6, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Port Richmond?

Port Richmond Bleeds While City Leaders Look Away

Port Richmond Bleeds While City Leaders Look Away

Port Richmond: Jan 1, 2022 - Jun 4, 2025

Blood on Port Richmond’s Streets

A man runs a red light. A child is struck crossing with the signal. The street does not care. In Port Richmond, the numbers pile up. Since 2022, one person is dead, three are seriously hurt, and 303 have been injured in 640 crashes (NYC crash data).

Last year, a sedan hit a man crossing Post Avenue. He died at the intersection. The record shows: chest wounds, severe bleeding, killed while walking with the light. The car kept going. The street stayed the same.

The Cost of Delay

No child should be in danger just walking home. Yet in April, a four-year-old girl riding on a bike was hit by an SUV on Rector Street. She survived. Her scars will last. The driver kept going straight. The city kept talking about safety.

On May 11, police tried to stop a Nissan SUV for tinted windows. The driver sped off, crashed into a police car, and opened fire. “The gunman smashed his Nissan into the police car and then opened fire on the vehicle, striking it but missing the officers inside” (reported the New York Post). Two officers were cut by glass. Two guns were found in the car. The SUV had 27 violations, five for speeding. The system let it roll.

Leadership: Words and Silence

The city says it is acting. Speed cameras. Lower speed limits. But the deaths keep coming. No council member, no local leader has stood in Port Richmond to say, “Enough.” The silence is loud. The laws are slow. The streets are fast.

What Now? Demand Action

The disaster is not fate. It is policy. Call your council member. Call the mayor. Demand a 20 mph speed limit. Demand speed cameras that never go dark. Demand streets that put children before cars. If leaders will not act, replace them.

Take action now.

Citations

Citations

Other Representatives

Charles Fall
Assembly Member Charles Fall
District 61
District Office:
250 Broadway 22nd Floor Suite 2203, New York, NY 10007
Legislative Office:
Room 729, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Kamillah Hanks
Council Member Kamillah Hanks
District 49
District Office:
130 Stuyvesant Place, 6th Floor, Staten Island, NY 10301
718-556-7370
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1813, New York, NY 10007
212-788-6972
Jessica Scarcella-Spanton
State Senator Jessica Scarcella-Spanton
District 23
District Office:
2875 W. 8th St. Unit #3, Brooklyn, NY 11224
Legislative Office:
Room 617, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies

Port Richmond Port Richmond sits in Staten Island, Precinct 121, District 49, AD 61, SD 23, Staten Island CB1.

See also
City Council Districts
Community Boards
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Port Richmond

Pick-up Truck Hits Pedestrian Crossing Signal

A 45-year-old woman was struck by a northbound pick-up truck at an intersection. She suffered bruises and injuries to her knee and lower leg. The driver was distracted, causing the collision. The pedestrian was crossing with the signal.

According to the police report, a 45-year-old female pedestrian was injured when a 2016 Chevrolet pick-up truck traveling north struck her at an intersection on Port Richmond Avenue. The pedestrian was crossing with the signal when the collision occurred. The driver, a licensed male from Maryland, was going straight ahead but failed to pay attention, as the report lists Driver Inattention/Distraction as the contributing factor. The impact was to the center front end of the truck, causing injuries including contusions and trauma to the pedestrian's knee, lower leg, and foot. The pedestrian was conscious and suffered a bruise but was not ejected from the roadway.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4571038 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-13
Fall Supports Safety Boosting $100 Monthly Transit Subsidy

DC Council’s transit bill moves. Committee votes yes. Every resident gets $100 monthly for Metro. Funds target bus, streetcar, and neighborhoods left behind. Lawmakers say it’s costly, but worth it. Riders wait for better, cheaper, fairer service.

The Metro for DC Amendment Act of 2021 advanced on October 3, 2022, with a unanimous vote by the DC Council’s Committee on Transportation and the Environment. The bill promises, as its summary states, to put '$100 per month on District residents' SmarTrip cards' and to invest millions in bus and streetcar improvements, especially for underserved neighborhoods. Councilmember Charles Allen (Ward 6) introduced the bill, joined in support by Christina Henderson (At-large) and Janeese Lewis George (Ward 4). Committee Chair Mary Cheh (Ward 3) acknowledged the program’s high cost—an estimated $163 million in fiscal year 2025—but called the community benefit 'more than worth it.' The bill also creates a $10 million Transit Equity fund. The measure now heads to the Committee of the Whole for further review and two rounds of voting. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson has not yet scheduled a hearing.


Fall Opposes Fordham Road Bus Lane Expansion Plan

Oswald Feliz halted DOT’s Fordham Road bus lane. He demanded a year’s pause. The move stalls safer, faster transit. Thousands of daily bus riders wait. Pedestrians and cyclists remain exposed. Cars keep ruling the street. The city’s promise fades.

On October 2, 2022, Councilmember Oswald Feliz of District 15 opposed the Department of Transportation’s plan to convert segments of Fordham Road to bus and delivery-only lanes. Feliz asked DOT to pause the redesign for at least 12 months, citing concerns about traffic diversion and business impacts. The matter, reported as 'Eric Adams’ ambitious bus lane plans hit roadblock on NYC’s Fordham Road,' details how Feliz’s opposition blocks a key part of Mayor Adams’ pledge to build 20 new miles of bus lanes. DOT’s proposal aimed to restrict private vehicle traffic and prioritize buses and deliveries, a move supported by transit advocates and local polls. But Feliz’s action keeps the status quo: crowded streets, slow buses, and danger for those outside cars. No safety analyst assessment was provided.


Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Skillman Avenue Bike Lane

Skillman Avenue’s protected bike lane sparked outrage. Critics warned of empty shops and lost jobs. But after the lane went in, business grew. Sales rose 12 percent. Crashes fell by nearly a quarter. The street got safer. The warnings proved hollow.

This report covers the installation of a protected bike lane on Skillman Avenue in Queens, completed in fall 2018. The project faced fierce opposition, with critics predicting economic ruin for local businesses. Streetsblog obtained sales tax data from the Department of Finance, showing that, after the bike lane went in, Skillman Avenue’s main commercial stretch saw a 12 percent increase in sales and a net gain of three businesses. The article states: 'The economy of Skillman Avenue grew after the city built the new lane.' Department of Transportation spokeswoman Mona Bruno praised the redesign, saying, 'It's thrilling to see the neighborhood flourish with safer and more sustainable streets.' Crash data show a 24 percent drop in crashes and a 28 percent drop in injuries after installation. The findings challenge the myth that bike lanes hurt business and highlight the safety gains for cyclists and pedestrians.


Charles Fall Mentioned in Debate Over Outdoor Dining Policy

Council Speaker Adrienne Adams rejects outdoor dining in parking lanes. She calls for sidewalk-only setups, ignoring cramped sidewalks and city data. Her stance favors car storage over public space. Council Member Bottcher and advocates push back, demanding streets for people.

On September 28, 2022, Council Speaker Adrienne Adams made a public statement opposing the use of parking lanes for outdoor dining. The matter, discussed at a Citizens Union breakfast, centered on the future of the Open Restaurants program. Adams said, "Outdoor dining, in my perspective, should be sidewalk. The street extensions were designed to be temporary." The City Council is currently developing legislation to allow restaurants to use parking lanes, but Adams’s comments signal resistance. Council Member Erik Bottcher countered, calling the use of road space for dining "an overall positive development." Adams’s stance ignores the reality that most city sidewalks are too narrow for sidewalk-only dining, squeezing pedestrians and limiting restaurant survival. Advocates and groups like Transportation Alternatives and Open Plans criticized her position, urging the Council to reclaim public space from cars and support vibrant, safe streets for all.


Fall Supports Safety Boosting Right On Red Ban

D.C. council moved to ban right turns on red. The Safer Intersections Act passed a unanimous preliminary vote. Cyclists could yield at lights. Pedestrians and cyclists face fewer deadly turns. The law targets a decades-old danger. Final approval and Congressional sign-off still needed.

Bill B22-0000, known as the Safer Intersections Act, advanced in the Washington, D.C. council with a unanimous preliminary vote on September 28, 2022. The bill, under committee review, would prohibit right turns on red except at designated intersections and allow cyclists to treat stoplights as yield signs. The matter summary states the act 'will prohibit right-on-reds except at designated intersections.' Council Member Christina Henderson acknowledged the controversy, highlighting that 'the vast majority of [traffic violence] incidents are occurring in communities of color.' Advocates and council members argue the ban will reduce deadly 'right-hook' crashes, especially as large vehicles create blind zones. The bill awaits a final vote and Congressional approval, aiming to protect vulnerable road users and address longstanding inequities in traffic violence.


Fall Supports Safety Boosting Clean Curbs Program Expansion

Sanitation’s ‘Clean Curbs’ bins land on Staten Island. Trash moves off sidewalks. Curb space shifts from cars to public use. The city eyes more locations. Streets get less cluttered. Pedestrians gain room. The program grows, block by block.

On September 27, 2022, the Department of Sanitation announced the expansion of its 'Clean Curbs' pilot program to Staten Island, with a new installation at 704 Bay St. The initiative, previously launched in Times Square and Brooklyn, containerizes commercial trash to clear sidewalks of leaky bags. The Staten Island Chamber of Commerce received a $3,500 grant for the project, which uses bins from CITIBIN, a Brooklyn-based woman-owned business. DSNY spokesman Vincent Gragnani said, 'Use of bins in these two different locations...will improve quality of life in these locations, while helping us learn more about containerized trash in a variety of New York City settings.' The program also repurposes curbside space for public use—like loading zones and parklets—instead of private car storage, freeing up sidewalks for pedestrians.


Charles Fall Critiques Adams Administration Safety Failures

City Hall missed the mark. Only 6.9 of 30 promised bike lane miles built. Just 2 of 20 bus lane miles delivered. Advocates say the Bronx is left behind. Riders and walkers wait. Promises broken. Streets stay dangerous. Progress stalls. Lives at risk.

On September 26, 2022, advocacy groups Transportation Alternatives and Riders Alliance released a report slamming the Adams administration for failing to meet the NYC Streets Master Plan’s legal mandates. The report states, 'the city is at only 23% of its bike lane goal and 10% of its bus lane goal for the year.' Elizabeth Adams called for protected bike lanes, saying, 'For the future of our climate and the safety on our streets, protected bike lanes need to be a priority.' Danny Pearlstein demanded faster action on bus lanes. Michael Kaess highlighted the Bronx’s lack of progress. The Department of Transportation disputed the numbers, but advocates pointed to missed deadlines and lack of transparency. Staffing shortages and political interference are blamed. Vulnerable road users—cyclists, bus riders, pedestrians—remain exposed as the city drags its feet.


Charles Fall Opposes Pickup and SUV Sales Undermining EV Progress

Electric cars promise cleaner air. But the rise of pickups and SUVs drowns out progress. Heavier, dirtier vehicles clog streets and pump out carbon. Loopholes let automakers dodge real cuts. The climate and city air pay the price.

This policy analysis, published September 26, 2022, by Streetsblog NYC, examines how surging sales of pickups and SUVs undermine carbon reductions from electric vehicles. The report states, 'sales of gas-guzzling pickups and SUVs are also surging. This other face of the market subverts electric cars’ carbon-cutting progress.' No council bill number or committee is attached, as this is a policy report, not legislation. The analysis highlights that regulatory loopholes and weaker standards for larger vehicles allow automakers to offset EV gains by selling more polluting trucks and SUVs. The author urges tightening greenhouse gas standards, especially for large gasoline-powered vehicles, and closing loopholes that let automakers evade meaningful carbon cuts. The report warns that unless regulators act, excessive emissions from pickups and SUVs will harm the climate and city air for years, stalling the benefits of electric vehicles for all road users.


Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Amtrak Service Restoration

Amtrak slashed trains in the pandemic. Riders still wait. The Adirondack route sits idle. Hudson Valley service lags. Trains run packed. Passengers get stranded. The state and Amtrak point fingers. Riders want action. The city needs more trains now.

This advocacy opinion, published September 26, 2022, calls for immediate restoration of Amtrak’s Adirondack service and expanded Hudson Valley trains. The matter, titled 'Opinion: Amtrak Must Restore Adirondack Service Now!', urges Amtrak and the New York State Department of Transportation to act. Steve Strauss and the Empire State Passengers Association press for more trains, added cars, and restored bike and baggage capacity. The piece blames state and Amtrak inaction for packed trains and stranded riders. It highlights that New York funds all Amtrak service north of the city, making state officials as responsible as Amtrak. The opinion demands urgent action to fill service gaps and meet rider demand.


Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bike and Bus Lane Expansion

Mayor Adams promised hundreds of miles of bike and bus lanes. The city is far behind. Only a trickle of new lanes appear. Councilman Restler demands faster action. Riders and walkers wait. Streets stay dangerous. Progress crawls. The toll mounts.

This progress report, dated September 23, 2022, highlights the city’s failure to meet Mayor Adams’ pledge for 300 miles of protected bike lanes and 150 miles of bus lanes in four years. The Mayor’s Management Report shows only 32 protected bike lane miles and 2 bus lane miles added in fiscal year 2022—far short of the annual targets. Councilman Lincoln Restler, District 33, is quoted: “We’ve approved $904 million for better bus lanes, more pedestrian space, and protected bike lanes and now we need to pick up the pace on implementation.” Restler pledges robust oversight and accountability, pressing the Department of Transportation to deliver. The report details frustration from council members and advocates over missed deadlines, slow progress, and persistent dangers for vulnerable road users. No safety analyst assessment was provided.


Fall Criticizes DOT Staffing Crisis Undermining Street Safety

DOT bleeds talent. One in five top jobs sit empty. Projects stall. Safety work slows. Leadership wobbles. Staff burn out. Promises break. Streets stay dangerous. The city’s most vulnerable pay the price. The lights stay on, but hope flickers.

This report, published September 22, 2022, exposes a staffing crisis inside the New York City Department of Transportation. Nearly 20% of top agency positions are vacant. The article, titled 'Just Keeping the Lights On,' details how these gaps cripple street safety and improvement projects. Key leadership roles—chief of staff, general counsel, communications director—remain unfilled. Employees blame city hiring policies, pandemic resignations, and weak leadership from Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez. One former staffer says, 'We couldn't produce anything new. We were just keeping the lights on.' Another warns, 'The agency's ability to respond to severe injuries and fatalities is also limited and slow.' Political interference and lack of expertise at the top deepen the crisis. The result: fewer bus lanes, stalled bike infrastructure, and a city where vulnerable road users face mounting danger.


SUV Strikes Woman Crossing Morningstar Road

SUV hit a 46-year-old woman crossing Morningstar Road. The impact broke her arm. She stayed conscious, hurt on the street. No driver errors listed. The SUV’s right front bumper took the blow.

According to the police report, a 46-year-old female pedestrian was struck by a 2003 Toyota SUV traveling northeast on Morningstar Road. The SUV hit her with its right front bumper as she crossed outside an intersection, where there was no signal or crosswalk. The pedestrian suffered a fractured and dislocated elbow and lower arm but remained conscious. The report lists pedestrian error or confusion and an unspecified factor as contributing factors. The driver was licensed, driving straight ahead, and no driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding were noted. The SUV sustained damage to its right front bumper.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4565857 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-13
Bicyclist Injured in Right-Turn Collision

A sedan and a bike collided on Port Richmond Avenue. Both were making right turns. The bicyclist suffered abrasions and injuries to the knee, lower leg, and foot. The crash involved failure to yield and unsafe speed by the bicyclist.

According to the police report, a sedan and a bicycle collided on Port Richmond Avenue while both were making right turns. The bicyclist, a 40-year-old man, was injured with abrasions and trauma to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists the bicyclist's unsafe speed as a contributing factor. The driver of the sedan was licensed and traveling east. The point of impact was the center front end of the bike and the right side doors of the sedan. The crash involved failure to yield right-of-way and unsafe speed. The bicyclist was conscious and not ejected. No helmet use was noted as a factor.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4565812 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-13
Fall Supports Mandating Hi-Lo Sirens and Noise Caps

Council Members push a bill to swap wailing sirens for hi-lo tones and vibrating tech. The aim: less noise, fewer health harms. Sirens will still clear streets, but without the shriek. The city’s nights could finally quiet down.

On September 13, 2022, Council Member Carlina Rivera, joined by Gale Brewer and seven others, sponsored a bill to mandate hi-lo, 'two-tone' sirens for emergency vehicles. The bill, discussed in committee, would cap siren volume at 90 decibels and encourage use of vibrating, low-frequency siren technology. The matter title calls for 'mandating the use of hi-lo, "two-tone" sirens by emergency response vehicles.' Brewer wrote, 'the city should mandate that emergency responders use hi-lo as their default siren and cap sirens at 90 decibels—as required by the proposed legislation—and scale up their use of vibrating siren technology.' The bill seeks to cut the health harms of constant siren noise, which studies link to hypertension and heart disease. No direct safety impact for vulnerable road users was noted.


Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Congestion Pricing Opposing Car Culture

Car culture drains wallets and endangers lives. Oil, auto, and insurance giants profit while public transit withers. Politicians suspend gas taxes, starving transit funds. Predatory loans and high insurance rates bleed drivers. Vulnerable road users pay the price in blood and dollars.

This opinion piece, published September 7, 2022, on Streetsblog NYC, attacks the narrative that congestion pricing is a 'cash grab.' Author Nicole A. Murray argues the true financial and social burden comes from car culture itself. The article highlights how automotive, oil, and insurance industries siphon money from the public, while political decisions—like Governor Hochul's gas tax suspension—undercut transit funding. The piece states: 'The real cash grab: the silent hands that the automotive and subsidiary industries have in our pockets—all of our pockets—every day.' Murray calls out the hypocrisy of congestion pricing opponents who ignore the needs of transit-dependent New Yorkers. No council bill number or committee is involved; this is a public statement, not legislation. The article exposes how car dependency and predatory lending practices trap working families, while public transportation offers a path to freedom and safety.


Fall Supports Safety Boosting McGuinness Boulevard Interim Fixes

DOT will daylight intersections, ban left turns, and add pedestrian space on McGuinness Boulevard. Eleven pedestrians and four cyclists have died here since 1995. Advocates demand a full redesign. The city promises more action after these quick fixes.

On August 31, 2022, the Department of Transportation announced interim safety improvements for McGuinness Boulevard in Greenpoint. The street has seen 1,594 crashes, 44 cyclist injuries, 67 pedestrian injuries, and three deaths since 2013. Assembly Member Emily Gallagher announced the changes, which include daylighting intersections, banning left turns at key avenues, and adding painted pedestrian extensions. Gallagher said, 'Quick, iterative incremental changes will be a great way to reduce injuries and fatalities rather than waiting for an entire overhaul.' Council Member Lincoln Restler praised the upgrades as 'a step in the right direction.' Bronwyn Breitner of Make McGuinness Safe Coalition called for a full-scale redesign, reallocating space from cars to people. The city will revisit the corridor plan this winter after installing these measures in the fall.


Fall Supports Safety Boosting E Bike Subsidy Plan

Senator Julia Salazar’s Ride Clean bill passed the New York Senate 60-3. It offers up to $1,100 for e-bike purchases. The bill aims to cut car use and emissions. It stalled in the Assembly. Lawmakers say it makes e-bikes accessible for working New Yorkers.

Senate Bill S7703, known as the Ride Clean rebate, passed the New York State Senate on June 2022 by a 60-3 vote. The bill sits stalled in the Assembly committee since January. The measure, sponsored by Senator Julia Salazar, would require NYSERDA to cover half the cost of e-bike purchases, up to $1,100. Salazar said, 'When the federal government falls short, it really does fall on the state to step up and take responsibility.' Assembly sponsor Robert Carroll added, 'This is not a luxury item.' The bill’s summary states it aims to make e-bikes accessible and reduce car dependence. If enacted, New York would join a handful of states offering direct e-bike subsidies, targeting emissions and car use in daily trips.


Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Congestion Pricing Plan

Congestion pricing cuts traffic in Manhattan. Air grows cleaner in the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, and Hudson County. Truck diversions raise miles driven, but fine particle pollution drops. Health improves. Advocates push for electric buses, cleaner trucks, and strict air monitoring.

This policy analysis, published August 26, 2022, reviews the impact of congestion pricing on air quality, focusing on the Bronx. The report states: 'Air quality and public health in the Bronx will receive a boost from congestion pricing, even under a toll scenario that diverts substantial truck traffic.' The analysis draws from the MTA's environmental assessment, especially Toll Scenario A, which projects less particulate matter (PM2.5) in Bronx air despite increased vehicle miles. The health benefits for Bronx residents match those in Queens, Brooklyn, and Hudson County. Environmental justice and transportation advocates call for rapid electrification of buses and trucks, capping highways, and rigorous air monitoring to prevent new pollution hot spots. The analysis values total health benefits at $20.8 million for 2023. No council members are named in this report.


Cyclist Injured in Riverside Lane Crash

A 33-year-old male cyclist riding south on Riverside Lane suffered abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The bike’s front center end was damaged. The cyclist was conscious and wearing a helmet. No other vehicles involved.

According to the police report, a 33-year-old male bicyclist was injured while riding southbound on Riverside Lane. The cyclist sustained abrasions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The bike’s center front end was damaged in the crash. The cyclist was conscious and wearing a helmet at the time. The report lists unspecified contributing factors but does not identify any driver errors or involvement of other vehicles. The cyclist was not ejected and was the sole occupant of the bike. No other parties or vehicles were involved in the incident.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4558622 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-08-13