About these crash totals
Counts come from NYC police crash reports (NYC Open Data). We sum all crashes, injuries, and deaths for this area across the selected time window shown on the card. Injury severity follows the official definitions in the NYPD dataset.
- Crashes: number of police‑reported collisions (all road users).
- All injuries: total injured people in those crashes.
- Moderate / Serious: subcategories reported by officers (e.g., broken bones vs. life‑threatening trauma).
- Deaths: people who died due to a crash.
Notes: Police reports can be corrected after initial publication. Minor incidents without a police report are not included.
Close▸ Killed 3
▸ Crush Injuries 2
▸ Severe Bleeding 1
▸ Severe Lacerations 2
▸ Concussion 9
▸ Whiplash 37
▸ Contusion/Bruise 48
▸ Abrasion 22
▸ Pain/Nausea 15
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.
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.
CloseForest and South don’t forgive
Mariner’s Harbor-Arlington-Graniteville: Jan 1, 2022 - Sep 5, 2025
Just after afternoon traffic began to swell on Aug 29, at Richmond Ave and Vedder Ave, an unlicensed BMW driver going straight hit a parked Chevy. The BMW driver was injured (NYC Open Data).
This Week
- Aug 30: Forest Ave at Union Ave — a child passenger was hurt as two cars turned into each other (NYC Open Data).
- Aug 29: South Ave at Richmond Ter — two sedans collided; a driver was injured (NYC Open Data).
- Aug 13: Forest Ave at Union Ave — a driver turning left struck a bicyclist going straight; the cyclist was injured (NYC Open Data).
The count does not slow. Since Jan 1, 2022, this area has seen 1,026 crashes, with 3 people killed and 515 injured (NYC Open Data). This year through Sep 5: 211 crashes, 110 injuries, compared to 190 crashes, 106 injuries at this point last year; two people were killed by this time last year, none so far this year (CrashCount analysis of city data).
Routines break at the curb. A 73‑year‑old man was killed by a turning van at Forest Ave and South Ave on Nov 21, 2022 (NYC Open Data, CrashID 4583662). Forest Ave shows up again and again in the records. So does Richmond Ter.
Forest Ave, Union Ave, South Ave. The records say left turns, inattention, and bad merges. At 5 PM, injuries peak in this dataset, the worst hour on the clock here (CrashCount analysis of city data). Trucks and vans are in the log too, including the case above where a van killed a pedestrian (NYC Open Data, CrashID 4583662).
“That’s one accident every four days where somebody perhaps unwittingly thinks they must turn from the middle lane,” Staten Island Borough President Vito Fossella said of confusing bus‑lane rules on Hylan Blvd — different corridor, same borough — after tallying crashes tied to bad signs (amNY). Signs matter. So do turns.
Where the street fails
- Forest Ave at Union Ave needs slower turns and clearer priority. Daylighting and hardened corners can keep turning drivers off people in the crosswalk. A leading pedestrian interval would give walkers a head start (CrashCount analysis of city data).
- South Ave at Richmond Ter is a freight route. Tighten radii at turns and add truck‑safe signal timing to cut conflicts (CrashCount analysis of city data).
Speed is the wound that never closes
Citywide tools exist. The Senate’s S 4045 would force repeat speeders to use speed‑limiting tech. State Sen. Jessica Scarcella‑Spanton voted yes in committee on June 12, 2025 (Open States). Assembly Member Sam Pirozzolo voted no on a separate school speed‑zone bill; State Sen. Scarcella‑Spanton also voted no on that measure (timeline records). Council Member Kamillah Hanks co‑sponsors Int 1339-2025 to let ambulettes use and block bus lanes — a change that pushes people into traffic (timeline records).
A safer default speed is on the table. New Yorkers can press the city to lower the limit on local streets, and to back the repeat‑speeder bill that would keep the worst offenders from roaring through crosswalks. The next move is public.
Act
- Tell City Hall and Albany to slow cars and stop repeat speeders. Start here.
Frequently Asked Questions
▸ Where is this happening?
▸ What do the numbers show since 2022?
▸ What is driving the harm?
▸ Who can fix this right now?
▸ How were these numbers calculated?
▸ What is CrashCount?
Citations
▸ Citations
- Motor Vehicle Collisions – Crashes - Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-05
- Confusing Bus Lane Signs Spur Crashes, amNY, Published 2025-08-05
- File S 4045, Open States, Published 2025-06-12
- File Int 1339-2025, NYC Council – Legistar, Published 2025-07-14
Other Representatives
Assembly Member Sam Pirozzolo
District 63
Council Member Kamillah Hanks
District 49
State Senator Jessica Scarcella-Spanton
District 23
▸ Other Geographies
Mariner's Harbor-Arlington-Graniteville Mariner's Harbor-Arlington-Graniteville sits in Staten Island, Precinct 121, District 49, AD 63, SD 23, Staten Island CB1.
▸ See also
Traffic Safety Timeline for Mariner's Harbor-Arlington-Graniteville
23
Unlicensed Driver Hits Pedestrian at Crosswalk▸Aug 23 - A 25-year-old man was struck at a marked crosswalk on Forest Avenue. The driver, unlicensed and distracted, hit the pedestrian with the left front bumper. The victim suffered bruises and injuries to his knee and lower leg. No vehicle damage reported.
According to the police report, a 25-year-old male pedestrian was injured while crossing at a marked crosswalk on Forest Avenue. The crash involved a 2005 Chevrolet pick-up truck traveling northeast. The driver, who was unlicensed, was going straight ahead when the collision occurred at the left front bumper. The pedestrian sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle showed no damage. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but not ejected. No other factors such as helmet use or signaling were noted.
17
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Frontover Camera Mandate▸Aug 17 - Senator Blumenthal demands federal action on deadly frontover crashes. He calls for better data, more transparency, and front cameras on giant cars. But cameras alone won’t shrink vehicles or save enough lives. The real fix: fewer, smaller cars on the road.
On August 17, 2022, Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) pressed the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to address frontover crashes—fatal incidents where large vehicles strike unseen children in front. The senator’s letter called for annual injury and fatality data, improved data collection, and efforts to prevent future deaths. He stated, 'Safety is not—and should never be—a premium feature only available to those who can afford it; it should be the default.' Blumenthal’s push follows a demonstration showing ten children hidden in a single SUV’s blind spot. The bill’s focus is on mandating front cameras, but experts and advocates warn this won’t fix the core problem: cars are too big, too tall, too deadly. As noted, 'The most effective way to reduce tragic frontover deaths is to have fewer cars in American driveways.' Cameras help, but shrinking vehicles and reducing car dependency would save more lives.
-
Senator Calls on Feds to Mandate ‘Frontover’ Cameras on Huge Cars — But It Won’t Save Enough Lives,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-08-17
16
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Conversion of Parking to Greenspace▸Aug 16 - Turning parking into greenspace means fewer floods, safer streets. Asphalt traps water. Storms turn roads into rivers. Bioswales and trees soak up rain, protect homes, keep subways dry. The city must swap pavement for life. Action saves lives, not parking.
On August 16, 2022, the Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, discussed flood prevention. An opinion from a Transportation Alternatives staffer urged the Council to 'transform impervious driving lanes into green climate solutions.' The piece calls for bioswales and greenspace in place of parking, citing the deadly floods after Hurricane Ida. It highlights that 72 percent of city land is impervious, worsening flash floods. The author presses city leaders, including Mayor Eric Adams, to repurpose street space for climate resilience, referencing the NYC 25x25 challenge. The message is clear: 'Our streets can become the solution to climate change and flooding.' No council vote occurred, but the advocacy pushes for urgent, systemic change to protect New Yorkers from future storms.
-
OPINION: Want to Prevent Flooding? Turn ‘Parking’ Into Greenspace,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-08-16
12
SUV Hits Parked Truck, Passenger Injured▸Aug 12 - A 2019 SUV struck a parked pickup truck at night. The impact hit the truck’s left rear bumper and the SUV’s front center. A 39-year-old female passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. Driver distraction caused the crash.
According to the police report, a 2019 Honda SUV traveling south collided with a parked 2000 Ford pickup truck at 268 ADA Drive. The point of impact was the left rear bumper of the truck and the center front end of the SUV. The SUV carried two occupants, including a 39-year-old female passenger seated in the middle front seat who sustained neck injuries and whiplash. She was restrained by a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. The report lists driver inattention and distraction as contributing factors. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
5
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Crossing South Avenue▸Aug 5 - A 32-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while crossing South Avenue outside an intersection. She suffered a shoulder and upper arm contusion. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but no driver errors were noted in the report.
According to the police report, a 32-year-old female pedestrian was injured when struck by a Station Wagon/SUV while crossing South Avenue away from an intersection. She sustained contusions to her shoulder and upper arm and remained conscious after the collision. The report does not list any contributing factors or driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The pedestrian was crossing without a signal or crosswalk, but no fault or blame is assigned to her. No helmet or signaling issues were noted. The vehicle was unoccupied at the time of the crash, and no further details on driver actions were provided.
4
Motorcycle Crash Burns Rider on Andros Avenue▸Aug 4 - A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper on Andros Avenue. Flames engulfed the 18-year-old rider. He wore a helmet. Distraction at the bars. Fire took his skin. The street bore witness. The system failed to protect.
An 18-year-old motorcycle rider suffered severe burns over his entire body after crashing into a rear bumper near Andros Avenue and Richmond Terrace. According to the police report, 'A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper. The rider, 18, burned over his whole body. Helmet on. Distracted hands gripped the bars as fire swallowed him.' The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor. The rider was wearing a helmet, but distraction led to the violent impact and subsequent fire. No other injuries were specified. The crash highlights the danger faced by vulnerable road users when attention lapses behind the bars.
3
Distracted Pickup Slams Sedan on South Avenue▸Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 23 - A 25-year-old man was struck at a marked crosswalk on Forest Avenue. The driver, unlicensed and distracted, hit the pedestrian with the left front bumper. The victim suffered bruises and injuries to his knee and lower leg. No vehicle damage reported.
According to the police report, a 25-year-old male pedestrian was injured while crossing at a marked crosswalk on Forest Avenue. The crash involved a 2005 Chevrolet pick-up truck traveling northeast. The driver, who was unlicensed, was going straight ahead when the collision occurred at the left front bumper. The pedestrian sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot. The report lists driver inattention and distraction as contributing factors. The vehicle showed no damage. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but not ejected. No other factors such as helmet use or signaling were noted.
17
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Frontover Camera Mandate▸Aug 17 - Senator Blumenthal demands federal action on deadly frontover crashes. He calls for better data, more transparency, and front cameras on giant cars. But cameras alone won’t shrink vehicles or save enough lives. The real fix: fewer, smaller cars on the road.
On August 17, 2022, Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) pressed the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to address frontover crashes—fatal incidents where large vehicles strike unseen children in front. The senator’s letter called for annual injury and fatality data, improved data collection, and efforts to prevent future deaths. He stated, 'Safety is not—and should never be—a premium feature only available to those who can afford it; it should be the default.' Blumenthal’s push follows a demonstration showing ten children hidden in a single SUV’s blind spot. The bill’s focus is on mandating front cameras, but experts and advocates warn this won’t fix the core problem: cars are too big, too tall, too deadly. As noted, 'The most effective way to reduce tragic frontover deaths is to have fewer cars in American driveways.' Cameras help, but shrinking vehicles and reducing car dependency would save more lives.
-
Senator Calls on Feds to Mandate ‘Frontover’ Cameras on Huge Cars — But It Won’t Save Enough Lives,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-08-17
16
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Conversion of Parking to Greenspace▸Aug 16 - Turning parking into greenspace means fewer floods, safer streets. Asphalt traps water. Storms turn roads into rivers. Bioswales and trees soak up rain, protect homes, keep subways dry. The city must swap pavement for life. Action saves lives, not parking.
On August 16, 2022, the Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, discussed flood prevention. An opinion from a Transportation Alternatives staffer urged the Council to 'transform impervious driving lanes into green climate solutions.' The piece calls for bioswales and greenspace in place of parking, citing the deadly floods after Hurricane Ida. It highlights that 72 percent of city land is impervious, worsening flash floods. The author presses city leaders, including Mayor Eric Adams, to repurpose street space for climate resilience, referencing the NYC 25x25 challenge. The message is clear: 'Our streets can become the solution to climate change and flooding.' No council vote occurred, but the advocacy pushes for urgent, systemic change to protect New Yorkers from future storms.
-
OPINION: Want to Prevent Flooding? Turn ‘Parking’ Into Greenspace,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-08-16
12
SUV Hits Parked Truck, Passenger Injured▸Aug 12 - A 2019 SUV struck a parked pickup truck at night. The impact hit the truck’s left rear bumper and the SUV’s front center. A 39-year-old female passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. Driver distraction caused the crash.
According to the police report, a 2019 Honda SUV traveling south collided with a parked 2000 Ford pickup truck at 268 ADA Drive. The point of impact was the left rear bumper of the truck and the center front end of the SUV. The SUV carried two occupants, including a 39-year-old female passenger seated in the middle front seat who sustained neck injuries and whiplash. She was restrained by a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. The report lists driver inattention and distraction as contributing factors. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
5
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Crossing South Avenue▸Aug 5 - A 32-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while crossing South Avenue outside an intersection. She suffered a shoulder and upper arm contusion. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but no driver errors were noted in the report.
According to the police report, a 32-year-old female pedestrian was injured when struck by a Station Wagon/SUV while crossing South Avenue away from an intersection. She sustained contusions to her shoulder and upper arm and remained conscious after the collision. The report does not list any contributing factors or driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The pedestrian was crossing without a signal or crosswalk, but no fault or blame is assigned to her. No helmet or signaling issues were noted. The vehicle was unoccupied at the time of the crash, and no further details on driver actions were provided.
4
Motorcycle Crash Burns Rider on Andros Avenue▸Aug 4 - A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper on Andros Avenue. Flames engulfed the 18-year-old rider. He wore a helmet. Distraction at the bars. Fire took his skin. The street bore witness. The system failed to protect.
An 18-year-old motorcycle rider suffered severe burns over his entire body after crashing into a rear bumper near Andros Avenue and Richmond Terrace. According to the police report, 'A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper. The rider, 18, burned over his whole body. Helmet on. Distracted hands gripped the bars as fire swallowed him.' The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor. The rider was wearing a helmet, but distraction led to the violent impact and subsequent fire. No other injuries were specified. The crash highlights the danger faced by vulnerable road users when attention lapses behind the bars.
3
Distracted Pickup Slams Sedan on South Avenue▸Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 17 - Senator Blumenthal demands federal action on deadly frontover crashes. He calls for better data, more transparency, and front cameras on giant cars. But cameras alone won’t shrink vehicles or save enough lives. The real fix: fewer, smaller cars on the road.
On August 17, 2022, Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) pressed the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to address frontover crashes—fatal incidents where large vehicles strike unseen children in front. The senator’s letter called for annual injury and fatality data, improved data collection, and efforts to prevent future deaths. He stated, 'Safety is not—and should never be—a premium feature only available to those who can afford it; it should be the default.' Blumenthal’s push follows a demonstration showing ten children hidden in a single SUV’s blind spot. The bill’s focus is on mandating front cameras, but experts and advocates warn this won’t fix the core problem: cars are too big, too tall, too deadly. As noted, 'The most effective way to reduce tragic frontover deaths is to have fewer cars in American driveways.' Cameras help, but shrinking vehicles and reducing car dependency would save more lives.
- Senator Calls on Feds to Mandate ‘Frontover’ Cameras on Huge Cars — But It Won’t Save Enough Lives, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-08-17
16
Fall Supports Safety Boosting Conversion of Parking to Greenspace▸Aug 16 - Turning parking into greenspace means fewer floods, safer streets. Asphalt traps water. Storms turn roads into rivers. Bioswales and trees soak up rain, protect homes, keep subways dry. The city must swap pavement for life. Action saves lives, not parking.
On August 16, 2022, the Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, discussed flood prevention. An opinion from a Transportation Alternatives staffer urged the Council to 'transform impervious driving lanes into green climate solutions.' The piece calls for bioswales and greenspace in place of parking, citing the deadly floods after Hurricane Ida. It highlights that 72 percent of city land is impervious, worsening flash floods. The author presses city leaders, including Mayor Eric Adams, to repurpose street space for climate resilience, referencing the NYC 25x25 challenge. The message is clear: 'Our streets can become the solution to climate change and flooding.' No council vote occurred, but the advocacy pushes for urgent, systemic change to protect New Yorkers from future storms.
-
OPINION: Want to Prevent Flooding? Turn ‘Parking’ Into Greenspace,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-08-16
12
SUV Hits Parked Truck, Passenger Injured▸Aug 12 - A 2019 SUV struck a parked pickup truck at night. The impact hit the truck’s left rear bumper and the SUV’s front center. A 39-year-old female passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. Driver distraction caused the crash.
According to the police report, a 2019 Honda SUV traveling south collided with a parked 2000 Ford pickup truck at 268 ADA Drive. The point of impact was the left rear bumper of the truck and the center front end of the SUV. The SUV carried two occupants, including a 39-year-old female passenger seated in the middle front seat who sustained neck injuries and whiplash. She was restrained by a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. The report lists driver inattention and distraction as contributing factors. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
5
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Crossing South Avenue▸Aug 5 - A 32-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while crossing South Avenue outside an intersection. She suffered a shoulder and upper arm contusion. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but no driver errors were noted in the report.
According to the police report, a 32-year-old female pedestrian was injured when struck by a Station Wagon/SUV while crossing South Avenue away from an intersection. She sustained contusions to her shoulder and upper arm and remained conscious after the collision. The report does not list any contributing factors or driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The pedestrian was crossing without a signal or crosswalk, but no fault or blame is assigned to her. No helmet or signaling issues were noted. The vehicle was unoccupied at the time of the crash, and no further details on driver actions were provided.
4
Motorcycle Crash Burns Rider on Andros Avenue▸Aug 4 - A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper on Andros Avenue. Flames engulfed the 18-year-old rider. He wore a helmet. Distraction at the bars. Fire took his skin. The street bore witness. The system failed to protect.
An 18-year-old motorcycle rider suffered severe burns over his entire body after crashing into a rear bumper near Andros Avenue and Richmond Terrace. According to the police report, 'A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper. The rider, 18, burned over his whole body. Helmet on. Distracted hands gripped the bars as fire swallowed him.' The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor. The rider was wearing a helmet, but distraction led to the violent impact and subsequent fire. No other injuries were specified. The crash highlights the danger faced by vulnerable road users when attention lapses behind the bars.
3
Distracted Pickup Slams Sedan on South Avenue▸Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 16 - Turning parking into greenspace means fewer floods, safer streets. Asphalt traps water. Storms turn roads into rivers. Bioswales and trees soak up rain, protect homes, keep subways dry. The city must swap pavement for life. Action saves lives, not parking.
On August 16, 2022, the Council Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, chaired by Selvena Brooks-Powers, discussed flood prevention. An opinion from a Transportation Alternatives staffer urged the Council to 'transform impervious driving lanes into green climate solutions.' The piece calls for bioswales and greenspace in place of parking, citing the deadly floods after Hurricane Ida. It highlights that 72 percent of city land is impervious, worsening flash floods. The author presses city leaders, including Mayor Eric Adams, to repurpose street space for climate resilience, referencing the NYC 25x25 challenge. The message is clear: 'Our streets can become the solution to climate change and flooding.' No council vote occurred, but the advocacy pushes for urgent, systemic change to protect New Yorkers from future storms.
- OPINION: Want to Prevent Flooding? Turn ‘Parking’ Into Greenspace, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-08-16
12
SUV Hits Parked Truck, Passenger Injured▸Aug 12 - A 2019 SUV struck a parked pickup truck at night. The impact hit the truck’s left rear bumper and the SUV’s front center. A 39-year-old female passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. Driver distraction caused the crash.
According to the police report, a 2019 Honda SUV traveling south collided with a parked 2000 Ford pickup truck at 268 ADA Drive. The point of impact was the left rear bumper of the truck and the center front end of the SUV. The SUV carried two occupants, including a 39-year-old female passenger seated in the middle front seat who sustained neck injuries and whiplash. She was restrained by a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. The report lists driver inattention and distraction as contributing factors. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
5
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Crossing South Avenue▸Aug 5 - A 32-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while crossing South Avenue outside an intersection. She suffered a shoulder and upper arm contusion. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but no driver errors were noted in the report.
According to the police report, a 32-year-old female pedestrian was injured when struck by a Station Wagon/SUV while crossing South Avenue away from an intersection. She sustained contusions to her shoulder and upper arm and remained conscious after the collision. The report does not list any contributing factors or driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The pedestrian was crossing without a signal or crosswalk, but no fault or blame is assigned to her. No helmet or signaling issues were noted. The vehicle was unoccupied at the time of the crash, and no further details on driver actions were provided.
4
Motorcycle Crash Burns Rider on Andros Avenue▸Aug 4 - A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper on Andros Avenue. Flames engulfed the 18-year-old rider. He wore a helmet. Distraction at the bars. Fire took his skin. The street bore witness. The system failed to protect.
An 18-year-old motorcycle rider suffered severe burns over his entire body after crashing into a rear bumper near Andros Avenue and Richmond Terrace. According to the police report, 'A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper. The rider, 18, burned over his whole body. Helmet on. Distracted hands gripped the bars as fire swallowed him.' The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor. The rider was wearing a helmet, but distraction led to the violent impact and subsequent fire. No other injuries were specified. The crash highlights the danger faced by vulnerable road users when attention lapses behind the bars.
3
Distracted Pickup Slams Sedan on South Avenue▸Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 12 - A 2019 SUV struck a parked pickup truck at night. The impact hit the truck’s left rear bumper and the SUV’s front center. A 39-year-old female passenger suffered neck injuries and whiplash. Driver distraction caused the crash.
According to the police report, a 2019 Honda SUV traveling south collided with a parked 2000 Ford pickup truck at 268 ADA Drive. The point of impact was the left rear bumper of the truck and the center front end of the SUV. The SUV carried two occupants, including a 39-year-old female passenger seated in the middle front seat who sustained neck injuries and whiplash. She was restrained by a lap belt and harness and was not ejected. The report lists driver inattention and distraction as contributing factors. No other contributing factors or victim errors were noted.
5
SUV Strikes Pedestrian Crossing South Avenue▸Aug 5 - A 32-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while crossing South Avenue outside an intersection. She suffered a shoulder and upper arm contusion. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but no driver errors were noted in the report.
According to the police report, a 32-year-old female pedestrian was injured when struck by a Station Wagon/SUV while crossing South Avenue away from an intersection. She sustained contusions to her shoulder and upper arm and remained conscious after the collision. The report does not list any contributing factors or driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The pedestrian was crossing without a signal or crosswalk, but no fault or blame is assigned to her. No helmet or signaling issues were noted. The vehicle was unoccupied at the time of the crash, and no further details on driver actions were provided.
4
Motorcycle Crash Burns Rider on Andros Avenue▸Aug 4 - A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper on Andros Avenue. Flames engulfed the 18-year-old rider. He wore a helmet. Distraction at the bars. Fire took his skin. The street bore witness. The system failed to protect.
An 18-year-old motorcycle rider suffered severe burns over his entire body after crashing into a rear bumper near Andros Avenue and Richmond Terrace. According to the police report, 'A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper. The rider, 18, burned over his whole body. Helmet on. Distracted hands gripped the bars as fire swallowed him.' The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor. The rider was wearing a helmet, but distraction led to the violent impact and subsequent fire. No other injuries were specified. The crash highlights the danger faced by vulnerable road users when attention lapses behind the bars.
3
Distracted Pickup Slams Sedan on South Avenue▸Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 5 - A 32-year-old woman was hit by an SUV while crossing South Avenue outside an intersection. She suffered a shoulder and upper arm contusion. The pedestrian was conscious and injured but no driver errors were noted in the report.
According to the police report, a 32-year-old female pedestrian was injured when struck by a Station Wagon/SUV while crossing South Avenue away from an intersection. She sustained contusions to her shoulder and upper arm and remained conscious after the collision. The report does not list any contributing factors or driver errors such as failure to yield or speeding. The pedestrian was crossing without a signal or crosswalk, but no fault or blame is assigned to her. No helmet or signaling issues were noted. The vehicle was unoccupied at the time of the crash, and no further details on driver actions were provided.
4
Motorcycle Crash Burns Rider on Andros Avenue▸Aug 4 - A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper on Andros Avenue. Flames engulfed the 18-year-old rider. He wore a helmet. Distraction at the bars. Fire took his skin. The street bore witness. The system failed to protect.
An 18-year-old motorcycle rider suffered severe burns over his entire body after crashing into a rear bumper near Andros Avenue and Richmond Terrace. According to the police report, 'A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper. The rider, 18, burned over his whole body. Helmet on. Distracted hands gripped the bars as fire swallowed him.' The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor. The rider was wearing a helmet, but distraction led to the violent impact and subsequent fire. No other injuries were specified. The crash highlights the danger faced by vulnerable road users when attention lapses behind the bars.
3
Distracted Pickup Slams Sedan on South Avenue▸Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 4 - A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper on Andros Avenue. Flames engulfed the 18-year-old rider. He wore a helmet. Distraction at the bars. Fire took his skin. The street bore witness. The system failed to protect.
An 18-year-old motorcycle rider suffered severe burns over his entire body after crashing into a rear bumper near Andros Avenue and Richmond Terrace. According to the police report, 'A Honda motorcycle slammed into a rear bumper. The rider, 18, burned over his whole body. Helmet on. Distracted hands gripped the bars as fire swallowed him.' The report lists 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the primary contributing factor. The rider was wearing a helmet, but distraction led to the violent impact and subsequent fire. No other injuries were specified. The crash highlights the danger faced by vulnerable road users when attention lapses behind the bars.
3
Distracted Pickup Slams Sedan on South Avenue▸Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 3 - A pickup truck crashed into a sedan’s rear on South Avenue. The sedan driver, 23, suffered a head contusion. Police cite driver distraction. The injured man was conscious and restrained.
According to the police report, a pickup truck struck the back of a sedan on South Avenue as both vehicles traveled northeast. The sedan’s 23-year-old male driver suffered a head contusion but remained conscious and restrained by a lap belt and harness. Police list driver inattention or distraction as the contributing factor. No other contributing factors or victim errors were reported. The injured driver was not ejected from the vehicle.
3
Unlicensed Driver Hits Cyclist Head-On on Andros Avenue▸Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Aug 3 - A sedan slammed into a cyclist head-on near Christopher Street. The man on the bike bled from a torn arm but stayed conscious. The driver had no license. Both moved straight. Distraction behind the wheel led to blood on the pavement.
A 60-year-old man riding his bike southeast on Andros Avenue near Christopher Street was struck head-on by a sedan. According to the police report, 'The car struck him head-on. His arm split open. Blood on the pavement. He stayed awake. The driver had no license. Both were going straight.' The cyclist suffered severe lacerations to his arm but remained conscious. Police listed 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as the contributing factor for both the sedan and the bike. The sedan driver was unlicensed at the time of the crash. No helmet or signaling issues were cited as contributing factors. The crash left the cyclist injured and exposed the danger of inattentive, unlicensed driving.
29
Charles Fall Critiques Misguided Climate Bill Favoring Large EVs▸Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
-
What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Jul 29 - Senate nears a climate deal. Bill pours billions into electric cars, skips bikes and transit. Big SUVs get a boost. No new money for high-speed rail. Advocates warn: heavy vehicles mean danger. Vulnerable road users left in the cold.
The Senate’s climate bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, is close to passage as of July 29, 2022. It allocates $369 billion to decarbonize sectors like power plants and HVAC, aiming for a 40% emissions cut by 2030. The bill continues the $7,500 federal EV tax credit and adds a $4,000 credit for used EVs, but omits dedicated funding for electric transit, freight, or e-bikes. Advocates like Yonah Freemark, David Zipper, and Noa Banayan criticize the focus on large electric SUVs and trucks, calling them dangerous for people outside cars. Zipper says, “We’re actually inducing people to buy heavier, more dangerous electric automobiles.” The bill introduces a $3.4 billion Neighborhood Equity and Access Grant, but skips high-speed rail and transit. Advocates urge more action, warning that the bill leaves vulnerable road users exposed.
- What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-29
27
Pedestrian Injured Boarding Vehicle on Mersereau▸Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Jul 27 - A 29-year-old man suffered bruises and lower leg injuries while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. The pedestrian was left in shock. No driver errors or contributing factors were reported.
According to the police report, a 29-year-old male pedestrian was injured while getting on or off a vehicle at an intersection on Mersereau Avenue. He sustained contusions and injuries to his knee, lower leg, and foot, resulting in shock. The report lists no contributing factors or driver errors. The vehicle involved is unspecified, and no details about the driver or vehicle actions were provided. The pedestrian was not wearing any noted safety equipment. The crash caused moderate injury but no further details on impact or vehicle movement are available.
26
Charles Fall Supports New State Funding to Avoid Cuts▸Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
-
Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Jul 26 - The MTA faces a $4 billion shortfall as ridership stalls. Without new state funding, service cuts or fare hikes loom. Advocates slam the gas-tax holiday for boosting driving. Riders, especially those without cars, stand to lose the most.
This event details the MTA's looming fiscal crisis, as described in the July 26, 2022 Streetsblog NYC report. The agency projects only 74% of pre-pandemic riders will return by 2024, leaving a $4 billion revenue gap through 2026. The matter summary warns, 'Without a new funding stream, the MTA faces a fiscal cliff after 2023.' MTA Chief Financial Officer Kevin Willens urged state legislators to act, saying, 'If we start working together and start solving the deficit by 2023, we can lower the fiscal cliff by a billion dollars a year.' Advocates like Rachael Fauss criticized the state's gas-tax holiday, arguing it incentivized driving over transit funding. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli warned of looming service changes. The bill is not tied to a specific council number or committee, but the call for recurring, dedicated state revenue is clear. Without intervention, vulnerable transit riders face reduced service and higher fares, deepening the city's transportation divide.
- Without New Funding, the MTA Faces a Fiscal Cliff After 2023, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-26
23
SUV Slams Parked Cars, Child Passenger Hurt▸Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Jul 23 - SUV crashed into parked cars on Union Avenue. Nine-year-old girl in back seat suffered neck bruise. Police cite alcohol involvement. Metal twisted. Child stayed conscious, strapped in.
According to the police report, a 2006 SUV traveling north struck several parked vehicles on Union Avenue. A nine-year-old girl riding in the right rear seat was injured, sustaining a neck contusion. She was conscious and secured by a lap belt and harness. The report lists alcohol involvement as a contributing factor. The SUV's front end was damaged; the parked cars took hits to their rear ends. No other driver errors were specified. The child was not ejected and received moderate injury.
22
Charles Fall Opposes Musk Tech Endangering Pedestrian Safety▸Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
-
Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Jul 22 - Elon Musk’s promises on self-driving cars and tunnels ring hollow. Crashes mount. Safety claims collapse. Planners and officials keep buying the hype. The toll grows. Vulnerable road users pay the price. It’s time to stop believing and start questioning.
This opinion piece, published July 22, 2022, by Kea Wilson in Streetsblog NYC, calls out Elon Musk’s record on transportation technology. The article, titled 'Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything,' cites damning crash data and exposes false safety claims around Tesla’s 'Full Self-Driving' feature. At least 273 crashes have been linked to the technology, contradicting Musk’s public statements. The piece urges planners and policymakers to reject Musk’s unproven solutions, including the Boring Company and Hyperloop, and instead focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled. The author warns that uncritical adoption of these technologies endangers vulnerable road users and worsens congestion and pollution. No council bill or vote is involved, but the message is clear: stop trusting tech hype that puts lives at risk.
- Opinion: Stop Trusting Elon Musk — on Tunnels, on Teslas, on Everything, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-22
21
Fall Supports MTA Service Realignment To Meet New Demand▸Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
-
Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again,
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Jul 21 - MTA ridership lags. Budget gaps loom. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli rejects service cuts. He urges smarter, flexible schedules. The MTA drags its feet. Riders wait. Transit remains a lifeline. Without change, the city’s most vulnerable face longer waits and harsher streets.
On July 21, 2022, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli released a policy report warning of an existential crisis for the MTA. The report, reviewed by the relevant state oversight committees, states: "the MTA doesn't actually have to cut service to find its footing, and instead has to get creative with service patterns and get serious with riders about what new service could look like." DiNapoli opposes service cuts and supports realigning schedules to match shifting demand, especially off-peak and weekends. MTA Chief External Relations John McCarthy echoed the need for a post-COVID plan. The report stresses that mass transit is essential for New Yorkers. No council members are directly involved, but the recommendations push the MTA to act. The agency’s slow response leaves vulnerable riders exposed to longer waits and increased danger on city streets.
- Nausea: The MTA Is Facing An Existential Crisis, Again, Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-21
20
Charles Fall Supports Safety Boosting Bus Operator Pay Raises▸Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
-
Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them),
Streetsblog NYC,
Published 2022-07-20
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
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
Jul 20 - Bus driver shortages choke transit. Agencies slash service. Low pay, abuse, brutal hours, and neglect drive workers away. Riders wait longer. Streets grow more dangerous for those on foot and bike. Solutions exist. Agencies must act. Lives depend on it.
On July 20, 2022, Streetsblog NYC published a report titled 'Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them).' The analysis highlights that over 90% of transit agencies struggle to hire bus drivers, forcing 71% to cut or delay service. The report cites low pay, workplace assaults, harsh schedules, and lack of basic facilities as root causes. It urges agencies to raise pay, cut hiring barriers, protect drivers, and provide humane schedules and facilities. The article states, 'Bus driver shortages are undermining transit agencies' efforts to recover from the pandemic and become the front-line mobility option that American cities need.' The report does not name specific council members or legislative actions, but it calls for systemic change to protect workers and restore reliable service for vulnerable road users.
- Four Factors Driving the Bus Operator Shortage (And What to Do About Them), Streetsblog NYC, Published 2022-07-20
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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