Take action for 20 mph

20isPlenty

Would you join us in speaking up for a speed limit that could save more than 130 lives every year?   Reducing New York City’s default speed limit to 20 mph, down from the current 30 mph, can help save lives and prevent thousands of life-altering injuries.

There are two ways you can help.

First, you can sign a petition in favor of legislation currently under consideration in Albany to reduce New York City’s default speed limit to 20 mph (while allowing the city council will be able to tailor speed limits as appropriate for specific locations, e.g. higher for major arterials, lower for school zones).  Transportation Alternatives has made it easy to sign this petition and tell your legislators that “20 is Plenty” using this link: http://goo.gl/zKFhg4

Second, on May 6th, you can join Families for Safe Streets — a new group of crash survivors and families who’ve lost loved ones in traffic — and Transportation Alternatives and Make Queens Safer on a powerful day of action in Albany to demand elected officials lower New York City’s speed limit to 20 mph. It’s an important opportunity to ask our state legislators to do what they can to support Mayor de Blasio’s Vision Zero agenda.  Buses will depart from each borough at 6 am and return by 6 pm. Transportation Alternatives will contact you with details about meet-up locations.  You can reserve your spot via this link: http://www.transalt.org/calendar/7464 .

However you can help, please also drop us a line at MakeQueensSafer@gmail.com to let us know.

Thank you!

–Make Queens Safer

Families For Safe Streets

FamiliesForSafeStreets

 Families whose loved ones have been killed or maimed by reckless behavior and dangerous conditions on New York City’s streets have come together to turn grief into action.   They will formally announce their new group, “Families For Safe Streets,” as a force for change on Sunday February 23 at 2pm on the steps of City Hall.  Everyone is welcome to attend.  Please visit the Facebook page for this event more details.

They are also planning a monthly meeting for individuals or families who have lost a loved one to reckless traffic in NYC.   See the Families for Safe Streets webpage for more details. 

Update: Here’s a selection of media coverage from the event:

Pedestrian Safety Town Hall in Jackson Heights

Moya-Crowley

Pedestrian Safety Town Hall

Hosted by
Congressman Joseph Crowley
Assemblyman Francisco P. Moya
&
Make Queens Safer

Sunday, February 9th, 2014, 4pm-6pm
Renaissance Charter School
35-59 81 Street, Jackson Heights, NY 11372

What pedestrian safety issue concerns you the most?
What is being done to improve safety in the neighborhood?
Get your questions answered by elected officials and city agencies

Continue reading

After Tragic Death of Angela Hurtado, Renewed Calls for Reform

On January 18th, Angela Hurtado was killed at Grand Avenue and 69th Place in Maspeth by a driver with a suspended license making an illegal turn. According to Streetsblog, the driver was charged only “with third degree aggravated unlicensed operation, an unclassified misdemeanor that carries a maximum penalty of 30 days in jail and a $500 fine.” 

On Sunday afternoon, January 26th, Make Queens Safer stood with Senator Michael Gianaris, Assemblywoman Marge Markey, and Councilwoman Liz Crowley to renew Sen. Gianaris’ proposed legislation to make it a felony to drive with a suspended license and kill or seriously injure someone in the process.

grand+ave

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Press release follows: Continue reading

Remembering Ella Bandes at a Dangerous Intersection in Ridgewood

Candlelight Vigil for Pedesrian Safety & Ella Bandes Memorial
Sunday, January 26, 4:30 pm, Myrtle & Wyckoff Avenues, Ridgewood, Queens

MyrtleA year ago, Ella Kottick Bandes was struck and killed by a bus at the intersection of Myrtle Avenue, Wyckoff Avenue and Palmetto Street on the boundary between Ridgewood, Queens and Bushwick, Brooklyn. Please join Ella’s family, concerned residents of the community, Make Queens Safer and Make Brooklyn Safer for a vigil in her memory.

In addition to remembering Ella, we will be calling for action to be taken to improve this unsafe intersection. Action is clearly overdue: three streets converge at the intersection, visibility is poor due to the subway columns and overhead tracks, and it has long been a hotspot for motor vehicle crashes. As the sixth busiest subway station in Brooklyn and a major bus hub, it also has very high pedestrian volumes. The city has said that it is studying safety improvements, but progress has not yet been seen on the ground.

Update: Continue reading

School access is part of the problem

Hundreds of thousands of NYC school children walk to and from school each day. These children have a fundamental right to a safe environment. Are we meeting our responsibility to provide it?

Make Queens Safer believes that access to school is a serious problem that schools need help to address. Many factors contribute to the difficulty of this problem:

  • Students must cross major roadways, and at many schools, not enough crossing guards are provided, or none are present at all.
  • Many parents drive their kids to school, resulting in double parking and congestion. Since curb space is rarely available, kids exit vehicles in traffic, putting themselves (and passing cyclists) at risk.
  • Elementary schools must safely and quickly release students individually to their parents or guardians. Many have very limited sidewalk space to work with, and post Sandy Hook, many are revisiting security protocols that affect student arrival and dismissal.

At a recent school rezoning forum, Make Queens Safer called for a clear plan to address these challenges at IS 230 in Jackson Heights, which must find ways to keep its students safe after a new annex opens in the fall. Already, conditions at arrival and dismissal times need improvement: students receive no assistance crossing busy Northern Boulevard, and some drivers passing the school on 34th Avenue are behaving erratically as they rush to pass slow traffic around the school. When the annex opens on an opposite corner of the intersection of 34th Avenue and 74th Street, the school will have to deal with arrivals and dismissals on both sides of the avenue, find ways to minimize the need for children to cross between the two buildings during the day, and ensure students’ safety if and when they do need to cross. Many other schools throughout the city face similarly difficult challenges keeping their kids safe.

Schools should not be left on their own to determine the best ways to manage traffic chaos on their perimeters or help students cross busy intersections blocks away. They need help. The city should provide experts to help schools and local precincts develop safety audits and plans. The Safe Routes to School program is a commendable start, but a more comprehensive approach is needed that reaches beyond DOT’s toolkit and includes close collaboration among NYPD, DOT, and DOE. NYPD has an especially important resource to bring to the table: it can deploy more of its Traffic Enforcement Agents on foot patrols to control traffic at schools during key arrival and dismissal hours. Crossing Guards should continue to focus on crosswalk safety, but supplemental patrols by trained and empowered agents are needed to keep traffic orderly at key intersections over a broader area.

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Mayor de Blasio Makes History

Yesterday, Mayor Bill de Blasio changed the culture of New York City governance.   New Yorkers have been calling for measures to protect pedestrians since the death of Henry Bliss in 1899 (if not earlier).  But this has always seemed a futile battle.  Pedestrian deaths became a regrettable but broadly accepted price of progress.

Over the past decade, thanks to the tireless work of Transportation Alternatives, Streetsblog, StreetsPAC, Right of Way, and countless other citywide and community groups, this conversation has started to change.  Mayor Bloomberg’s Department of Transportation set about transforming the city’s streets with safety and livability in mind.   But never until today has street safety been made a central concern of government.  The policy commitments and interagency coordination promised by the mayor and his commissioners are unprecedented.  We think many cities around the U.S. will watch what happens here, and begin to follow New York’s lead.

By following through on this promise to make Vision Zero a priority, Mayor de Blasio has already accomplished something signficant.  And his recognition of how this crisis reaches deep into communities that are isolated by language and cultural barriers is extremely important.  We admire the Mayor’s efforts yesterday to embrace families and communities who mustered the courage to speak out on this issue despite these barriers.

As a result of this bold action and its rapid roll out, children and other New Yorkers will start to be safer today on city streets.  Sadly, Queens has already seen the death of a young mother and several severe injuries this year, and we know that more tragedies lie ahead, but thanks to Mayor de Blasio we are on the road, for the first time in our city’s history, to a systematic implementation of safe and livable streets for all.

NYC Homepage

 

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Mourning and Determination in Woodside

On Sunday evening, over 150 people gathered on Northern Blvd. to mourn 8-year-old Noshat Nahian. There was deep sadness at the loss of another child to reckless driving, but growing determination to take action to bring about change. Thanks for all who came out to be heard, and to comfort and support those in our community who are grieving.  We would particularly like to thank Noshat’s family and friends, as well as Seema Ahmed, the Bravo family, Afsana Choudhury, the Cohen-Eckstein family, Congressman Joseph Crowley, State Senator Mike Gianaris, S. Mitra Kalita, State Senator Jose Peralta, Agah Saleh, the Tam-Liao family, Steve Vaccaro, Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer, Transportation Alternatives, and Woodside on the Move.

In an encouraging development the next morning, State Sen. Mike Gianaris proposed new legislation to implement stiffer penalties and impound license plates for individuals found to be driving with suspended licenses. Make Queens Safer was proud to join him for the announcement, along with Senator Toby Ann Stavisky, Senator Jose Peralta, Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer, and Transportation Alternatives Executive Director Paul Steely-White.  It was another example of how the Queens delegation is stepping up to provide leadership in the City Council and Albany to keep our communities safe.

Here’s some media coverage from the Sunday and Monday events:

Together, we need to press to make our streets safer and more forgiving.

Key Quotes:

“We’ll continue to meet every traffic fatality w/a response. #VisionZero will be a reality & I’ll fight until it is.” – Councilmember Jimmy Van Bramer via Twitter

 

Vigil on Sunday for Child Killed on Northern Blvd.

Tragedy has again struck our community.   This morning, a truck hit and killed an 8-year-old boy as he crossed Northern Blvd. on his way to P.S. 152 in Woodside.

Please join us on Sunday for a vigil to express our sympathy and support for the child’s family and friends, and to call for pedestrian safety improvements on and around Northern Blvd.  The vigil will be held at the corner of Northern Blvd. and 62nd Street.

 Time: Sunday, December 22nd, 2013, 5 pm

Location: Northern Blvd. and 62nd Street

 

Queens Boulevard Winter Wander

Sponsored by the Transportation Alternatives Queens Volunteer Committee

Saturday, December 14, 1:00-3:30 pm

The Zero on Queens Boulevard Campaign is joining up with community members from Astoria all the way to Forest Hills to walk, talk and take a stand against the dangerous conditions along the “Boulevard of Death.” Concerned neighbors, parents, walkers, bikers, and motorists have been fighting to make Queens Boulevard welcoming for all users.

The walk kicks off at the New Life Fellowship Church, 82-10 Queens Blvd, Elmhurst.

For more information, check the Facebook page.

Here’s a related news story: Residents to March Along Queens Boulevard to Protest ‘Dangerous Conditions’ (DNAinfo New York, December 9, 2013)