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Is Vision Zero a success?

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wnyc.org

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ontheway@lists.wnyc.org

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Thu, Jan 18, 2024 04:12 PM

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Plus: MTA proposes partial 6-week shutdown of G train A decade in, Vision Zero saves lives, but poth

Plus: MTA proposes partial 6-week shutdown of G train [On The Way - from WNYC and Gothamist] Gothamist relies on your support to make local news available to all. Not yet a member? [Consider donating and join today.]( A decade in, Vision Zero saves lives, but potholes abound By [Stephen Nessen]( and [Clayton Guse]( This week marks the 10th anniversary of New York City’s Vision Zero program. The initiative aims to eliminate traffic deaths through better road design for pedestrians and cyclists, as well as an aggressive crackdown on reckless drivers. Sweden was first to launch a version of the program in the late 1990s. Following New York’s lead, cities across the U.S. have embraced the push for street safety. Now, with a decade of experience, New Yorkers are reflecting on the effectiveness of the policy. [Gothamist and WNYC have this week]( looked back at Vision Zero, and concluded the program was indisputably a success — at least in areas where it won the support of elected officials. Here’s former Mayor Bill de Blasio explaining his thinking on Vision Zero during a recent interview with “Morning Edition” host Michael Hill. “The more I understood it, the more I said, you know, if we're going to fight murder, if we're going to devote massive resources to protecting people from being shot and killed, why are we not making a similar effort to protect people?” de Blasio said. The city Department of Transportation is quick to note the number of people killed in car crashes have reached historic lows since Vision Zero launched in 2014. The agency shared data all the way back to 1910, which shows the city’s eight best years for street safety have all come in the past decade. That’s marked progress from the 1990s, when the city recorded no fewer than 368 traffic deaths every year. And it’s a dramatic drop from the late 1920s and early 1930s, when motorists killed more than 1,000 people a year. But at the same time, street safety advocates have plenty of reasons to demand the city recommit itself to Vision Zero. The city has seen [increases in yearly traffic deaths]( since recording an all-time low of 206 in 2018. Last year, the number reached 257. The rise comes as [Mayor Eric Adams has come under criticism]( for walking back street safety projects across the five boroughs. De Blasio — who launched Vision Zero during his first year in office — faced similar scrutiny for slow-walking some of his administration’s own street safety initiatives. In the summer of 2019, as the city saw a surge of [cyclist deaths]( advocates blamed his administration for failing to add enough new bike lanes across the five boroughs. Vision Zero has coincided with a cycling boom. The number of people riding bikes in New York reached an all-time high in 2023 – the same year 29 cyclists died in traffic. That’s the highest toll since 1999, when 35 cyclists were killed. Among those killed are e-bike riders and app-based delivery workers, neither of whom were such a common sight on the roads when Vision Zero launched. Of the 29 cyclists killed last year, 22 were riding e-bikes. The e-bike crashes indicate an ongoing problem that will likely dominate Vision Zero conversations in the coming years. “The way that this street is being used now has changed and it's gotten ahead of our street design. Electric mobility is moving faster than bikes and faster than transit and faster than regulators,” former city Transportation Commissioner [Janette Sadik-Khan told WNYC this week](. “So, we're sort of seeing next generation problems, but we're not seeing next generation solutions and new mobility lanes at the scale and design that's needed.” [Dig deeper: A look at New York City’s new ‘Boulevard of Death’]( What New York is reading this week [the G train at sunset]( Gary Hershorn/Getty Images [G Whiz: MTA proposes partial 6-week shutdown of G train this summer]( - In order to revamp the signal operating system, the MTA wants to instate three major shutdowns of the G train from June through Labor Day. [Read more](. - Since the launch of Vision Zero, Queens Boulevard, a.k.a. the Boulevard of Death, has gotten much safer. Atlantic Avenue, a.k.a. the new Boulevard of Death, has not. [Read more](. - A Brooklyn mother and leading Vision Zero advocate whose 12-year-old son was fatally hit by a truck in 2013 is still pushing state lawmakers to pass "Sammy's Law," which would allow New York City to set its own speed limits. [Read more](. - The FDNY responded to 267 fires caused by faulty e-bike batteries in 2023 — about 20% more than in 2022 — even as lawmakers have tried purging the market of low-quality batteries. [Read more](. - New York City is testing new technology that automatically prevents school bus drivers from speeding. [Read more](. - A teenage boy died after surfing atop an F train on elevated tracks in Brooklyn last Friday, with witnesses saying he fell off the train all the way to the street. [Read more](. - Amtrak on Thursday canceled more than a dozen trains along its Northeast Corridor due to freezing temperatures. [Read more](. - In other Amtrak news, the new (overdue) Acela trains passed a crucial computer modeling test (on the 14th try), meaning the trains are now ready for test runs on actual tracks. ([The New York Times]( - The MTA said it's tweaking the locks on subway conductor cabs to keep people from breaking in and taking trains for joyrides, among other misdeeds. ([THE CITY]( - Plainclothes NYPD teams are still out in the subway system busting fare evaders and people drinking on platforms. ([amNewYork]( Curious commuter “Why is there no subway transfer between the Lorimer Street J and M station and the Broadway G station?” - Dennis, from brooklyn What Clayton says: There are a few places in the city where subway lines overlap without offering riders a free transfer, but the point in South Williamsburg where the elevated Lorimer Street station and underground Broadway station cross paths is among the most egregious. The layout of the stations isn’t dissimilar to the Franklin Avenue shuttle and the C line, which overlap in Brooklyn at Fulton Street and allow riders to transfer without crossing through the turnstiles. But the MTA has no plans to build a similar connection between Lorimer Street and Broadway. The MTA did, for a while, offer free transfers between the stations when the agency performed construction on the L train’s East River tunnel in April 2019. The work hampered service on the L line during nights and weekends for a year — so the agency temporarily offered riders a free entry into either station if they’d recently swiped or tapped into another subway stop. The MTA ended the free transfer in June 2020, saying it was only offered as part of the L train construction plan. Have a question? Follow [@Gothamist on Instagram]( for special opportunities and prompts to submit questions. If you're not on Instagram, email [cguse@wnyc.org](mailto:cguse@wnyc.org ?subject=Curious%20Commuter) or [snessen@wnyc.org](mailto:snessen@wnyc.org?subject=Curious%20Commuter) with the subject line "Curious Commuter question." You must provide your first name + borough (or city if outside of NYC) to have your question considered. Service tips - Friday night through Monday morning, downtown 1 trains will skip 86 St, 79 St, 66 St-Lincoln Center, 59 St-Columbus Circle, 50 St, Christopher St-Sheridan Sq, Houston St, Canal St and Franklin St. - Friday night through Monday morning, 4 trains will not run between Bowling Green and Crown Hts-Utica Av/New Lots Av. - Friday night through Monday morning, D trains will not run between 161 St-Yankee Stadium and Norwood-205 St. - Queensboro Plaza, a highly trafficked station in Long Island City, will have not have weekend subway service for all of January. [Read more.]( - Through the first quarter of 2024 the M train will not travel above 57th street, and the F train will run on the E line between Rockefeller Center and Jackson Heights-Roosevelt Ave. These changes to the F line means there's no subway service at Roosevelt Island, but the MTA is providing shuttle buses instead. More details [here](. - Every borough currently has one free bus route. [Find yours](. - [Check here]( for a complete list of service updates. This week in NYC transit history [a rendering of an East River Tunnel] MTA Archives/NYS Public Library A novel subway tunneling method in the East River When the MTA launched in March 1968, its top brass promised to build a double decker train tunnel under the East River stretching from East 63rd Street in Manhattan to Vernon Boulevard in Long Island City. The tube was to carry subway trains on its top level, and LIRR trains on the bottom. The MTA initially planned to dig out the tunnel from underneath the river, as was the case with the rest of the East River subway crossings. But the initial proposals for the work came back in far over budget, so transit planners went back to the drawing board. Instead of boring beneath the river, the MTA decided to dig trenches in the channels on either side of Roosevelt Island, then bury prefabricated tubes. The dredging work to dig out the trenches began the week of Jan. 16, 1970 — but the project didn’t proceed on schedule. After construction delays and the city’s financial crisis, subway trains wouldn’t run over the tube’s upper level until 1989. And LIRR service on the lower level wouldn’t launch until last year, when the MTA finally cut the ribbon on its long-delayed Grand Central Madison terminal in Midtown. [Instagram]( [Instagram]( [Facebook]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [YouTube]( [New York Public Radio] [WNYC]( | [WQXR]( | [NJPR]( | [GOTHAMIST]( [WNYC STUDIOS]( | [THE GREENE SPACE]( Copyright © New York Public Radio. All rights reserved. 160 Varick Street, New York, NY 10013 [TERMS OF USE]( You can update your [PREFERENCES]( or [UNSUBSCRIBE]( from this list.

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