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Re: 800+ pedestrians hurt, 19 killed, on JFK Blvd. in past 10 years
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Pedestrians make errors, sometimes even very stupid errors. They shouldn't be punishable by violent death. Our roads need to be forgiving, to "fail well," not summarily execute people like some medieval justice system. In a Complete Street, people still make stupid mistakes, but they're ripped to shreds for it far less often.
Posted on: 2015/4/9 16:13
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Re: 800+ pedestrians hurt, 19 killed, on JFK Blvd. in past 10 years
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Go to any JC intersection where there are turning arrows to allow cars to turn, while having the red hand to prevent pedestrians from crossing until the full green is displayed.
Pedestrians, almost 100%, ignore the red had and walk in front of crossing cars. Or go past any school after classes are done and see the kids blatantly jaywalking cross moving traffic. Yes, there are plenty of idiot drivers. But you know what? Who loses in a contest between an idiot driver and an idiot pedestrian?
Posted on: 2015/4/9 16:08
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800+ pedestrians hurt, 19 killed, on JFK Blvd. in past 10 years
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This is our insanity:
nj.com article
And this is our solution??
>>During a press conference about the March 30 incident, Hudson County Sheriff Frank X. Schillari advised pedestrians to be more careful on the road.
"[Many pedestrians] underestimate the traffic coming," Schillari said. "A lot of people take a chance, because they're all in a hurry."
To pedestrians, he said, "Cross at the crosswalk. Wait for the traffic light to change."<<
Well, yes. But no. I understand the sheriff's desire to protect people, and his advice is good in a vacuum. But traffic is not weather; it is us, and we can change it.
The way to stop the carnage on our Boulevard of Death isn't to keep urging pedestrians to be more careful, or more visible, or to wave fluorescent orange flags to "alert drivers to their presence." (Yes, that's a real thing. Google it.)
The solution isn't mysterious or gradual or experimental or untested; it's being done on similarly inappropriate suburban speedways all over this metropolitan area, including Queens and Woodhaven Boulevards in NYC, and on dozens of other arterial deathtraps across the country.
It's called Complete Streets, and generally it 1. reduces the number of car lanes and narrows them ("road diet"), 2. adds protected bike lanes, 3. adds pedestrian protection like middle islands, corner curb bump-outs, and raised crosswalks, 4. calms and slows traffic with these and other features, and 5. improves and expands mass transit options, e.g., bus-only lanes and better bus shelters.
This set of concepts has been the basis for urban street design in much of Western Europe for decades now, saving tens of thousands of lives. To do anything less here, or to delay doing so for another day, would be immoral and disgraceful.
Posted on: 2015/4/9 15:54
Edited by elsquid on 2015/4/9 16:10:27
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