New York City traffic deaths fall to
record low under safety program
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[January 09, 2018]
By Peter Szekely
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Led by a sharp drop in
pedestrian deaths, overall traffic fatalities in New York City fell for
the fourth consecutive year in 2017 to their lowest on record, thanks at
least in part to an ongoing safety improvement program, city officials
said on Monday.
The number of pedestrians, motorists and cyclists killed in accidents on
New York City streets last year fell by 7 percent to 214 and by 28
percent from 2013 when officials began implementing a safety program
known as Vision Zero.
The program, which includes a lower speed limit, tougher enforcement and
improved street design, is one of the signature policies of Mayor Bill
de Blasio's first four-year term of office. His second term began last
week.
"Vision Zero is working," de Blasio said in announcing the new
statistics at a police facility in the city's Queens borough.
Under Vision Zero, originally developed in Sweden, officials have been
trying to eliminate traffic deaths through more than 100 initiatives
that include curbing speed limits, boosting enforcement with speed
cameras and high profile ticketing campaigns, as well as driver outreach
and education.
The most striking decline was in the number of pedestrian casualties,
which fell 32 percent last year to 101, and for the first time comprise
less than half of the city's overall traffic fatalities. Since 2013,
pedestrian deaths have fallen by 45 percent.
While stressing that even a single traffic death is one too many,
officials said that New York was moving in the opposite direction of the
national trend. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
reported that U.S. traffic deaths rose more than 13 percent between 2013
and 2016.
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People watch passing traffic below as they stand on the Brooklyn
Bridge over the East River between the boroughs of Brooklyn and
Manhattan in New York City, U.S. November 18, 2016. REUTERS/Mark
Kauzlarich
The city plans to redesign more streets to make them safer and
police will "deepen" their traffic enforcement efforts, the mayor
said.
"There’s a lot more to do," the mayor said of the program and the
$1.6 billion five-year commitment attached to it.
Earlier this month, de Blasio said the city would install more than
1,500 new barrier posts on sidewalks and plazas to protect
pedestrians, after at least two instances last year of drivers
killing people after mounting the curb.
In May an intoxicated man steered a car along sidewalks for three
city blocks in Times Square, killing a young woman and injuring at
least 22 people.
In November, a man was charged with murder and providing support to
Islamic State after he mowed down people on a lower Manhattan bike
lane the previous month, killing eight.
The deaths in those two incidents were not included in the city's
report on traffic fatalities, a spokesman for the mayor said.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely; Editing by Frank McGurty and Diane
Craft)
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