Posts tagged Vision Zero
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The Ride of Silence honors fallen bicyclists
The Ride of Silence Wednesday evening in Benjamin Banneker Park SW was a gathering, a memorial, and a demonstration. But mostly, it was a sobering commemoration to cyclists killed or injured in crashes in the past year. Keep reading…
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Local bicycle shops ask Mayor Bowser to get serious about road safety
While advocates are often the ones who generate events and statements about road safety, now local bike shops are also speaking out about Vision Zero. On Monday, several local bicycle shop owners sent an open letter to DC Mayor Muriel Bowser, urging her to make the District safer for people who bike. You can read it in full below. Keep reading…
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No changes have been made to the Kenilworth intersection where Sherron Pressley died
The man accused of striking and killing 51-year-old Sherron Pressley with his car on Kenilworth Avenue NE has a hearing before the DC Superior Court this Friday, May 17. While the case is moving forward, little has changed at the dangerous intersection where Pressley died more than eight months ago. Keep reading…
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Events: Bike to work, speak out against highway widening, and more
Get ready for bike to work day, protect the local watershed, speak out against highway widening, remember fallen cyclists, and more in this week's events roundup. Keep reading…
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Vision how many? We’re still tracking how many people are killed while traveling in DC
In the time I conceived the idea for this article on 2:20 pm on May 6 to when I got home to put words on paper around 9 pm, the traffic fatality count in DC had already ticked up another notch. In case you’re counting, that puts us at 10 traffic-related fatalities inside DC’s borders in 2019. That’s the same number as this date last year. Keep reading…
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Three new bills aim to make DC streets safer
Following weeks marred by multiple traffic-related deaths in the District, Councilmember Charles Allen (ward 6) introduced a bill on Tuesday that would push much harder for Vision Zero, a strategy to eliminate traffic-related deaths and injuries. It would also push DC to fulfill its Sustainable DC commitment. Keep reading…
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Let’s make our streets safer by putting the transportation people in charge of traffic cameras
Here’s one of the changes proposed by DC Mayor Muriel Bowser to combat dangerous streets: transfer photo enforcement from the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) to the District Department of Transportation (DDOT). DC councilmembers Mary Cheh and Charles Allen disagree on whether to make this change, but Cheryl Cort argues it's the right move. Keep reading…
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Hundreds “die” on Pennsylvania Avenue for streets that don’t kill
A few hundred people rallied in front of the John A. Wilson Building at noon on Friday to demand “streets that don’t kill people” in the District. Protesters laid down on Pennsylvania Avenue and blocked the street for about eight minutes, a nod to the eight road deaths that have occured in the District so far this year. Keep reading…
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A Bloomingdale ANC is trying to water down a street safety plan to temporarily save two parking spots
First Street NW in Bloomingdale is a residential street, but many drivers use it as a commuting thoroughfare, making it dangerous to people walking in the neighborhood. Residents have complained about it for years, but happily there's a plan to add better pedestrian infrastructure and to slow drivers down. There's just one catch. Keep reading…
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NBC4’s story about Dave Salovesh’s death frets about cyclists running lights
At first, I was glad to see the media at the emplacement of the ghost bike at Florida Avenue NE & 12th Street NE. I wanted them to hear the hurt in the cycling community, to see our tears and our goodbyes, to see us take the intersection and close it down in honor of Dave Salovesh. Keep reading…