Pedestrian Safety
Top Categories
Flashing Beacons are the Wrong Way to Make a Bike Way
Berkeley bike advocates are pushing back against the use of "Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons (RRFBs or flashers)" in the city's bicycle visioning plan. The idea is to use them where 'bike boulevards' cross heavily trafficked streets. In an op-ed this week in Berkeleyside, bike advocate Charles Siegel makes a compelling plea for the city to instead install four-way stop signs, specifically at the intersection of California and Dwight.
October 6, 2017
Mayor Lee, It’s Time for an Executive Order on Senior Safety
David Grinberg, 90, was crossing Fell Street at Baker, returning to his home at the Mercy Terrace Apartments, a senior facility, yesterday around 5:20 p.m. He was struck by a motorist and died of his injuries later that evening.
October 5, 2017
SPUR Talk: Checking in on Vision Zero
"Every year, 360 people are killed in the Bay Area as a result of traffic crashes," said Jenn Fox, with the Vision Zero Network. "Each of these tragedies is a person--a family member, a community member ... we must get over our complacency."
October 4, 2017
Last Sunday Streets of the Year, Excelsior
Thousands of people, including lots of kids, came out to the Excelsior neighborhood yesterday morning and afternoon to enjoy a bright and sunny Sunday Streets on Mission Street. This one ran from Avalon/Theresa to Geneva Streets, and marks the final Sunday Streets event of 2017.
October 2, 2017
Oakland Alameda Access Project Kicks Off With a Car-First Focus
Thanks to I-880 and its complex of on and offramps, walking or bike riding through Oakland's Chinatown, downtown, or on routes to Jack London Square and the estuary, can be pretty awful.
September 29, 2017
Supervisor Shocked to Hear Uber and Lyft Violate Bike and Transit Lanes
Some two-thirds of citations for driving in transit lanes and bike lanes, failing to yield to pedestrians, and other motor vehicle violations, are issued to Transportation Network Company (TNC) cars such as Uber and Lyft--this according to a study from the police department of violations in downtown San Francisco.
September 26, 2017
The Cultural Lag on Safety at DOTs
Will protected bike lane policy directives ever get absorbed by street-level crews?
September 22, 2017
SPUR Talk: Protected Bike Lanes Must Become the New Normal
Urban planners, at least when it comes to bikeway design, are still trying to undo the damage caused by vehicular cyclists in the 1970s and 80s, explained Bill Schultheiss, a traffic engineer who specializes in bike design and a member of the Bicycle Technical Committee and the Pedestrian Task Force of the National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (NCUTCD), with the Toole Design Group. "There was a fear that cyclists would no longer be able to ride in the streets and would be relegated to sidewalks," he added. "To this day, that has discouraged protected bike lanes in the [road engineering] guidance."
September 19, 2017
And the Victim Blaming Continues
There was a bit of a dust-up late Friday on Twitter when the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition called out Caltrans over "public service" announcements that blame our most vulnerable road users for their own deaths and injuries.
September 18, 2017
Push Continues to Fix Valencia
Yesterday evening, some thirty bicycle advocates in yellow t-shirts again cordoned off a section of Valencia Street's Uber drop-off zone (also known as the bike lane) in the Mission, between 18th and 19th.
September 15, 2017