Skip to Content
Streetsblog USA home
Streetsblog USA home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

In Chicago and Around the Country, Calls for Pedestrian Safety Grow Louder

The Dangerous by Design report on pedestrian fatalities from Transportation for America has been getting a lot of attention from the Streetsblog Network (and from the national press) this week. The data in the report, which was co-authored by Michelle Ernst of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, gives advocates a powerful tool when talking to local officials about the need for safer streets.

In Chicago, the Active Transportation Alliance rallied at an intersection where a pedestrian was killed in a hit-and-run last month to demand safer conditions in that city. Five Chicagoans have died in the last month after being hit by drivers.

From the Active Transportation Alliance blog:

4086732888_756d0b70e4.jpgA Chicago sidewalk near the spot where Martha Gonzalez was killed by a hit-and-run driver October 13. (Photo: Steven Vance of Steven Can Plan)

Active Trans and Center for Neighborhood Technology called
on our leaders today to make streets safer for pedestrians.
Transportation for America, a national campaign, released a national report that ranks Chicagoland 41st in a list of the 50 most dangerous metropolitan areas in the country for pedestrians.

We gathered at 18th and Halsted streets this morning with
representatives from Chicago Police and the 25th Ward to talk about
street design and the laws that make it easier for drivers to disregard
pedestrians.

Martha Gonzalez was a victim of fatal crash at that intersection last month and it was powerful to have her family there.

Tell your senator to support HB43! This legislation would require
drivers to STOP for pedestrians. These deaths are preventable and we
have solutions that have proven effective in other communities. Call on
your leaders to act now!

The report ranked Louisville, Kentucky, as the seventh most dangerous metro area with more than 1 million residents. Network member Broken Sidewalk notes that this is in spite of a relatively high rate of spending on pedestrian infrastructure:

If Louisville is spending among the most per person for pedestrianimprovements but still ranks among the worst metro areas for safety,then we’re either not putting our money in the right places or there’sa more fundamental problem that must be addressed.

I’m not going to try and diagnose these problems right now, but Iwould be willing to guess that addressing speed will be a key factor.Dangerous by Design points out the alarming truth about a pedestrian’ssurvival rate when struck at various speeds. When hit at 20MPH, yourchances of recovery are good at 95 percent.  As speed increases, survival ratedrops rapidly.  At 30MPH, the rate stands at 55 percent and at 40MPH yourchances of survival are only 15 percent. Considering so many of Louisville’sarterials have a posted speed limit of 45 (or sometimes more) miles perhour, it’s no wonder that so many pedestrian deaths occur on arterialroads.

Among the many other network blogs covering the report are Bike Delaware News, Discovering Urbanism and Greater City Providence.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog USA

Trump’s ‘EV Mandate’ Does Not Exist. But Car Dependency Does — And We Can End It

The new president has sworn to unravel Biden's EV plans. But would they have been enough to decarbonize the transportation sector without confronting how much Americans drive?

January 22, 2025

Wednesday’s Headlines Get a Gentleman’s ‘C’

Transportation for America gave the Biden administration middling grades. Meanwhile, President Trump is already pushing to fulfill promises to cancel federal support for EVs.

January 22, 2025

Drivers Keep Hitting Pedestrians In Front of An Iconic St. Louis Ice Cream Shop. Advocates Are Fighting Back.

A series of crashes outside a popular St. Louis landmark carries a larger lesson about traffic violence, and the cost of government inaction.

January 22, 2025

Tuesday’s Headlines Take Me Home, Country Roads

Getting around without a car in a small town isn't easy, as one Fast Company writer found out. More bike lanes and denser town centers would help.

January 21, 2025

How America Can Reconnect Its Neighborhoods Before the Next Climate Catastrophe

America is replete with sprawling, disconnected neighborhoods that send residents out of their way by design. A new study explores just how bad it is — and what we can do about it.

January 21, 2025
See all posts