Skip to Content
Streetsblog USA home
Streetsblog USA home
Log In

Plenty of states are saddled with a legacy of road designs that are deadly for pedestrians, but Florida stands out as a special case. Orlando, Jacksonville, Tampa, and Miami have a monopoly on the four "top" spots on Transportation for America's list of the most deadly cities for pedestrians [PDF].

as
Waiting for the bus in Tice, Florida. Photo via BikeWalkLee
false

The good news is, the Florida Department of Transportation has signaled a commitment to reform. The agency gave veteran traffic-calming expert Billy Hattaway the mandate to make safer, more humane streets for walking and biking standard practice within the department.

Last year, as part of this effort, Florida DOT released a complete streets policy [PDF]. Now, the agency has followed up with an implementation plan, explaining how this policy change will be enacted.

Florida DOT is a huge agency, encumbered by a lot of cultural inertia. But Darla Letourneau at Bike Walk Lee says she likes what she sees so far:

The 5 key guiding elements of their implementation framework are ingredients that all communities with complete streets policies should undertake:

1.  revising guidance, standards, manuals, policies, and other documents;2.  updating decision-making processes;3.  modifying approaches for measuring performance;4.  managing internal and external communications and collaboration during implementation; and5.  providing ongoing education and training.

Of particular interest for local agencies is that one of the documents that will be updated to incorporate a complete streets approach is the Florida Green Book. See p. A-7- A-13 for the detailed recommendations in each Green Book chapter.

This is an ambitious plan to be completed over the next two years, with assigned timeframes for each element (see Table VI, p. 28).

Kudos to the FDOT team, led by Billy Hattaway (and assisted by Smart Growth America), for developing this exciting Plan and for committing to its implementation over the next two years.

There's a lot riding on this effort. If it succeeds, Florida DOT will save lives.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Better Cities & Towns says traffic engineers should take a page from the medical profession's system of "self-analysis and correction." Urban Review STL reports St. Louis wonders whether the city's new downtown traffic study will do something to make things better for pedestrians. And The Urbanist argues in favor of building a "lid" over I-5 in downtown Seattle.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog USA

Friday Video: The Largest U.S. City With No Transit

Can communities really keep people moving without fixed-route transit? Find out on this visit to Texas.

November 21, 2025

Friday’s Headlines Tread Carefully

The Washington Post too a deep dive into the epidemic of pedestrian deaths, which rose from 4,300 in 2010 to more than 7,000 in 2023.

November 21, 2025

Talking Headways Podcast: Emotional Consumption in China

High-speed rail has completely transformed the country. Think about that sentence: "High-speed rail has completely transformed the country." When was the last time something positive like that happened here?

November 20, 2025

Cutting Federal Transit Funding Won’t Close Budget Gaps — But Will Make Transportation Less Affordable

The Trump administration's proposal to eliminate the mass transit account of the Highway Trust Fund would be short-sighted, ineffective, and ruinous, a new analysis finds.

November 20, 2025

Thursday’s Headlines Get Schooled

It's still hard to find people willing to drive the ol' cheese wagon. And since so many places aren't walkable, guess what parents are doing?

November 20, 2025
See all posts