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September 15, 2020
Safe Street for Everyone
Authors
Allen Weiss
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COVID-19 Economics Policy
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How to Build Safer Streets for Everyone

Almost everyone agrees that where one lives has more influence on one’s life experience and expectancy than any other factor.

Where one walks, hikes, bikes, or runs determines the safety of one’s outings. Families and communities across the nation are discovering parks, trails, and public spaces while limiting COVID risk. Questioning sidewalks that can’t safely accommodate physical distancing and demanding that speeding automobiles slow down or get off the street are reasonable issues. [1] In the current pandemic, getting out of one’s home while physically distancing has become a great way of staying sane and maintaining conditioning during the pandemic. 

Everyone wants to feel and be safe on his or her street, regardless of the pandemic.

In the summer of 2020, the National comprehensive report, “City Limits, Setting Safe Speed Limits on Urban Streets,” [2] highlighted this concern about safety: 

“Between 2009 and 2018, pedestrian deaths from traffic crashes in the US grew by 46%, reaching a nearly 3-decade high of 7,354 people killed by vehicles in 2018 alone. This rate means that people walking and biking are an increasingly large percentage of all fatalities on the road. For the past five years, pedestrians and cyclists have accounted for almost 20% of all road fatalities, despite making up only 11% of road users. And this number is on the rise. From 2008 to 2018, cyclist and pedestrian fatalities increased by 38% versus a 12% decline for vehicle occupants.” 

“More than 35,000 people die in traffic crashes on US roads each year, and millions more are seriously and often permanently injured. The United States has the highest fatality rate in the industrialized world—double the rate in Canada and quadruple that in Europe. While traffic fatalities may seem like an intractable issue, city governments have the power to reduce the frequency and severity of traffic crashes by reducing motor vehicle speeds.”

Reengineering streets and building new roads offer opportunities to create a network of “Complete Streets,” planned, designed, operated, and maintained to enable safe, convenient, and comfortable travel. Safe and comfortable travel for users of all ages and abilities, regardless of mode of transportation. Complete Streets provide safe travel for those walking, cycling, driving automobiles, riding public transportation, or delivering goods.  

Before COVID-19, large-scale change in street environment and usage was painfully slow. The spring of 2020 has shown that change can be rapid. Within weeks commuter traffic disappeared since working from home grew. Commercial real estate demand withered while virtual connections thrived. Many other pre-pandemic norms will diminish or disappear. 

Traffic science incorporated into street design does save lives. At 23 miles/hour, 10% of struck pedestrians will die in an accident; at 32 miles/hour, 25% of pedestrians die; and at 50 miles/hour, 75% of pedestrians will die. Roundabouts decrease overall travel time by avoiding the wait at a traffic lights, and they also greatly decrease the number and severity of accidents.[2]  

An equally important and sensitive subject, surprisingly related to safety on the street, is racism.  Black, indigenous, and Latin people are more likely than white people to be struck and killed. [3] Decades of underinvestment in infrastructure have damaged lower income neighborhoods, particularly as societal focus shifted from urban to suburban growth. Major highways built over or through existing neighborhoods changed their character and walkability. Living on the “other side of the tracks” has diminished lifestyle and safety. 

Two other very disturbing facts are highlighted in the same report:

  1. In higher-income neighborhoods, researchers found that drivers failed to yield to a White pedestrian actively crossing in the crosswalk only about 3% of the time versus 21% of the time for a Black pedestrian.” [4]
  2. “According to the Department of Justice, about half of all interactions with police begin with a traffic stop or crash. But data shows that when enforcing traffic laws, police disproportionately stop Black people and other people of color, sometimes with fatal consequences.” [5]

Better designed streets that decrease speeding can reduce both the need for police enforcement and the total number of police encounters. Automated traffic safety cameras and other devices can help keep everyone safe while avoiding direct collisions.

“Safety for all road users must be set as the foremost goal, and all decisions—about speed, infrastructure, allocation of parking and other curbside uses, enforcement, and maintenance— must be made based on how well they advance work toward zero deaths. By taking a holistic, Safe Systems approach to street design, cities can reduce speeds, build safer streets, and save lives.” This quote in the “City Limits” report is a well-articulated, worthwhile goal. 

Since the 1950s engineers designed roads to encourage speed—not walking, biking, or running. Elderly, low-income, Black, and Native Americans suffer disproportionately. [6] 

Prioritizing equitable planning, development and design is an obvious first step. Equitable planning uses all available resources in all communities, including low-income, disabled, elderly, minority and disenfranchised communities. Repurposing streets and common spaces to become Complete Streets follows logically.  

The journey begins by educating and involving both community thought leaders and residents. Leaders who advocate improved walking, biking, hiking, running, and driving streetscapes can  showcase opportunities for positive change and results of that change. Accepting the status quo simply perpetuates bad environments.   

Review “City Limits, Setting Safe Speed Limits on Urban Streets,” to learn more about controlling speed, decreasing mortality, employing tools, and implementing recommendations. Education and subsequent action will make a difference for everyone.

Want to know what healthcare executives are talking about this week? Subscribe to the 4sight Friday RoundUp on iTunes, Spotify, or where ever you listen to podcasts.

Sources

  1. “Making Meaning and Finding Solutions for a Better Future and 5 Tips for Sparking Walkable Community Change,” America Walks, Kate Kraft, 2020.
  2. “City Limits, Setting Safe Speed Limits on Urban Street,” National Association of City Transportation Officials, 2018. https://nacto.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/NACTO_CityLimits_SinglePages.pdf
  3. “Dangerous by Design,” Smart Growth America, National Complete Streets Coalition, 2019.
  4. “Examining Racial Bias As a Potential Factor in Pedestrian Crashes,” Courtney Coughenour, Sheila Clark, Ashok Singh, Eudora Claw, James Abelar, and Joshua Huebner, Accident, Analysis, and Prevention. January 2017. 
  5. “Contact Between Police and the Public, 2015,” U. S. Department of Justice, October 2018.
  6. “Investing in More Equitable Transportation,” Smart Growth America, Sean Doyle, June 22, 2020.  

About the Author

Allen Weiss

Dr. Allen Weiss is Chief Medical Officer for the national Blue Zones Project. Having practiced rheumatology, internal medicine, and geriatrics for 23 years and been President and CEO for 18 years of a 716-bed, two-hospital integrated system, Dr. Weiss now has a national scope focused on prevention. After graduating from Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons and subsequently completing his training at both the New York Presbyterian Hospital and Hospital for Special Surgery of Cornell University, he had a solo practice in Rheumatology, Internal Medicine, and Geriatrics for twenty-three years. He is recognized both as a Fellow of the American College of Physicians and a Fellow of the American College of Rheumatology. Dr. Weiss’s national commitments and honors include: named as one of the Top 100 outstanding physician leaders of healthcare systems by Becker’s Hospital Review multiple times; chosen as a keynote speaker at numerous meetings; served five years on the Regional Advisory Council of the American Hospital Association; elected to the American Hospital Association Board in 2017; selected as Chairman of the Upper Midwest Vizient Board; and continues as a Director of American Momentum Bank. In 2005, he was invited to testify on information technology before the U.S. House Ways and Means Health Subsection. For the state of Florida, Dr. Weiss is past Chair of the Florida Hospital Association as well as its Quality Committee. The Florida Hospital Association presented Dr. Weiss with its highest award in 2019 for advancing healthcare, and he has received numerous other awards from Florida organizations. His wife, Dr. Marla Weiss, is a writer and educator. They have two daughters who are physicians, one a biomedical illustrator/educator and the other an adolescent medicine physician/educator.

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