Dozens of Children Killed on NYC Streets since Mayor Adams Took Office, Lawmakers Demand Redesign of Intersections
A group of lawmakers and transportation advocates gathered at City Hall this week, carrying 50 pairs of shoes to represent the dozens of children killed in car crashes since Mayor Eric Adams took office. The group is calling for the city council to pass legislation requiring redesigns at streets across all five boroughs.
The proposed bill would require the city Department of Transportation to remove up to 20 feet of parking spaces from near every intersection each year, a strategy known as "daylighting." The goal is to improve pedestrian safety and reduce the number of traffic-related deaths. However, the plan has sparked controversy due to its potential impact on parking availability.
Initially, Adams and transportation department officials had expressed support for daylighting, but changed their stance last year after releasing a report claiming that it can actually make intersections more dangerous. Queens Councilmember Julie Won, who sponsored the bill, says that lives have been lost while the city failed to act.
Won has criticized Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez, saying he should be "completely ashamed" for not taking action earlier. She is open to a watered-down version of the bill that would only require daylighting at intersections near schools, with the goal of achieving better results.
While advocates point to Hoboken, New Jersey as an example of how daylighting can work, with zero traffic deaths in eight years, it remains unclear if the scaled-back bill will pass by the start of 2026. Speaker Adrienne Adams and her office have maintained that pedestrian safety is a top priority, but details for any potential compromise are still being negotiated.
The number of children killed on NYC streets has been alarming, with dozens lost to traffic-related incidents since Mayor Adams took office. As advocates push for change, lawmakers must decide whether the benefits of improved safety outweigh the cost of reduced parking availability.
A group of lawmakers and transportation advocates gathered at City Hall this week, carrying 50 pairs of shoes to represent the dozens of children killed in car crashes since Mayor Eric Adams took office. The group is calling for the city council to pass legislation requiring redesigns at streets across all five boroughs.
The proposed bill would require the city Department of Transportation to remove up to 20 feet of parking spaces from near every intersection each year, a strategy known as "daylighting." The goal is to improve pedestrian safety and reduce the number of traffic-related deaths. However, the plan has sparked controversy due to its potential impact on parking availability.
Initially, Adams and transportation department officials had expressed support for daylighting, but changed their stance last year after releasing a report claiming that it can actually make intersections more dangerous. Queens Councilmember Julie Won, who sponsored the bill, says that lives have been lost while the city failed to act.
Won has criticized Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez, saying he should be "completely ashamed" for not taking action earlier. She is open to a watered-down version of the bill that would only require daylighting at intersections near schools, with the goal of achieving better results.
While advocates point to Hoboken, New Jersey as an example of how daylighting can work, with zero traffic deaths in eight years, it remains unclear if the scaled-back bill will pass by the start of 2026. Speaker Adrienne Adams and her office have maintained that pedestrian safety is a top priority, but details for any potential compromise are still being negotiated.
The number of children killed on NYC streets has been alarming, with dozens lost to traffic-related incidents since Mayor Adams took office. As advocates push for change, lawmakers must decide whether the benefits of improved safety outweigh the cost of reduced parking availability.