[
Ghost bike for East Village resident Chaim Joseph]
Now that 15 cyclists have been killed by cars or trucks on NYC streets already this year (up from 10 all of 2018), the NYPD yesterday announced that it is launching a citywide bicycle safety plan.
Per
The Wall Street Journal:
Officers will step up enforcement of vehicles that speed, run red lights or fail to yield to pedestrians, NYPD officials said. They will also increase the ticketing of drivers who are texting or talking on their phone without a headset, the officials said.
NYPD Commissioner James O’Neill also said at an unrelated press conference Tuesday that officers will also make sure bike lanes are clear of vehicles, especially police cars. Officers caught using bike lanes illegally may face a variety of internal administrative consequences, such as a reprimand from a supervisor or a disciplinary letter, he said.
And...
“We absolutely have an emergency on our hands,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said Monday night during a television interview.
The enforcement will run through July 21.
Reactions:
• NYPD announces plan to temporarily improve bike safety after slew of cyclist deaths (
Daily News)
• NYPD Promises To Crack Down On Reckless Drivers For A Few Weeks (
Gothamist)
• NYPD’s Reckless Driver ‘Crackdown’ is a Breezy Three-Week Affair (
Streetsblog)
• DOT’s Forthcoming ‘Cycling Safety Plan’ Won’t Likely Break the Car Culture (
Streetsblog)
The NYPD's MO has been
to ticket cyclists instead of drivers in areas where a fatality occurred.
Meanwhile, coming up next week, Transportation Alternatives is staging a “die-in” in Washington Square Park ...
Chaim Joseph, a 72-year-old East Village resident, was one of the 15 cycling victims this year. He was struck by a private oil truck shortly before 6 a.m. on Feb. 4 while he was riding in the bike lane near the intersection of Eighth Avenue and West 45th Street.
The NYPD arrested 56-year-old Queens resident Kenneth Jackson, who worked for Brooklyn-based Approved Oil company. Jackson was charged with failure to yield and failure to exercise due care. He faces a maximum of 30 days in jail — although such sentences are rare,
as Streetsblog noted.