Vision Zero reframes this mindset by saying traffic deaths and severe injuries are avoidable.
We assume safety is built into our street design, but the reality is it’s not. Traditional road design prioritizes moving cars from point A to B as fast as possible. Roads are designed with wider lanes and longer, straight stretches to move large volumes of cars quickly, often encouraging drivers to go speeds much higher than posted speed limits.
This comes at a high cost. Speed is the single most significant factor in crash severity. For a pedestrian hit by a car, the difference of 5 mph could determine whether they survive or not. The risk of fatality or severe injury increases at higher speeds as does the driver’s reaction time and distance a car is thrown out of control. The driver’s field of vision is reduced exacerbating their ability to see pedestrians in the first place.
On Montclair’s dense, residential streets a lack of protected infrastructure for bicyclists and pedestrians combined with roads designed to encourage unsafe speeds increases the dangers for both drivers and pedestrians. And yet, even on roads or intersections with a history of repeated crashes, it is difficult to make infrastructure changes because of crash quotas that must be met. Oftentimes, action is triggered only after someone is severely injured or killed.
Vision Zero, says this is UNACCEPTABLE. Traffic deaths and severe injuries are avoidable on our streets.
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