Author: walkboston

Transportation Advocates Letter on Congress St / Fort Point Design

Transportation Advocates Letter on Congress St / Fort Point Design

June 17, 2022
Jascha Franklin-Hodge, Chief of Streets, City of Boston
Arthur Jemison, Chief of Planning, City of Boston
Pat Hoey, Senior Project Manager, Boston Transportation Department

Re: Congress Street, Fort Point Design

Dear Chief Franklin-Hodge, Chief Jemison and Mr. Hoey:

Our collective organizations offer joint comments on the Congress Street Fort Point Design that was recently presented at a public meeting.

Thank you for recommending a design that will create a safer, more attractive street that slows speeds and includes more space for people walking and biking.

Our support for the proposed design, and for a Congress Street that is not used as a corridor to connect buses to North Station, comes from our belief that the South Station-North Station bus connection concept that the City is putting forward will make some of the important improvements that are needed to enhance transit access from the north to the South Boston Seaport where it is so urgently needed.

However, we continue to have questions about the serious transit needs in this booming part of the City, and the planning required to allow the neighborhood’s residents, businesses and workers to thrive in the years ahead. We would like to meet with you again to discuss our comments and provide our thoughts on the South Boston Seaport Transit Plan (within which the Congress Street Fort Point Design sits). Specifically, we would like to touch base on the following elements of the transit plan:

  • Accessible walking between South Station and A Street, including both Melcher Street and the replacement of the Summer Street/A Street stairways. We understand that progress is being made on both of these issues.
  • Bus network redesign and the City’s anticipated comments to the MBTA, including:
    • The need for two-way bus service on A Street
    • Planning for Seaport Boulevard/North Station bus connection
  • Bike network planning, including a review of possible protected bike lanes on the Evelyn Moakley Bridge
  • The status of the Northern Avenue Bridge project
  • Update on the City’s interagency efforts with the MBTA, MassDOT, Massport and the BCEC, and how we can be helpful in supporting this needed collaboration

Additionally, as the design moves forward, we request that a curb management plan be developed that specifically addresses loading and passenger pick-up/drop-off. We believe that this is important both for the safety of people walking and biking and for the economic health of the area businesses. It will also help to build broad support among stakeholders for the redesign.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the plan. We look forward to working with you in the months ahead.

Sincerely,

Tom Ready, FPNA
Stacy Thompson, Executive Director, LivableStreets
Stacey Beuttell, Executive Director, WalkBoston
Wendy Landman, Senior Policy Advisor, WalkBoston
Becca Wolfson, Executive Director, Boston Cyclists Union
Galen Mook, Executive Director, Massachusetts Bicycle Coalition
Jarred Johnson, Executive Director, TransitMatters

Statewide Fatal Crashes In MA, April 2022

Statewide Fatal Crashes In MA, April 2022

Each month, we post about the fatal crashes in Massachusetts from the previous month, and share any trends that we see. For the full list of monthly posts, head here. Earlier this year, we released a year in review for 2021 to highlight common issues.

Last month, we took a look at the seven fatal crashes listed in the MassDOT Crash Portal in March. In this post, we’ll look at crashes in MA in April 2022. The information in the chart below is compiled from news reports, and was checked against the MassDOT Crash Portal Dashboard “Fatal Crash Information.” The Google Street View images included below use the address listed in the crash portal.

  • Of the 21 fatal crashes in Massachusetts in April in the MassDOT Crash portal, three were identified as people walking.
  • The average age of pedestrians hit & killed in April was 60.
  • One additional fatal crash was in the news: 5-year-old Candice Asare-Yeboah was struck on April 18th on Stafford Street in Worcester and passed away in the ICU on May 24th; a vigil at the crash site was held on Sunday, May 30th. Since Candice died more than 30 days from the date of the crash, this crash may not be included in the federal FARS dataset.

Update, 6/1: After this monthly post was added, a reader sent us a link to an additional fatal crash that was not listed in the portal. On April 27th, a 78-year-old woman was hit and killed at Elm Street and Whittier Street in Andover. We reached out to MassDOT who followed up with Andover PD about this crash; the fatal crash report has now been submitted to MassDOT and added to the crash database.


Date4/4/2022, 12:50 AM
LocationKneeland St. + Hudson St.
TownBoston
TypePEDESTRIAN
Age33
SexM

Richard Mullins, age 33, was struck and killed by 36-year-old Abana Cabrera on Kneeland Street in Boston. UniversalHub reported:

Abana Cabrera, 36, of Randolph, was arraigned yesterday in Boston Municipal Court, before Mullins’s death, on charges of operating under the influence of alcohol causing serious bodily injury, OUI alcohol as a second offense, and failure to stop or yield, the DA’s office says, adding she had been earlier convicted of DUI in Nevada in 2016…The defendant allegedly made statements to Boston Police detectives that she had been drinking since 4 p.m. the prior afternoon.

According to the MassDOT Road Inventory, Kneeland Street & Hudson Streets are under local jurisdiction. There are two lanes and a bike lane in each direction on Kneeland. There is no crosswalk across Kneeland Street at Hudson. The intersection of Kneeland and Hudson is one block from the intersection of Kneeland and Albany Street, which has access to I-93 and I-90. The speed limit is 30mph.


Date4/11/2022, 8:27 PM
LocationI-291 EAST, EXIT 3
TownSpringfield
TypePEDESTRIAN
Age75
SexF

Roselaine Jacquet, age 75, was struck and killed on I-291 East just before Exit 3. Western Mass News reported that a 34-year-old Springfield man was driving eastbound when he struck her in the center travel lane.

According to the MassDOT Road Inventory, this road is under MassDOT jurisdiction. It is a limited access highway, with a median and 3 travel lanes in each direction. The speed limit is 55mph.

This section of I-291 is also signed as Rt 20.


Date4/12/2022, 8:10 PM
Location27 North St.
TownSalem
TypePEDESTRIAN
Age72
SexM

The Salem News reported that a 72-year old Salem male was treated on scene then rushed to Salem Hospital with serious head injuries after he was struck by the driver of a vehicle on North Street (Rt 114) in Salem.

WalkBoston has conducted a number of walk audits in Salem over the last few years. This intersection is located outside the planned route of the September 2019 North Salem Walk Audit, but other intersections along North Street were examined at that time.

According to the MassDOT Road Inventory, this road is under local jurisdiction. At this intersection with Lynde Street, there are two lanes in each direction to accommodate turning lanes, with a bike lane on one side and a bike lane that transitions to sharrows on the other side. The speed limit is 30mph.


Updates

If you have an update about a community member who was killed in one of these crashes, please contact Brendan so we can update our 2022 list. WalkBoston has maintained a list each year since 2016, pulling the information from news reports, social media, and from people like you that share the information with us.

Yearly trackers:  |  ||||| 2022

Report: Fatal Pedestrian Crashes in MA (2021)


Reminder about the data from the MassDOT portal

MassDOT makes no representation as to the accuracy, adequacy, reliability, availability or completeness of the crash records or the data collected from them and is not responsible for any errors or omissions in such records or data. Under no circumstance will MassDOT have any liability for any loss or damage incurred by any party as a result of the use of the crash records or the data collected from them. Furthermore, the data contained in the web-based crash report tool are not an official record of what transpired in a particular crash or for a particular crash type. If a user is interested in an official copy of a crash report, contact the Registry (http://www.mass.gov/rmv/). The City of Boston Police Department may be contacted directly for official copies of crash reports and for crash data pertaining to the City of Boston. In addition, any crash records or data provided for the years after 2018 are subject to change at any time and are not to be considered up-to-date or complete. As such, open years’ of crash data are for informational purposes only and should not be used for analysis. The data posted on this website, including crash records and other reports, are collected for the purpose of identifying, evaluating or planning the safety enhancement of potential crash sites, hazardous roadway conditions or railway-highway crossings. Under federal law, this information is not subject to discovery and cannot be admitted into evidence in any federal or state court proceeding or considered for other purposes in any action for damages that involves the sites mentioned in these records (see 23 USC, Section 409).

MA Vision Zero Coalition comments on New Car Assessment Program

MA Vision Zero Coalition comments on New Car Assessment Program

Submit your own comments to NHTSA about the New Car Assessment Program by June 8th using this simple feedback form created by America Walks.

Friday, May 20th, 2022

As members of the Massachusetts Vision Zero Coalition, we are writing to provide comments on the updates to the New Car Assessment Program. 

The Massachusetts Vision Zero Coalition is composed of transportation advocacy organizations, community-based groups, and individuals representing communities across the state who are dedicated to improving traffic safety in Massachusetts. 

The executive summary of the report shares the following data: “…a statistical projection of traffic fatalities for the first half of 2021 shows that an estimated 20,160 people died in motor vehicle traffic crashes—the highest number of fatalities during the first half of the year since 2006, and the highest half-year percentage increase in the history of data recorded by the Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS).[3] In addition, the projected 11,225 fatalities during the second quarter of 2021 represents the highest second quarter fatalities since 1990, and the highest quarterly percentage change (+23.1 percent) in FARS data recorded history”. 

The role that cars themselves play in these crashes cannot be ignored. For many many years, vehicles have been continually designed to improve safety for those inside the vehicle, to the detriment of those outside the vehicle, such as  vulnerable road users like people on foot and on bike. We appreciate that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is taking the safety of those outside of the vehicle into consideration in the adjustment of the New Car Assessment Program (NCAP) safety ratings and the requirement for a 10 year roadmap for the future of NCAP. The NCAP is both a way to educate the public on the safety of new cars and an opportunity to encourage car manufacturers to make the safest products possible. Though this update is a step in the right direction, we believe that there are additional things that NHTSA should consider to even more greatly improve the efficacy of the safety rating program. 

US DOT recently released the first ever National Roadway Safety Strategy, which  included the NCAP update as one of the first concrete steps to address the increase in fatalities on America’s roadways through a safe system approach. Yet despite the National Roadway Safety Strategy stating “Under the Safe System Approach, efforts to make our roads safer should affirmatively improve equity outcomes,” NHTSA’s plan for both this update of the NCAP and its 10 year plan fail to adequately consider vulnerable road users other than people walking, people with disabilities, or Indigenous, Black, and Hispanic people who are disproportionately represented in traffic fatalities and serious injuries. We ask NHTSA to take our following comments into consideration to improve this once in a decade opportunity to address the NCAP.

Vehicle size, height, & weight:

Increasing vehicle size has been continuously linked to fatal pedestrian and bicyclist crashes across the country. A recent study from the Insurance Institute of Highway Safety demonstrated that drivers of larger vehicles like SUVs, vans, and trucks are more likely to hit pedestrians while making right turns than drivers of other vehicles. This suggests issues of visibility and larger blindspots. This is especially concerning given the additional danger that the size, height, and weight of larger vehicles causes to vulnerable road users. Direct vision, visibility, and blindspots/zones for vehicles should be rated as part of NCAP. Europe and other countries have had a direct vision standard for passenger vehicles (cars, pickup trucks, and SUVs) since 2009, and are expanding this standard to newly-built trucks as well. This blind zone measurement tool demonstrates just what the blind spots are for different vehicles, and shows, for example, that a driver of a Ford F-150 truck has a blind spot in front of the vehicle so deep that eight standing elementary school children lined up from the bumper of the vehicle would be invisible

Human-Machine Interface (HMI) and In-vehicle Infotainment System (IVIS):

This should prioritize ease of use and minimize distraction, including less reliance on touch screens and more buttons and dials for basic vehicle functions (like climate control and radio). There should be restrictions on screens built into vehicles (maximum size limit, for instance). Any vehicle with a screen that does not lock when the vehicle is in motion should have a lower safety rating. 

Intelligent speed assistance (ISA):

NHTSA should take Intelligent Speed Assistance into consideration for NCAP. The EU’s European Transport Safety Council found a safety benefit in using these technologies and the General Safety Regulation made an overridable version of ISA mandatory in 2019. They expect ISA to result in a 30% reduction in collisions, and 20% reduction in deaths.

Advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS): 

The inclusion of additional ADAS, including pedestrian automated emergency braking, lane keeping support, and blind spot detection and intervention, is encouraging as these all aim to protect those outside the vehicle. However these ADAS are not without issues and limitations, which we outline below. 

The inclusion of Pedestrian Automatic Emergency Braking (PAEB) systems does not go far enough to truly consider the safety of vulnerable road users. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law defines vulnerable road users as pedestrians, bicyclists, other cyclists or persons using a personal conveyance as defined by the American National Standards /Manual on Classification of Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes. This definition includes people using personal conveyances, motorized and non motorized such as wheelchairs and scooters used by people with disabilities, and multiple micro mobility devices. In addition to neglecting all kinds of vulnerable road users beyond pedestrians, the sensors used for PAEB have been proven to not work at night, and concerningly, are not as accurate in sensing people with darker skinned, raising serious equity and safety concerns. A 2019 Study by the Georgia Institute of Technology found that Automated Vehicles do not identify darker skin as well as they identify lighter skin. The study concludes, in part, that more data and research is necessary. Additionally, these sensors are not accurate at detecting people riding bikes, an important feature that the European Union will be including in their standards. 

The Lane Keeping Support (LKS)  systems keep vehicles centered in the lane, even when drivers need to shift to make room for a cyclist who is passing and may not be in a designated lane. This technology should be tested for how it impacts passing people on bikes at a safe distance. 

The blind spot detection and blind spot intervention systems must detect people in wheelchairs, bicyclists, and scooter riders as well as pedestrians.

The ADAS systems NHTSA is now testing are very likely to be the building blocks for more automated vehicles. As NHTSA moves forward with testing of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems it must include tests of different races, ethnicities, and genders, as well as people using wheelchairs and other common mobility devices. Otherwise the outcome of these tests risk increasing the safety inequities in our transportation system.

Testing crash avoidance technology on its ability to detect and respond to vulnerable road users, especially those with darker skin, could avoid future disparities in vulnerable road user crashes and fatalities by encouraging car manufactures to test for people of all races and ethnicities with ADAS now. Vehicles that lack ADAS features that effectively protect people outside vehicles should not receive 5-star ratings.

NCAP Roadmap:

In the 10 year NCAP roadmap outlined in the request for comments, NHTSA stated it would release a plan for testing for crashworthiness—the damage done to a person in the event of crash- of hoods and bumpers—this year. When testing for crashworthiness of pedestrians and vulnerable road users, NHTSA should be required to also use women-specific test mannequins, as opposed to solely using male mannequins.  NHTSA’s own research has shown that women are 17 percent more likely to die and 73 percent more likely to be severely injured in car crashes than men. Testing with women-specific test mannequins will help determine if vulnerable road users experience similar gender disparities, and help car manufacturers avoid that outcome.

The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law also requires NHTSA to consider the benefits of being consistent with other rating systems both within the United States and internationally. The EuroNCAP has been testing for cyclists since 2018, the Australasian New Car Assessment Program (ANCAP) tests for cyclists, as does the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) in the US. NHTSA’s ten year plan does not include testing for cyclists until the 2025-2031 timeframe, showing the US will likely be a decade behind other countries. 

Overall, it is crucial that new vehicles be strictly measured against the NCAP rating system in order for the system to be an effective consumer resource tool and make vulnerable populations safer on our streets. Data suggests that Americans keep their cars for nearly 12 years, meaning  vehicles built today will be on the road for at least a decade, if not longer. Any delay to including additional important changes to the NCAP means a generation of vehicles without these safety measures. 

We appreciate the opportunity to provide comments on the NCAP, and encourage NHTSA to incorporate our suggestions. Thank you for your time and consideration. 

Sincerely, 

The MA Vision Zero Coalition

NCAP Comment Letter – MA Vision Zero Coalition (PDF)
all footnote references included in PDF document

WalkBoston Comments on Stanhope Hotel PNF

WalkBoston Comments on Stanhope Hotel PNF

May 23, 2022
Quinn Valcich
Boston Planning & Development Agency

RE: WalkBoston Comments on Stanhope Hotel PNF

Dear Quinn:

WalkBoston is Massachusetts’ leading walking advocacy organization working to make Massachusetts a safer, more accessible and more attractive place to walk. 

Slide 28 of the presentation dated May 5, 2022 shares the possibility of a “Seasonal Road Closure” for the section of Stanhope Street between the project site and Frieda Garcia Park. Rather than creating a temporary/seasonal closure at this location, we believe that this section of Stanhope Street should be made into a permanent pedestrian-only area as part of this hotel development project. The people-focused space could have a flush curb and sturdy, attractive bollards at each end for better ADA accessibility and protection from vehicle traffic. 

A temporary outdoor pedestrian area was already well received and proven to be a success at this location last summer. We highly recommend that the pedestrian plaza should move beyond the pilot phase into construction as part of the larger Stanhope hotel project. This high quality pedestrian plaza and increased pedestrian traffic would help encourage the city to create a safer crosswalk connection across Clarendon Street to Back Bay Station in the longer term.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment. 

Brendan Kearney 

Deputy Director, WalkBoston

WalkBoston’s Advocacy Work Continues to Soar

WalkBoston’s Advocacy Work Continues to Soar

Two of the most iconic by-products of Boston’s Big Dig — the Rose Kennedy Greenway and the Zakim Bridge — also stand today as symbols of WalkBoston’s earliest and most prominent pedestrian advocacy.

Founded in 1990, WalkBoston played a leading role throughout the 1990s in making sure pedestrians weren’t overlooked in the massive project to bury Boston’s Central Artery highway. Most notably, it persuaded transportation officials to reduce the number of proposed vehicle travel lanes on the Greenway from 10 to 6, with extra space devoted to pedestrians and bicyclists. It also persisted in seeing to completion the crucial pedestrian/bicycle bridge linking the Charles River Basin and Boston Harbor, a Big Dig commitment that languished until WalkBoston held a highly publicized walk in 2005 decrying its absence. The bridge was completed in 2012.

Those efforts and others are being recalled this month as WalkBoston marks the 20th anniversary of one of its most high-profile events: a Mother’s Day walk on the soon-to-be-opened Zakim Bridge on May 12, 2002. Co-sponsored with the Mass. Turnpike Authority, the walk drew 200,000 people — five times what officials anticipated — despite it being a cool rainy day.

The bridge walk idea came from then WalkBoston board member Catherine Donaher. 

“We had all gone through a very long and challenging fight to stop Scheme Z (a proposed I-90/Route 1 interchange over the Charles River) and I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be great to have a walk across the bridge before it opened?’ ” Donaher recalled.

WalkBoston co-founder and then-president Ann Hershfang pitched it to Turnpike Authority chairman Matt Amorello. “I stood up at a meeting and said, ‘Would you be willing to have pedestrians be the first mode of transportation across the Zakim Bridge?’ and he immediately said ‘Yes!’ ” Hershfang said.  

“What happened was so wonderful,” Donaher said. “We need to do more things to bring people out to touch and feel projects like this and feel like ‘This is my bridge — I paid for this.’”

The Mother’s Day walk’s popularity prompted officials to hold a walk through the Big Dig tunnels in August 2002, and a dedication walk on the Zakim Bridge that October. Those two events drew 600,000 and 800,000, respectively.

“Our work on the Central Artery kind of elevated us in the public mind,” said Hershfang, “and the bridge walk also raised our profile. I can still see one of our bright orange WalkBoston banners stretched across the bridge!” The Fall 2002 WalkBoston newsletter noted that nearly 90 new memberships were received after the first two events.

WalkBoston has only continued to grow over the ensuing two decades. An organization that in 2002 had no full-time staff and an annual budget of just over $100,000 now has six full-time staff members, interns, and a budget in excess of $600,000. WalkBoston continues to broaden and diversify its walkability programs and advocacy efforts, which now includes the WalkMassachusetts Network, a statewide coalition of groups working on walking.

Help us continue to add to our legacy by becoming a member or making a donation at walkboston.org/donate.

News clippings of the event from 2002: