An Excellent New Book: Right of Way
In Right of Way, Angie Schmitt explains why U.S. pedestrian fatalities have increased in recent years.
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An Excellent New Book: Right of Way
In Right of Way, Angie Schmitt explains why U.S. pedestrian fatalities have increased in recent years.
Michael Lewyn | @mlewyn | October 5, 2020, 8am PDT
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Over the past decade, the number of American pedestrians killed by automobiles has increased by 50 percent; by contrast, in Europe pedestrian death rates have actually gone down by 36 percent. What went wrong? In Right of Way: Race, Class and the Silent Epidemic of Pedestrian Deaths In America , journalist Angie Schmitt tries to explain what went wrong.
Schmitt suggests that the problem has a variety of causes, including:
Demographic change. Sun Belt cities like Orlando and Tampa are the most dangerous for pedestrians, because they have the widest roads. (Where roads area wide, motorists can drive more rapidly—which means that a collision is more likely to be fatal than in a place with gentler traffic.) As more people have moved to those regions, more walkers have died. By contrast, most of the least dangerous metro areas are slow-growth regions like Boston and Pittsburgh. Even in the latter regions, suburbs have often grown faster than cities, so population has moved to more dangerous places. Schmitt notes that lower-income persons and persons of color are especially likely to be victimized in car crashes, and that as poverty has suburbanized, these persons are more likely to be in suburbs with wide roads.
The growth of “killer cars.” Sport utility vehicles (SUVs) cause more than twice as many deaths per collision as sedans, primarily because of their height. Drivers of tall vehicles have more difficulty seeing pedestrians, and an SUV is likely to hit a pedestrian in the middle of the body instead of the legs, which in turn makes death more likely. “Bull bars” added to SUVs increase risks to pedestrians by concentrating the force of a blow; they are banned in the United Kingdom but not in the U.S.
An aging society. A middle-aged man can walk 3.5 feet per second, while older people walk 2.5-3 feet per second. Traffic engineers time lights for a walking speed of 3.5 or even 4 feet per second, ensuring that older walkers are stranded in the middle of the road when lights change.
One common response to dead walkers is to blame the victim. For example, one study showed that only 25 percent of pedestrians seriously injured by cars were at crosswalks—implying that the rest were struck in midblock where people arguably should not be crossing streets.* However, Schmitt looked at the study more carefully, and points out that only 25 percent of seriously injured walkers were crossed at midblock. (The rest were injured in placers other than midblock or crosswalks, such as driveways and parking lots.) Moreover, crosswalks are infrequent in the suburban areas where injuries are most common, making it difficult for pedestrians NOT to cross midblock.
Schmitt shows that just as our pedestrian safety crisis has many causes, it is best addressed with a wide variety of small solutions. For example, the book discusses:
Road redesign. In New York City, Queens Boulevard was narrowed by the addition of bike lanes, reducing the number of lanes walkers have to cross at a time. Between 1990 and 2014, 189 walkers died on this “boulevard of death” while in some recent years, none have.
Changing traffic lights to give walkers a 5-7 second head start before vehicles get a green light.
Lower speed limits, enforced by speed cameras. When New York City approved a pilot speed cameras program for school zones, injury crashes were reduced by 17 percent. *Street lighting. After Detroit repaired thousands of nonfunctioning streetlights, the pedestrian death rate fell 50 percent in two years—at a time when deaths were rising in the rest of Michigan.
Imposing rules to make SUVs safer. Schmitt notes that European nations score cars on impacts to pedestrians, encouraging carmakers to introduce safety features to raise their scores.
Although I generally found Schmitt's analysis to be persuasive, there is one part of the book that I have reservations about. Schmitt devotes a chapter to attacking state and national Republicans, primarily for failure to fund pedestrian and bicycle facilities. Of course, some Republican legislatures are a target-rich environment in this area. However, this issue cuts across partisan lines. On the one hand, the wide roads that Schmitt properly condemns were mostly created in the late 20th century, when Democrats controlled most state legislatures; on the other hand, cities with Republican mayors and states with Republican governors have endorsed " Vision Zero" policies and other plans designed to make streets safer for walking and biking. My sense from reading blogs and listservs is that over the past few years, urbanist commentary has become more focused on appealing to left-leaning audiences; this book is an example of that trend. Given the dependence of Democrats on votes from car-dependent suburban areas , it seems to me unlikely that state legislatures will become radically more pro-walker without some Republican support. Thus, it seems to me that pedestrian advocates should be fighting for Republican support rather than leaving votes on the proverbial table.