In 2015 the City of Edmonton launched — vision zero — a policy with the goal to have zero traffic injuries and fatalities by 2032. In 2019, the city spent almost $4 million on improving crosswalks and $1.1 million on traffic signals. “What could be done here should’ve been done with the renewal rece...
Lowering speeds is probably the most effective recomendation in the article.
Instead of fresh paint, I'd recomend redesigning the crosswalks entirely. Narrow the car lanes as they approach the crossings, and raise the crossing with a speed hump. Provide a pedestrian island in the center so pedestrians can focus on one direction of traffic at a time.
Nah. Pedestrian education. You're not supposed to walk in front of moving cars. Signal your intent and then proceed when safe, vs just walk out from between a couple parked cars.
Seems a lot harder to educate anyone who might use the crosswalk, including tourists or people from out of town, than it is to just build a safer crosswalk.
With driver education we could just get rid of road signs, lines on the road and traffic lights right? Cause education is such a good replacement for functional infrastructure.
Slower speed limits are shown to reduce injuries and deaths to people both within and outside of cars, at a greater rate than "pedestrian education" ever will. Source
Braking distances are proportional to the square of the speed for most cars. The available reaction times around corners or after unexpected events are much shorter at high speed.
High speed limits in the city don't really improve your travel times that much, when you have to stop at lights every few intersections anyway.
Its just as effective as saying "well, just drive safer".
What we need is proper, safety oriented infrastructure. this includes narrowing travel lanes, raised speed humps, minimizing crossing distances, improving lines of sight,