Toronto Star

City to study safety of trail in wake of 5-year-old’s death

Cycling advocate blames child’s death on city’s infrastruc­ture

- FAKIHA BAIG STAFF REPORTER

The city of Toronto will look into safety measures for the Martin Goodman Trail following the tragic death of a 5-year-old boy who fell into traffic from a bike trail next to Lake Shore Blvd. W., Wednesday night.

“Earlier today I spoke with senior staff in the parks and transporta­tion department­s, who oversee the Martin Goodman Trail, and they’ve agreed to urgently look into what safety measures we can put in along that most narrow portion of the trail,” said Councillor Gord Perks, the representa­tive for Parkdale—High Park.

“At this point I’ve asked them to cast the net wide (for possible solutions) and give me their best advice for what we can do so that no other little children lose their lives,” he said.

One cycling advocate said a simple guard rail could have saved him.

“This was a devastatin­g incident,” said Jared Kolb of Cycle Toronto, a not-for-profit advocacy group that educates Torontonia­ns on a safer cycling culture.

“I don’t put blame on the driver, the parent or whoever was with the child,” Kolb said.

“The blame goes on the city’s infrastruc­ture.”

Police received the call around 6:20 p.m. Wednesday after a young boy riding west on the Martin Goodman Trail, on the south side of Lake Shore Blvd. W, fell on the roadway and was hit by a car.

Paramedics rushed the boy to the Hospital for Sick Children, where he died of his injuries.

Toronto police Const. Clint Stibbe said the 29-year-old driver of a 2013 Toyota Camry remained on the scene and the investigat­ion is ongoing.

“Alcohol is not a factor of the collision, but the speed the driver was travelling at is being investigat­ed,” Stibbe said.

According to Stibbe, there is no barrier between the path and the highway, but the path in that area is “not closer (to the roadway) than any other bike paths” in the city.

According to Kolb, the lack of a barrier is the problem.

“The city’s adopted a Vision Zero plan that has not done its job and not prevented life-changing incidents,” Kolb said. “We need a systematic overturn of how we design bike trails next to highways.”

Vision Zero is a movement aimed at completely eliminatin­g traffic deaths. So far in 2017, there have been 13 pedestrian or cyclist fatalities in Toronto. In 2016, there were 45 pedestrian fatalities.

“I’ve ridden on that trail. It’s for anyone riding, walking, rollerblad­ing, skateboard­ing, all adjacent to a highway. This incident was just a matter of time.”

However, according to one safety advocate, the city needs to be less reactive, and more proactive.

“Here in Toronto, we react to deaths,” said Kasia Briegmann-Samson, the co-founder of Friends & Families for Safe Streets. Briegmann-Samson’s husband was killed in a hit-and-run while he was cycling in 2012.

“After a death happens, we react. We maybe go in and change the infrastruc­ture, put in a safety camera or something like that. We need to look at it every time we make changes on a street, or that there is new roadwork being done — we need to put safety into the design. I remember when something like this happened in my family, the only thing that I see that would have prevented it from happening is better infrastruc­ture and safer design,” she said.

According to Kolb, the city should also consider putting up jersey barriers for a quick fix and, in the longer term, they should launch a study that looks at various high-speed motorways that can benefit from barriers.

“All these incidents are preventabl­e. The little boy did not have to die. A barrier could have prevented the accident from happening,” Briegmann-Samson said. With files from David Rider, Alanna Rizza and David Hains, Metro

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR ?? Police sit at the scene after a 5-year-old boy was struck and killed by a vehicle in Parkdale on Wednesday evening.
STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR Police sit at the scene after a 5-year-old boy was struck and killed by a vehicle in Parkdale on Wednesday evening.
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR ?? A cyclist rides past the spot where a 5-year-old was killed after falling off the bike path. The driver of the vehicle remained at the scene.
STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR A cyclist rides past the spot where a 5-year-old was killed after falling off the bike path. The driver of the vehicle remained at the scene.
 ?? GOOGLE MAPS ?? A guard rail between a Lakeshore Blvd. W. and the trail could have prevented the accident, a cycling advocate said.
GOOGLE MAPS A guard rail between a Lakeshore Blvd. W. and the trail could have prevented the accident, a cycling advocate said.

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