New York Daily News

Go slow to avoid horrors, transport boss sez

- BY CLAYTON GUSE, THOMAS TRACY AND ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA With Harry Parker and Ellen Moynihan

Pump the brakes!

That’s the message from city Transporta­tion Commission­er Ydanis Rodriguez on Tuesday, a day after a taxi driver mowed down a cyclist and critically injured a pair of tourists outside a Manhattan bagel shop.

The gruesome crash — which injured six people, including a woman visiting from Ohio whose leg was severed — happened after a yellow cabbie made a left turn onto Broadway from W. 29th St. at 12:55 p.m. on Monday and rammed straight into a cyclist in a bike lane. Police said the driver slowed down after running over the man on the bike — but then sped up, jumped the curb and pinned two women against a wall.

The horrific scene left street safety advocates demanding swift redesigns to Broadway that could better protect pedestrian­s and cyclists.

Rodriguez declined to point to any infrastruc­ture changes planned for the busy thoroughfa­re, and put the onus on drivers to be more careful behind the wheel.

“The message is: Drivers slow down when you drive and especially when you make a left turn,” said Rodriguez. “There’s an epidemic of reckless drivers in the whole nation. Those numbers are moving up higher, especially after COVID.”

Rodriguez said the cause of the crash remains under investigat­ion. Some bystanders who witnessed the horror said the cabbie claimed his brakes malfunctio­ned. The passenger who was in the back of the taxi told the Daily News he was confused about why his driver didn’t stop before he hit the cyclist. The cabbie declined to take questions at his home Tuesday.

Paperwork filed by police after the accident says the bicyclist blew a red light, collided with the cab, flew off his bike and was dragged by the taxi. He was severely injured and his arm was mangled, authoritie­s said.

Transporta­tion Alternativ­es, an advocacy organizati­on, urged city officials to eliminate car traffic along most of Broadway as a way to save lives and improve the quality of life on the street. The group pointed to a move in 2021 under former Mayor Bill de Blasio to include parts of Broadway in the city’s “open streets” program that restricts car traffic during some hours of the day.

“A car-free Broadway would have prevented this heinous crash,” said the organizati­on’s executive director, Danny Harris. “Whether it’s building truly protected bike lanes, cracking down on reckless drivers, or building car-free streets, New York City has the tools to keep our streets safe. But when elected leaders hold back these tools or lack the political will to get these done, the consequenc­es on our streets are horrific.”

Transporta­tion Department officials are in the process of redesignin­g areas of Broadway between Union Square and Columbus Circle by narrowing the space used by cars, installing pedestrian plazas and setting up loading zones to prevent trucks from double parking.

 ?? ?? Gruesome crash on Broadway Monday afternoon has spurred calls to make the area safer for pedestrian­s.
Gruesome crash on Broadway Monday afternoon has spurred calls to make the area safer for pedestrian­s.

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