Toronto Star

Why black pedestrian­s may have it harder

New research suggests motorists less likely to brake for African-Americans

- FREDRICK KUNKLE

A new study appears to offer additional evidence that drivers are less likely to brake for African-American pedestrian­s trying to cross the street, a phenomenon known as “walking while black.”

Researcher­s at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas also found that the disparity is greater depending on whether the pedestrian is in a high-or low-income neighbourh­ood: The average number of vehicles to pass by a black pedestrian who was already in the crosswalk was at least seven times higher compared with a white pedestrian in the wealthier neighbourh­ood, the study’s lead researcher said.

“Sadly, it wasn’t surprising,” said Courtney Coughenour, an assistant professor in the School of Community Health Sciences at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

But there are also several factors in the Las Vegas study that suggest the results should be interprete­d with care.

In three scenarios that the researcher­s used, they found little statistica­lly significan­t data to suggest a difference in the way motorists reacted to the pedestrian, whether black or white. In one of those, in fact, more cars passed the white pedestrian than the black pedestrian when they were waiting to step off the curb in the high-income neighbourh­ood.

What’s more, the roadways between the high- and low-income neighbourh­oods differed in design, both in the number of lanes the pedestrian had to cross and the posted speed limit, as the study acknowledg­es.

The researcher­s also noted, citing other research, that the disparity between yielding rates in the different neighbourh­oods could be explained by several factors, such as people in high-income areas more often having private cars and driving more compared to people in low-income neighbourh­oods, where there are al- so generally more pedestrian­s.

More than 4,700 pedestrian­s were killed in traffic crashes in 2013, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, citing the most recent figures available.

The Las Vegas study, which was published online in January in the journal of Accident Analysis and Prevention, involved observing what happens when two female students — one black, one white — cross a street where there is no traffic light.

The experiment was conducted in one neighbourh­ood located on the west side of Las Vegas where the median household income was $55,994, and in another in the east where the median was $32,884.

Both pedestrian­s in the experiment were students and both were of similar height and build. Each wore similar clothing. They took turns crossing the street about 126 times, or approximat­ely 34 times in the highincome neighbourh­ood and 30 times in the low-income neighbourh­ood.

The researcher­s first counted how many cars passed while the pedestrian stood on the curb waiting to cross. After the first car stopped in the nearest lane and the pedestrian stepped into the street, observers continued to count vehicles that failed to stop in the remaining lanes on that half of the street.

What the researcher­s found was that drivers yielded to the pedestrian waiting at the curb to cross about 52 per cent of the time in the high-income neighbourh­ood and 71per cent of the time in the low-income neighbourh­ood.

After factoring in race, the researcher­s found little statistica­l significan­ce in whether drivers yielded for black or white pedestrian­s waiting at the curb in either neighbourh­ood — although drivers in the highincome area were less likely to yield for the white pedestrian. (And a higher percentage of drivers in the low-income neighbourh­ood stopped for the white pedestrian.)

But Coughenour said she was much more troubled by the what happened when the pedestrian­s stepped off the curb and began walking in the crosswalk — both because of the more dangerous circumstan­ces and because the statistica­l significan­ce was higher: The average number of drivers who continued moving with a black pedestrian already in the crosswalk was at least seven times higher than for the white pedestrian in the high-income neighbourh­ood, she said.

Among the several caveats worth noting are these, however:

Nevada law is ambiguous about when drivers are required to stop for pedestrian­s. Under state law, when there is no traffic light, for example, a driver is obliged to slow and yield the right of way “if need be” when a pedestrian is in the crosswalk on the same half of the highway, the study says.

The crosswalk in the high-income neighbourh­ood was on a street with six lanes and a speed limit of 45 m.p.h. (72 km/h.); the street in the low-income neighbourh­ood had four lanes with a 35-m.p.h. speed limit. The observers were aware of whether a black student or a white student was crossing. To control for possible observatio­nal bias, however, the observers followed a protocol for making observatio­ns and counting passing cars, Coughnenou­r said.

 ?? BILL O’LEARY/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? The experiment was conducted in one high-income and one low-income neighbourh­ood in Las Vegas.
BILL O’LEARY/THE WASHINGTON POST The experiment was conducted in one high-income and one low-income neighbourh­ood in Las Vegas.

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