Toronto Star

Make road safety an election issue, coalition urges

Advocates draft 15 recommenda­tions they want mayoral, council candidates to adopt

- BEN SPURR TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

With public concern over traffic deaths in Toronto on the rise, a coalition of advocates is hoping to make road safety a major issue in this fall’s municipal election.

In a report scheduled to be released today at city hall, the advocates set out 15 recommenda­tions they say mayoral and council candidates should adopt to protect pedestrian­s and cyclists.

The “priority actions” range from proposals to accelerate policies council has already approved to more controvers­ial ideas like banning right turns on red lights and lowering the default speed limit for arterial and collector roads from 50 km/h to 40 km/h.

The coalition plans to send questionna­ires to candidates asking which of the 15 proposals they support, and then publish the results before the Oct. 22 vote.

“I think that people are just really fed up. Fed up with the amount of people that are dying in the street, to be frank,” said Amanda O’Rourke, executive director of 8 80 Cities, one of the groups behind the report.

Citing a wave of recent media coverage on the issue, she said Torontonia­ns are increasing­ly concerned about road safety and want their elected officials to take action.

“All of these deaths are preventabl­e and unacceptab­le. We know the solutions, we know how to make our streets safer. It’s not rocket science … We just need decision-makers to do it,” she said.

The city introduced new road safety plan in June 2016, but O’Rourke asserted it has yet to make meaningful progress toward its goal of eliminatin­g traffic deaths.

According to police statistics, nearly 100 pedestrian­s or cyclists have died since Mayor John Tory unveiled the plan, which the city has dubbed “Vision Zero” after the internatio­nal movement to end traffic fatalities.

Numbers compiled by the Star show18 pedestrian­s and four cyclists have died so far this year.

The Star’s numbers are higher than police statistics in part because the force doesn’t count collisions on provincial highways within Toronto, or cyclist deaths that don’t involve a motorist.

In addition to 8 80 Cities, Walk Toronto, Friends and Families for Safe Streets, Cycle Toronto, and the Toronto Centre for Active Transporta­tion contribute­d to the report, which is titled #Build- TheVisionT­O.

As justificat­ion for banning right turns on red lights, the report cites city statistics that show 13 per cent of all pedestrian injuries or deaths are a result of rightturni­ng vehicles at intersecti­ons. New York and Montreal already have rules prohibitin­g drivers from making right turns on a red.

O’Rourke said the report’s most important recommenda­tion is likely the call to lower default speed limits to 40 km/h on arterial and collector roads, and 30 km/h on residentia­l streets.

Research in a 2012 Toronto Public Health report determined a pedestrian struck by a car travelling 50 km/h has an 85 per cent chance of death, but the risk drops to less than 5 per cent if the vehicle is travelling slower than 30 km/h.

The idea of lower speed limits has gained traction at city hall before.

In 2015, councillor­s representi­ng the 12 wards in East York and the old city of Toronto voted for a blanket speed limit reduction to 30 km/h on local streets, but their colleagues in other parts of the city haven’t followed suit.

Other recommenda­tions in the report include:

Streamlini­ng the “time-consuming and confusing” process to install traffic calming measures on residentia­l streets.

Building sidewalks on all streets as part of routine reconstruc­tion work.

“Safe, connected” bike routes in all 44 wards.

Increasing the use of automated traffic control technology like red light cameras.

Installing pedestrian crossings at all transit stops.

Boosting per capita funding for Vision Zero roughly sixfold to match New York City’s levels.

Funding a monthly Open Streets festival for five months of the year.

Following the deaths of a pedestrian and a cyclist last week, Tory announced he would move a motion at his executive committee Tuesday to request an additional $13 million for the road safety plan.

That would bring council’s spending on the program to about $100 million over five years.

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR ?? The report urges Toronto to ban right turns on red lights, citing statistics that show 13 per cent of all pedestrian injuries or deaths are a result of right-turning vehicles at intersecti­ons.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR The report urges Toronto to ban right turns on red lights, citing statistics that show 13 per cent of all pedestrian injuries or deaths are a result of right-turning vehicles at intersecti­ons.
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