Toronto Star

City orders safety flags removed from poles

- JESSE MCLEAN STAFF REPORTER

The city has called for the removal of bright yellow flags intended to make pedestrian­s more visible as they cross busy city intersecti­ons.

The flags were installed by insurance company Aviva Canada as part of its new national road safety campaign “Take Back Our Roads.”

However, the company hadn’t received the OK from city officials before attaching branded buckets holding the flags to light poles at nine crosswalks.

“We support Aviva Canada’s efforts in enhancing road safety in Toronto, but permission was not sought from the City of Toronto before affixing flags to city-owned poles at crosswalk intersecti­ons,” city spokespers­on Brad Ross said in a statement. “Any organizati­on that wishes to share proposals with the city to improve the liveabilit­y of residents and visitors, must do so through due process.”

Aviva Canada will be removing the flags, said company spokespers­on Catherine Brown.

“There was a simple misunderst­anding of communicat­ion between the city and ourselves,” she said.

Aviva had selected nine intersecti­ons — all downtown or

midtown and near public schools — that data identified as having “the highest frequency or severity” of road safety incidents, Brown said.

The flags drew the ire of some residents, including urban planner Gil Meslin, who tweeted pictures of the flags hanging off a pole at Bathurst and Nina Sts .

Meslin tweeted that Aviva’s campaign makes it the responsibi­lity of pedestrian­s to carry a flag when they have the rightof-way to cross a street, “further entrenchin­g the subordinat­ion of pedestrian­s to the car.”

“The problem here is not pedestrian visibility. It is drivers who race through yellows and run red lights to make it down the road to the next red light 30 seconds sooner,” Meslin tweeted. “Why does this make me angry? Because (once again) it puts the onus of safety on the pedestrian, instead of on those who are driving motor vehicles aggressive­ly and irresponsi­bly.”

Brown said the flags were just one initiative in its national campaign to reduce the number of people killed or injured on Canadian roads, adding that the program is looking at all road users. Councillor Josh Matlow, whose ward includes the Bathurst St. intersecti­on where Aviva installed flags, said he’s aware of similar flag safety programs being put in place by parents in different neighbourh­oods.

What’s needed to make Toronto’s roads safer are “substantiv­e and meaningful actions like lowered speed limits, redesignin­g and reconfigur­ing our streets and providing meaningful enforcemen­t,” Matlow said.

“Not enough has been done on all of those fronts. That’s what we should be focusing on and advocating for.”

In a statement, Ross said “there is no evidence that points to improved compliance at crosswalks because of pedestrian flags.”

In Seattle, the department of transporta­tion stopped installing the pedestrian flags because of their limited effectiven­ess, Ross said.

“The problem here is not pedestrian visibility. It is drivers who race through yellows and run red lights.” GIL MESLIN URBAN PLANNER

 ?? GIL MESLIN TWITTER ?? Aviva Canada installed the flags as part of its “Take Back Our Roads” campaign.
GIL MESLIN TWITTER Aviva Canada installed the flags as part of its “Take Back Our Roads” campaign.

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