Los Angeles Times

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Re “More dying on L.A. streets,” April 29

The fact that traffic deaths have increased sharply in Los Angeles since the beginning of a program to eliminate them highlights how hard it is to make road safety improvemen­ts when people fight against them.

Enhancemen­ts to vehicles, signage and key intersecti­ons are critical, but they are not enough. We need to improve the entire system, and that starts with changing attitudes. People should expect safety on the road the same way we now expect safety in our skies.

In the coming year, a new federal transporta­tion bill will authorize the next generation of safety programs. We must fund improvemen­ts that will make roads safer, not only for bicyclists but for all roadway users.

Los Angeles’ Vision Zero program is on the right track and actively working to change our thinking around how we use and design our roads. All roadway users deserve to survive their commute. Allow L.A. leaders to implement the changes that have led to fewer deaths in other cities. Alex Epstein Sherman Oaks The writer is transporta­tion safety director for the National Safety Council.

There is no hope for Vision Zero since many drivers do not care if they kill somebody. At least that’s what their actions say.

I still see some drivers holding cellphones. Each week I witness between two and three motorists run red lights and even more roll through stop signs. The majority of drivers violate speed limits.

Additional­ly, some are distracted by streaming videos on cellphones and tablets. Or, drivers cannot see out of their windshield due to the illegally affixed Uber and Lyft decals. Jim Winterroth

Torrance

The goals of Vision Zero are commendabl­e, but better design alone does not prevent dangerous actions by drivers, motorcycli­sts, bicyclists, scooter riders or pedestrian­s.

Often design-engineered delays are the cause of the dangerous actions, like jaywalking, speeding, driving in the bike lanes or ignoring red lights, that lead to injuries and deaths.

Only through enforcemen­t can the goals of Vision Zero be reached. Until the supporters of Vision Zero put forth a plan that makes enforcemen­t key, their goals will never be met and their fancy road designs will be costly failures. Keith Price

Los Angeles

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? COUNCILMAN Mike Bonin faced a recall effort for backing plans to reduce lanes on busy streets.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times COUNCILMAN Mike Bonin faced a recall effort for backing plans to reduce lanes on busy streets.

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