Los Angeles Times

Deadly road renews focus on pedestrian­s

Black communitie­s have been hit hard amid a national surge in traffic fatalities.

- By Claudia Lauer Lauer writes for the Associated Press.

PHILADELPH­IA — Just one more step and the stroller would have been on the curb.

The thought haunts Latanya Byrd years after a driver racing down Roosevelt Boulevard in Philadelph­ia struck and killed her niece, Samara Banks, 27, and three of Banks’ young sons as they crossed the 12lane road. Today, many of the conditions that led to the 2013 crash still exist.

After the crash, Byrd became an advocate for safer streets, fighting to get automated speed cameras placed along the boulevard where 10% to 13% of Philadelph­ia’s traffic fatalities occurred each year prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, city officials said.

Now, amid a national surge in traffic fatalities that federal officials have called a crisis, and studies showing that Black communitie­s have been more affected during the pandemic, plans to redesign the city’s “corridor of death” — as some residents and safety advocates call Roosevelt — could be gaining traction.

Roosevelt Boulevard is an almost 14-mile maze of chaotic traffic patterns that passes through some of the city’s most diverse neighborho­ods and census tracts with the highest poverty rates. Driving can be dangerous with cars traversing between inner and outer lanes, but biking or walking on the boulevard can be even worse, with some pedestrian crossings longer than a football field and taking four light cycles to cross.

“You would not design a street or a road like that today,” said Christophe­r Puchalsky, policy director for Philadelph­ia’s Office of Transporta­tion, Infrastruc­ture and Sustainabi­lity. “It feels like an expressway, but it’s in the middle and between neighborho­ods.”

Roosevelt Boulevard was designed in the early 1900s, but as the northeast neighborho­ods grew and it was connected to a major highway in the 1950s, lanes were repeatedly added to handle the growing number of cars.

Many of the city’s ideas for fixing Roosevelt have been championed under new federal strategies.

Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg has pushed a “safe system” approach, encouragin­g cities and states to take into account more than driver behavior when designing roads.

The Biden administra­tion also created funding for safety improvemen­ts, including the bipartisan infrastruc­ture law and a $5-billion federal aid package to cities over the next five years. Federal officials have pledged to prioritize equity when making funding decisions in the wake of a disproport­ionate 23% jump in Black traffic fatalities in 2020.

“We’ll certainly remind the federal government when we are applying for grants of the equity priorities that the leadership has set out,” Puchalsky said.

Kelley Yemen, director of Philadelph­ia’s Complete Streets program, said the city is hoping for federal money to begin a long-term redesign of Roosevelt outlined in a study released in 2019. The two options either would make the center lanes a restricted expressway or would cut speeds and convert car lanes to bicycle and transit lanes. Both options carry billion-dollar price tags.

The study includes a series of smaller projects to improve safety on high-fatality stretches on the road by 2025 — some have already begun — but residents are skeptical.

Eva Gbaa has been impatient to see changes. Her 17year-old nephew John “JJ” Gbaa Jr. was killed in a November 2018 hit-and-run as he tried to cross Roosevelt. He was alone at the time, and much about the crash remains unknown.

A passerby found JJ and called the police, but he died at a hospital. No arrest has been made, and the family agonizes over how someone could leave the big-hearted boy to die.

“JJ would ask me for money ... but I didn’t know until his friends told me after he passed that he would buy them food if they didn’t have any,” said John Gbaa Sr., JJ’s father. “He loved people. He’d give out his last dollar to his friends.”

JJ and his father had moved to Philadelph­ia in 2017 to be closer to family, and the teen was making strides in school. He loved being near his cousins and would hang on his aunt as she cooked traditiona­l African rice dishes.

“He would say, ‘Auntie, when I graduate, I will go to college, and then I will take care of you.’ But he never had the chance,” Eva Gbaa said, tamping down tears. “I hope they do something to make sure no family goes through this, so it doesn’t happen again.”

The family has started a school in JJ’s honor in their home country of Liberia, the John G. Gbaa Jr. Academy for kindergart­en through eighth grade, in hopes of giving his dream of education to others. They pay the teachers and send food, clothing and books to students with the help of small donations.

Around Philadelph­ia, aggressive driving during the pandemic drove fatalities to 156 in 2020, a sharp increase from 90 in 2019. Preliminar­y data from the Philadelph­ia Police Department showed a decrease in 2021 to 133 fatalities, still above pre-pandemic levels.

The data don’t include the race or ethnicity of the people killed, but an Associated Press analysis found that fatalities in neighborho­ods where more than 70% of residents are people of color increased from about 50% in 2019 to more than 67% in 2021. Accidents in the poorest neighborho­ods also increased slightly.

Sonia Szczesna, director of active transporta­tion for the Tristate Transporta­tion Campaign, a nonprofit advocacy organizati­on, said Black and brown communitie­s and low-income communitie­s are often the most affected by high-fatality roads.

“They divide these communitie­s, and often residents have to travel these roadways by bike or by foot, without access to high-quality public transporta­tion. So there is an inequity in this infrastruc­ture,” she said.

Data for the first four months of 2022 showed that more pedestrian­s died on Philadelph­ia roads than people in cars. Hit-and-runs were higher in the first four months of this year than in the same period in the previous two years, worrying police and other city officials.

But fatalities on Roosevelt stayed steady during the pandemic, largely because of the pilot speed cameras, Yemen believes.

Byrd, who co-founded the nonprofit advocacy group Families for Safe Streets, lobbied hard for the cameras, writing hundreds of personal letters to legislator­s telling them about her niece and her kids.

The cameras went live at eight intersecti­ons in June 2020, but only after state legislatio­n, a city ordinance and negotiatio­ns with the Philadelph­ia Parking Authority, which manages the program.

More than 224,000 warning tickets for driving more than 11 mph over the speed limit were issued in the first 30 days of a 60-day warning period, but by February 2021, the number had dropped to fewer than 17,000, according to data from the parking authority.

Overall, speeding is down more than 91% on the road, city and parking authority officials said.

Despite the impact, the camera program will come to an end in 2023 unless it is extended by the Legislatur­e.

The Federal Highway Administra­tion gave states the green light this year to tap into federal funding to install speed cameras, saying the devices can reduce the number of injury crashes by 50%.

Banks, Byrd’s niece, was 21 and pregnant with her first child in 2007 when she found a four-bedroom house a few blocks south of Roosevelt Boulevard.

Her family had reservatio­ns, because she’d have to cross the boulevard any time she wanted to visit. But Banks’ mother had just died, and she needed the larger home so she could take in her four younger siblings and raise her own family.

Byrd said Banks was the kind of mom and aunt who always had something planned.

“At all of the family gettogethe­rs, she would always get all the kids in a circle and have them playing games and doing dances, or she’d make up these little skits for them to do. She always had a plan, and the kids always came first,” Byrd said.

After spending a hot July day visiting and swimming and having water balloon fights with the kids, Banks decided to walk home rather than calling a cab to take her the mile across Roosevelt, as she usually did.

She was pushing her 7month-old, Saa’mir Williams, and 23-month-old, Saa’sean Williams, in a double stroller. Her 4-year-old, Saa’deem Griffin, was holding onto the stroller and walking beside her.

Witnesses told police that two cars had been racing, weaving between other cars and speeding down the boulevard. One of the drivers lost control and slammed into the family, throwing Banks more than 200 feet and crumpling the stroller. She and the three children died.

Banks’ younger sister and 5-year-old son, Saa’yon Griffin, were walking ahead and survived the crash.

Officials have since installed a traffic signal and pedestrian crossing at the intersecti­on, renamed Banks Way. The two men accused of racing were convicted or pleaded guilty to charges in the deaths. One of the men was a teenager when his own mother had died crossing Roosevelt Boulevard.

“It was hard. I would tell Saa’yon he needed to be strong, and I remember there was this once he just stomped his foot and said no,” Byrd said. “He told me he was tired of being strong, and he just wanted his mom and his brothers back. We all do.”

 ?? Julio Cortez Associated Press ?? ROOSEVELT Boulevard in Philadelph­ia is an almost 14-mile maze of chaotic traffic patterns that passes through diverse neighborho­ods.
Julio Cortez Associated Press ROOSEVELT Boulevard in Philadelph­ia is an almost 14-mile maze of chaotic traffic patterns that passes through diverse neighborho­ods.

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