Category: Comment Letter

Comment Letter on Recommendations around the Role of Police Enforcement in Vision Zero and Removal of Captain Danilecki from the Vision Zero Task Force

Comment Letter on Recommendations around the Role of Police Enforcement in Vision Zero and Removal of Captain Danilecki from the Vision Zero Task Force

June 9, 2020

Mayor Martin J. Walsh

1 City Hall Square, Suite 500

Boston, MA

Dear Mayor Walsh,

As members of the Boston Vision Zero Task Force, we urge you to reform the way the Boston Police Department engages with the City’s Vision Zero program and to remove Captain Danilecki from the Vision Zero Task Force. 

In your comments to the press on Thursday, June 4, you committed to making Boston a leader when it comes to battling racism, saying: “We are listening — I am listening — to the voices and the messages of our black neighbors who are harmed by systemic racism every single day. As elected officials, it’s time to listen and learn and keep those voices at the center of the conversation.” As many have noted already, listening isn’t enough. Our Black and brown communities need concrete actions from our elected officials. Central to these conversations is the role of our transportation system in perpetuating racism. 

Boston has a legacy of destroying vibrant Black communities to make space for highways, creating barriers between certain neighborhoods and critical resources. Many streets in Black and brown communities act as conduits for cars to pass through quickly, without regard for the effect this has on people who live there. BIPOC communities often don’t have sufficient walking or biking infrastructure and lack access to high quality public transit, which in turn leads to well-documented public health disparities. Layered on top of these injustices is the violent reality of policing on our streets. 

We have long been concerned by the attitude and role that the various Boston Police Department representatives demonstrate at monthly Vision Zero Task Force meetings. When reporting on the details of fatal car crashes, officers have consistently engaged in victim-blaming, either suggesting or outright attributing a person’s death to their own fault. This attitude runs counter to the very concept of street safety and Vision Zero that the Boston Police Department is supposed to uphold. On top of this, it is clear that not all officers at Task Force meetings are trained or even aware of the Vision Zero program. 

Any conversation about moving away from enforcement as a community must include moving away from enforcement in transportation as well — and we should start with fundamentally rethinking the role of police and enforcement in Vision Zero. 

  • Remove police enforcement as a tenet of Vision Zero effective immediately. Law enforcement nationwide often make race-based stops and searches which further inflict harm, violence, and trauma in communities of color.

  • Instead of relying on police, use automated enforcement to address speeding, which is the cause of most fatal crashes. We are calling on you to champion state legislation that would allow automated enforcement explicitly built on equity principles (see attached FAQ for more details). 

  • Work with the City Council to pass an ordinance banning facial recognition technology in Boston communities. This would also establish necessary civil liberty protections for the use of automated enforcement in the future.

  • Ensure adequate long term funds for crash data collection and analysis. It is shameful that it took two years of advocacy from our organizations and several City Councilors to secure funding for a single civilian research and crash data analyst position within BPD after grant funding for the position ran out. 

  • Reduce the BPD budget and reallocate resources for social programs designed to strengthen communities. Follow the calls from organizations such as the Muslim Justice League, Families for Justice as Healing, Youth Justice and Power Union, and others.

  • Create a diversion program for any nonviolent traffic- and transportation-related infractions. For example, the City can provide front and rear lights to cyclists who may be traveling without them after dark or offer educational opportunities in lieu of fines for other similar minor and non-violent offenses. 


And lastly, in addition to changing the relationship between streets, enforcement, and Vision Zero, we are calling on you to condemn the actions of Captain Danilecki, who currently serves as the BPD designee on the City’s Vision Zero Task Force. 

Captain Danilecki’s violent actions against protestors exercising their right to gather peacefully at a white supremacist rally in Boston on August 31, 2019 are well-documented. More recently, Captain Danilecki was filmed acting in an aggressive, escalatory, and unacceptable manner towards peaceful protestors on May 31, 2020. 

We understand there has been at least one formal complaint filed with the BPD internal affairs division based on a video of Captain Danilecki’s behavior from that recent demonstration, and we hope that he is held accountable through that process. In the meantime, we are calling for the immediate removal of Captain Danilecki from the Vision Zero Task Force. It is unacceptable for an officer who engages in brutal tactics against civilians to be the liaison between BPD and those of us who are fighting to make our streets safer. 

We believe Boston is capable of achieving zero traffic fatalities and serious injuries on our streets. However, we will not have achieved our goal of safe streets if officer-initiated enforcement remains a tenet of Boston’s Vision Zero Action Plan, and furthermore, if Boston police officers are not held accountable for engaging in racist and aggressive tactics. We hope you agree and will take immediate action. 

Sincerely,

Becca Wolfson, Boston Cyclists Union

Stacy Thompson, LivableStreets Alliance 

Stacey Beuttell, WalkBoston

Cc:
Chief of Streets Chris Osgood,
Transportation Commissioner Greg Rooney,
Chief of Police William Gross,
Boston City Council

Comment letter on the Northern Avenue Bridge Replacement Project

Comment letter on the Northern Avenue Bridge Replacement Project

June 9, 2020

Kathleen A. Theoharides, Secretary of Environmental Affairs
100 Cambridge Street, Suite 900
Boston, MA 02114
Attn:  Alex Strysky, MEPA Unit

Chris Osgood, Chief of Streets
Public Works Department
Boston City Hall
Boston, MA 02201
Attn: Para Jayasinghe, City Engineer

Re:       MEPA Project 16194 – Northern Avenue Bridge Replacement Project

Dear Secretary Theoharides and Chief Osgood:

We are writing to provide comments on the ENF for the Northern Avenue Bridge (NAB) Replacement Project. This is a project with a 30-year history which has included many internal City deliberations as well as many public processes, both within and outside those managed by the City. While we are pleased that the City is now seeking to bring the project planning to closure, we strongly disagree with the City’s choice of a bridge design that includes regular vehicle use that impinges on the use and safety of the bridge by people walking and biking, and does not provide the traffic benefit that the City says is the reason for including buses on the bridge.

While the design includes substantial space for use by pedestrians, much of that space would not be built until the unfunded and unscheduled Phases 2 and 3 of the project are built. Bicycles are relegated to shared lanes with buses. The lack of clarity about how pedestrians, bikes and buses will circulate raise many safety and operational concerns.

The scale and cost of the bridge has grown enormously simply to accommodate 110 shuttle buses/day. In addition to the lack of transportation efficacy and the design problems discussed below, we believe that the project is simply too big and too expensive. A smaller bridge that serves people walking and biking, and provides access for emergency vehicles, could provide the benefits and urban enhancements that both the public and the City desire.

While the loss of the Old Northern Avenue Bridge and the design of a new Northern Avenue Bridge raise many historic and contextual design issues, we are confident that the comments of our fellow advocates with specific historical and urban design expertise will speak to those issues, and we leave that task to those able commenters.

Our comments are organized as follows:

  1. Decision regarding the modes to be served by the bridge
  2. Funding and budget for the project
  3. Walking and biking designs as described in the ENF
  4. Public process

Decision regarding the modes to be served by the bridge

The City has determined that the bridge will carry pedestrians, bicycles, emergency vehicles and “transit”, which has never been clearly defined by the city, but thus far seems to include private buses and shuttles utilized by businesses located in the Seaport District. . We believe that the decision to serve these private vehicles  is the wrong choice, and that this wrong choice has in turn led to a wide variety of problems with the selected alternative.

  • Will the inclusion of a bus lane on the bridge provide transportation benefits to the public?

There has been widespread and consistent public support for pedestrian, bicycle and emergency vehicle access. It is worth noting that of the online public comments regarding the project, 68% of the respondents preferred a bike/ped/emergency bridge option and only 1 person called for allowing general traffic on the bridge. The remaining 31% of comments didn’t reference a mobility preference.

  • Will the inclusion of a bus lane reduce congestion?

As the City has stated in the ENF (page 6) ”… the intent of the project is (to) re-open the bridge for public enjoyment, provide additional means of pedestrian access across Fort Point Channel, provide a dedicated bus lane to reduce traffic congestion in Downtown Boston, and provide an alternate route for emergency vehicles if the need arises.”  This statement of purpose seems to be the City’s justification for selecting a large and very expensive bridge rather than a smaller and less expensive alternative, that serves only  pedestrians, bicycles and emergency vehicles. However, the transportation analysis provided by the City’s consultants – AECOM Memo: Northern Avenue Bridge Reconstruction – Mobility Analysis (November 13, 2018) makes the following conclusion: (P 16)   “The overall level of service for all study area intersections remains consistent between the No Build and all concepts analyzed in 2035 PM peak hour as previously shown on Table 5. The intersections of Seaport Boulevard and Atlantic Avenue and Seaport Boulevard and Purchase Street continue to operate at LOS “F”, and would remain congested under all concepts analyzed.”

Thus, the City’s own transportation analysis concluded that putting buses on the bridge does not reduce congestion. 

Having been closed to vehicular traffic since 1997, the downtown Boston side of the NAB ends at a one-way roadway lacking direct access to the entrance of I-93, completed as part of the central artery in Big Dig which opened up many years later. Thus, the utility for vehicular traffic traveling from the Seaport into downtown will be extremely limited and cause further disruption in travel demand due to congestion and redundancy (forced increase in VMT from driving around the block to get to the entrance). Therefore, having motorized vehicle traffic travel from and utilize the NAB will not fit into the existing fabric of the street network.

When asked about this mismatch between the stated purpose for the project and the lack of efficacy shown by the data during the MEPA “Site Visit” call, City Engineer Para Jaysinghe suggested that the City was planning for “unknown volumes” for the next 75 years. The standard practice for transportation studies is to use the time frames actually evaluated (2035).

  • Is the inclusion of a bus lane on the bridge a reasonable financial decision?

The ENF states that the bridge would carry 110 buses/day (at a generous occupancy factor of 25 people/bus this equals 2,750 people/day). The very wide bridge now proposed at a cost of $100 million (for Phase 1, Phases 2 and 3 have not yet been costed out) is at least twice as costly as a bridge that could very comfortably accommodate walkers, cyclists and emergency vehicles. As stated in City presentation from the Mobility and Traffic Evaluation Workshop: “Most people on NAB will be walking; 70 to 90% of trips are by foot across all concepts.

  • Will any public transit make use of the bus lane?

There has been no indication that any MBTA public buses will use the bridge, and the MBTA’s study of improvements to its bus networks and routes does not include any use of a Northern Avenue bus lane. Thus, as we understand it today, a bus lane on the NAB would only serve private shuttle buses serving employees in the Seaport District. Over the years many advocates for better bus service have urged the MBTA and the City to look at the feasibility of an exclusive Congress Street bus lane from South Boston to North Station – a route that could provide significantly more direct and efficient service for both MBTA and private shuttles. We do not believe that this bridge should be built to accommodate buses unless the MBTA and the City can demonstrate that there is a clear benefit to public transit, and the MBTA identifies which specific routes will run over the bridge when it has been completed.

We urge the City to select a design to accommodate walking, biking and emergency vehicles and to delete accommodation of other vehicles.

Funding and budget for the project

  • How much will the bridge cost?

The cost information provided at the June 3, 2019 community meeting showed a range in cost from a “basic” 12-foot wide bridge for $40 million to a “contextual” 56-foot wide bridge for $110 million. The contextual bridge now being proposed is more than 100-feet wide (at the center of the span) and thus could be guesstimated to cost well in excess of $150 million for Phase 1. The public needs to be informed about the actual estimated cost of Phases 1, 2 and 3 of the entire bridge.

  • How will the bridge be funded?

Appendix C of the Massachusetts Historical Commission PNF (included as Attachment 5 to the ENF) provides a funding summary that shows $46m in City funding; $10m in Federal funding; and $2m in private funding – for a total of $58m in allocated funding. This would seem to indicate a gap in sufficient funding for the bridge in the range of 50-$100m for Phase 1 of the project. The City needs to disclose its funding plan for all phases of the project to prove the feasibility of the design that has been shared with the public.

  • Is this the moment in time to spend a lot of money on this project?

The combined Federal and private funds for the bridge comprise less than 10% of the overall cost of the bridge as it is currently designed. This means that the City will need to contribute significant funds to complete even the first phase of the bridge at a point of great economic uncertainty locally and globally. There is significant risk that the City will be unable to finance the completion of the bridge through Phase 3. Additionally, the City already has enough dedicated funds, $46m, to build a basic 12 ft bridge as described at the June 2019 NAB Task Force meeting (see above).

Walking and biking designs as described in the ENF

As laid out above, we strongly disagree with the City’s choice of a design alternative that includes vehicle use (other than emergency vehicles) on the bridge. However, we feel compelled to also comment on the specific design of the bridge as shown in the ENF because it has so many problematic design features for people walking and biking. While we understand that the designs are not expected to be complete at this point in the project, the lack of attention to simple operational and safety questions raises doubts about the project design. If the City continues to pursue this preferred alternative we request that each of the design issues raised below be answered in the response to comments on this ENF. In addition, we recommend designing any bikeway and pedestrian facility using the NACTO, Boston Complete Streets, MassDOT, and FHWA design standards to have a low level of traffic stress (LTS by Furth) and high level of local access (by MAPC) rating.

  1. The pedestrian//bike/bus interaction at the Seaport side of the bridge seems to show the bus lane taking up the entire entrance area onto the bridge with a pedestrian ramp entering directly into the bus lane. All of the pedestrian access onto and off the bridge is in the area shown as a bus lane. How will this area be designed to ensure the safety of people walking and biking? The plan shows shuttle buses directly adjacent to people walking/biking; paint is not an appropriate or safe separation or protection for pedestrians and cyclists on a new bridge.
  2. On the downtown side of the bridge the buses would cross the heavily traveled Atlantic Avenue sidewalk into the congested Atlantic Avenue vehicular traffic without a traffic signal to provide them with a break in traffic. How will bus movement be managed to ensure that the buses do not inch up to the travel lane and block the sidewalk while waiting to turn right onto Atlantic Avenue?
  3. How will pedestrian connections between the new bridge and the Harborwalk be designed on both sides of the Channel and how will the connection on the Seaport side of the bridge impact the operations and attractiveness of the Barking Crab restaurant and the Envoy Hotel? The new bridge is itself planned to be a new part of the Harborwalk, but these connections which have complicated vertical and alignment design challenges have not been described in the ENF. Specifically, how does the bridge gain enough height to pass over the water 8′ higher than it is now? Is there a long ramp from Northern Avenue near the courthouse? Is that ramp steep enough to affect walkers trying to use it?  Does the existing Harborwalk at the Courthouse connect under the new bridge to the part of the Harborwalk that parallels the Fort Point Channel? Will the new bridge allow this connection?
  4. On the downtown side of the bridge, it appears that service access to the Coast Guard Building and the Hook Lobster site are to be provided through the pedestrian, bike and bus zones of the bridge. How would this work? Would service vehicles (or any other vehicles) be allowed to turn right from Atlantic Ave into the bus lane and pedestrian zone?
  5. Bus/Bike Lane – The functionality of bus/bike lanes prioritizes bus travel, but do provide some safety benefits for bikes in places where buses were already operating in the roadway space and the only other option bikes have is to ride in dangerous, high speed vehicular traffic. For example, after the bus/bike project was implemented on Washington St, bikes now have the option of riding in a less congested space, which they share with buses, hence reducing the potential for conflicts and ultimately crashes. While the bus/bike lane provides some protection, we feel that it is not enough for the following reasons: 

    – Since the Northern Ave Bridge has not allowed vehicles for many years and it is being designed from scratch, adding an additional layer of bus traffic (transit) without proper space for segregation for bikes and pedestrians only increases the exposure to conflict and risk.

    – In a 12’ bus/bike lane, buses will travel at a much greater speed than cyclists and will want to overtake cyclists, which becomes stressful and can cause potential conflicts. The cyclist is forced to rely on the decision-making of bus drivers behind them. The cyclist is also usually traveling slower, causing the bus driver to reduce their speed and accept the delay from being “stuck” behind the cyclist. This conflict may cause aggressive behavior, which can promote overtaking movements due to impatience from the delay.

    – The ENF states there the number of vehicle trips per day will be 110 bus trips (potential for occasional emergency vehicles). Within a 12-hour period, for example from 8 AM – 8 PM, frequency will be approximately 10 buses per hour, or 1 bus every 6 minutes. This pushes the limit of the NACTO recommendations for a safe shared bus/bike facility. If there is more frequent vehicle transportation in the future, the bus lane should definitely not be designed to be shared with cyclists. Overtaking a cyclist leaves too much room for human error, especially in the confined space of 12’ wide lane.

    – Finally, other bus/bike lanes in Boston are shared with MBTA buses whose drivers get specific and detailed training on sharing a lane with bikes. We understand that the Northern Avenue bridge bus lane would be for private shuttles and have no reason to believe that these drivers know how to safely share and pass cyclists.

  6. Air quality – As we now understand in a more visceral way than before COVID19, air quality matters to health. We share concerns that were expressed at the last public meeting about air pollution from diesel fumes, given the proximity of pedestrians and cyclists to the bus travel lane.Future Design Considerations – In the current 25% design, there are two spans (ribbons) each 24’ wide. One side is a pedestrian only zone and the other includes a bus/bike lane (12’), an unprotected bike lane (6’), and a pedestrian walkway (6’). The plan is designed to keep bikes separate from the pedestrian side, by signing that they ride in or adjacent to bus/shuttle traffic. However, we do not believe this design is realistic given that we can expect tourists and people who are new to the bridge to ride in whatever space is furthest from vehicles, and who also will want to visit the ocean side of the bridge. We suggest separating all bike facilities completely from vehicular facilities, and providing a bike lane with clear ocean views. If the purpose of this bike lane is to be a recreational bike path, which we support, then we suggest designing bike lanes for people to ride 2 abreast which demands that the lanes be 7.5-8 feet wide.
  7. Future Design Considerations – In the current 25% design, there are two spans (ribbons) each 24’ wide. One side is a pedestrian only zone and the other includes a bus/bike lane (12’), an unprotected bike lane (6’), and a pedestrian walkway (6’). The plan is designed to keep bikes separate from the pedestrian side, by signing that they ride in or adjacent to bus/shuttle traffic. However, we do not believe this design is realistic given that we can expect tourists and people who are new to the bridge to ride in whatever space is furthest from vehicles, and who also will want to visit the ocean side of the bridge. We suggest separating all bike facilities completely from vehicular facilities, and providing a bike lane with clear ocean views. If the purpose of this bike lane is to be a recreational bike path, which we support, then we suggest designing bike lanes for people to ride 2 abreast which demands that the lanes be 7.5-8 feet wide.

Public process

Over the past two years, we have raised concerns about the public process on numerous occasions — and LivableStreets raised these issues formally and repeatedly as an official NAB task force member.

The City of Boston established a NAB task force as a means of utilizing the abundant knowledge the City of Boston has to offer, to direct the process for turning the Northern Avenue Bridge into an iconic destination that improves mobility, strengthens resiliency, and honors history. Unfortunately, this process was mismanaged and flawed from the onset.

Though the Task Force process had been framed as transparent and open to the public, there was limited discussion of public comment and often blatant disregard for public consensus.  At each task force meeting, while there was a short amount of time allotted to public comment, there appeared to be no method for incorporating those comments into the process for decision making. Additionally, while there was a tool for providing online comment, there was no discussion about how to incorporate those comments into the process.

Similarly, public meetings for the project were problematic. Ahead of the June 2019 public meeting, Stacy Thompson of LivableStreets, along with several other task force members expressed strong concerns and reservations about the approach the City was taking, which appeared to be purposefully obstructive of public feedback. Stacy also followed up with Chief Osgood, the consulting team and the chairs of the committee outlining her direct concerns in writing. None of the feedback was acknowledged or incorporated into the meeting.

In advance of the May 6, 2020 meeting for this project, we again directly expressed our concerns to the project team and Chief Osgood, that it was inappropriate to even hold public meetings of this nature while the State’s stay-at-home advisory related to COVID 19 was in place. BTD’s decision to hold the meeting was in direct contradiction to the policies of other city of Boston departments such as the BPDA which  stated that, “to ensure that the public process is equitable to all”, it would not be holding virtual public meetings for Article 80 projects or planning studies at this time. This inconsistency between agencies is concerning and needs to be addressed.

We would be pleased to speak with the MEPA Office or the City of Boston about our comments.

Best regards,

Stacey Beuttell, WalkBoston

Stacy Thompson, LivableStreets Alliance

Becca Wolfson, Boston Cyclists Union

Cc:        Mayor Marty Walsh
Congressman Stephen Lynch
State Senator Nick Collins
State Representative David Biele
City Councilors – Kim Janey, Annissa Essaibi-George, Michael Flaherty, Julia Mejia, Michelle Wu, Lydia Edwards,
Ed Flynn, Frank Baker, Andrea Campbell, Ricardo Arroyo, Matt O’Malley, Kenzie Bok, Liz Breadon
Tammy Turley, Chief Regulatory Division, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Harborfront Neighborhood Alliance
Northern Avenue Bridge Task Force members – Rick Dimino, Sara McCammond, Kathy Abbott,
Dennis Callahan, Carol Chirico, Senator Nick Collins, Handy Dorceus,
Councilor Michael Flaherty, Councilor Ed Flynn, Gregory Galer, Susan Goldberg, Susanne Lavoie, Representative Stephen Lynch, Richard Martini, Bud Ris, Patrick Sullivan,
Stacy Thompson

Testimony as prepared for City of Boston City Council Committee on Planning, Development & Transportation – Implementing changes for safe streets during and after Covid-19 pandemic

Testimony as prepared for City of Boston City Council Committee on Planning, Development & Transportation – Implementing changes for safe streets during and after Covid-19 pandemic

Testimony as prepared for City of Boston City Council Committee on Planning, Development & Transportation on May 11, 2020 Docket #0662 – Implementing changes for safe streets during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, May 11, 2020 conducted via Zoom.

Thank you Councilor Wu & Councilor Breadon for the chance to speak today, and thank you to all the councilors taking part this evening. My name is Brendan Kearney, and I’m the Deputy Director of WalkBoston. WalkBoston is a statewide pedestrian advocacy organization whose mission is to make Massachusetts more walkable. We work with municipal staff, state agencies, community-based organizations and residents to make walking conditions safer, more enjoyable, and more equitable for all.

Jeff & Stacy gave a great overview to help set the stage, and it was great to see Jacob & Vineet identifying the different types of problems & how BTD hopes to repurpose areas. Also want to say thank you, Representative Elugardo, for your inspirational words of how the state can be a partner. 

I wanted to highlight a few areas of concern for people walking.

First, On Speed reduction / traffic calming: 

  • I shared this info at the Budget hearing but wanted to reiterate since Jeff mentioned it: Earlier this week, MassDOT reported that the rate of fatalities on Massachusetts roadways doubled in April: with 50% less traffic on the road, 28 individuals died in crashes, compared with the month of April 2019 when there were 27 deaths on roadways in the state. Road safety projects are important to combat this problem. 
  • In response to that – Massachusetts State Police launched a Speed Reduction Initiative to address the increase in speeding vehicles now that traffic volumes are low due to stay-at home order. The focus of this mobilization is to identify, stop and take enforcement action on operators of vehicles traveling at very high speeds. We appreciate that appropriate use of police department time. 
  • However – We hope that expanded sidewalks, car-free streets and additional bike lanes can be self-enforcing designs and ways to slow people down that can be added without increased police presence; it does not need to take away from COVID-related response. 

Second, On Signals: 

  • Need for automatic pedestrian recall.  Make it so ‘No need to push a button.’
    Set up signals so they allot time for people to cross without having to push a button to request it. 
  • ‘Mid-day’ cycle phases: shorter delay, lights change more often. Change timing of signals to slow traffic with traffic signals – the opposite of the “green wave”; regulate lights to keep traffic speeds down.
  • Would love to hear about the plan to implement some of these changes — which can it be done remotely from the Traffic Mgmt Center, and which require going out to the intersection to fix? Would need to prioritize changes by ease of implementation. areas that see crowding &/or crash data.

Third, On Small businesses: 

  • Our small businesses make walkable communities/neighborhoods successful
  • Thriving downtown districts and town centers are critical to the success of walkable communities. With many stores now closed to walk-in customers, that life is on hold, and furthermore threatened with the uncertainty of what is to come. For all of you listening to this hearing, think about those local places you walk to in your neighborhood that make it home to you. Figure out a way to continue supporting those businesses. You will not only be helping your local shops, you’ll be preserving the walkability of the places you love. For me, that’s Pavement Coffee on Western Ave in Allston. Re-ordered coffee beans online today.
  • We know that people walking, biking and taking transit are more likely to frequent local, small businesses. Anything that can be done to improve walking, biking and riding transit will in turn help small business community recover once we re-open.
  • Really should consider car free or “car lite’ streets in key business districts to facilitate reopening while maintaining mandated physical distancing requirements.
    • Mayor mentioned this yesterday is his press conference – ideas of widening sidewalks, allowing restaurants to expand onto sidewalks
    • Understand emergency access and lack of organized grid structure of Boston’s streets need to be considered when determining which areas to devote to people walking and biking – not always a parallel path that traffic can be diverted to – but honestly a lot easier to move people out of the way for emergency vehicles than to move cars; i.e. Downtown crossing (Washington St/Summer Street) need fire truck access? people just get out of the way.

Finally for vulnerable populations/limited spaces due to COVID:

Agree wholeheartedly w/ what Galen spoke about w/ older adults, in conversations that we’ve had with the Boston Age Strong Commission who have identified potential locations where expanded sidewalks and outdoor spaces would greatly benefit senior residents.  I know they’ve shared it with Jacob as he’s been compiling locations.

Goal to facilitate essential movement in areas where it is most needed: for older adults near senior housing, for access to parks and schools (throughout the summer & into fall). WalkBoston, MassBike and the Massachusetts Healthy Aging Collaborative have had conversations about the needs of older adults living in senior housing units in urban walkable centers across the state.

As we’ve seen through Boston Globe coverage, older adults are among the most vulnerable to fall victim to COVID-19. Ensuring that our elders have safe access and enough room on our sidewalks to walk to get food and other essential services is a must. We ask that you keep the needs of our seniors on the top of your minds when deciding on a methodology to share Boston’s streets.

2 example areas that I hope are considered that can also build onto ongoing planning efforts:

  • State St (downtown). Extended curb / sidewalks as part of State St Reconstruction Project.
  • Washington Street from Comm Ave to Brookline line (Brighton). Senior safety zone / create safe access to grocery store location as part of Allston Brighton Mobility Study.

Thank you for the opportunity to speak this evening.

Testimony as prepared for City of Boston City Council Budget Hearing on Public Works and Transportation

Testimony as prepared for City of Boston City Council Budget Hearing on Public Works and Transportation

Testimony as prepared for City of Boston City Council Budget Hearing on Public Works and Transportation, May 7, 2020 conducted via Zoom.

Thank you for the chance to speak today. My name is Brendan Kearney, and I’m the Deputy Director of WalkBoston. 

Earlier this week, MassDOT reported that the rate of fatalities on Massachusetts roadways doubled in April: with 50% less traffic on the road, 28 individuals died in crashes, compared with the month of April 2019 when there were 27 deaths on roadways in the state. This highlights why the safety projects identified for funding here are important. 

The BTD staff expansion over the last two budget cycles is now showing dividends: Many projects those team members started on are moving to implementation. There is a need to keep working to make our streets safer for people walking; safety projects in the public works and transportation budget are moving us in the right direction.

I wanted to highlight a few things from the budget & Transportation Priorities overview:

  • 1st: Great to see Tremont Street has construction dollars in the coming year.
  • 2nd: Very glad to hear that “$2 million for a Safety Intervention Program on Neighborhood Streets, which will help us evaluate and act on all resident 311 safety requests” is part of the budget. It would be great for more clarification around this, and how it will be equitably implemented similar to sidewalk repairs in the Walkable Streets Program. This could be a way for spot improvements like speed humps at dangerous intersections or on streets that may not be a good fit or eligible for the Neighborhood Slow Streets Program. 
  • 3rd: Thank you for continued work toward accessibility for all, with “Newly expanded pedestrian ramp plan that doubles number of ramps installed” & adding an ADA Coordinator to Public Works. 
  • 4th: We’re hopeful on the item “$150,000 to improve the Pedestrian Signal Retiming Program in order to retime more of our most dangerous intersections in a more equitable manner.” This could be a step in the right direction of the GoBoston2030 goal of pedestrian-prioritized signals, especially good to hear about the goal of POLICY changes. 
  • Finally, echoing Eliza and Louisa about the Northern Ave Bridge: WalkBoston, LivableStreets, and the Boston Cyclists Union asked last night that the City commit to a bridge design that is only open to pedestrians, bicycles, and emergency vehicles. That was not reflected in last night’s meeting. We are asking City Council not to approve the Northern Ave Bridge project in the budget until this commitment has been made. The scale of funding for the safety projects I just mentioned throughout the city pale in comparison to the estimated dollars for the current iteration of this proposed bridge.

Thank you for the opportunity to comment.

Letter to City Council on Safe Streets and COVID-19

Letter to City Council on Safe Streets and COVID-19

April 30, 2020

City Councilor Liz Breadon
City Councilor Michelle Wu
1 City Hall Square
Boston, MA 02201

Dear Councilors Breadon and Wu:

Thank you for filing an order for a hearing regarding implementing changes for safe streets during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. As stated in WalkBoston’s March 27, 2020, post “We are all in this together,” and the Vision Zero Coalition’s April 13, 2020, statement,“Keeping People Safe While Making Essential Trips During the COVID-19 Crisis,” we share your concerns regarding limited space for people to safely walk, bike and use transit while maintaining the recommended 6 feet of physical distance.  Our recommendations mirror yours, and we commend you on elevating this issue to the Boston City Council.

As we continue to remain close to home to stop the spread of the virus, we remain connected to those on the front lines of this crisis to better understand the built environment issues they face when making essential trips outside their homes. MassBike and the Massachusetts Healthy Aging Collaborative have included us in conversations about the needs of older adults living in senior housing units in urban centers. Older adults are among the most vulnerable to fall victim to COVID-19. Ensuring that our elders have safe access and enough room on our sidewalks to walk to get food and other essential services is a must. We ask that you keep the needs of our seniors on the top of your minds when deciding on a methodology to share Boston’s streets.

We have also been in contact with the Boston Age Strong Commission who have identified potential locations where expanded sidewalks and outdoor spaces would greatly benefit senior residents. This is by no means an exhaustive list, but will be a good starting point and can help act as models for other cities and towns as they design and implement shared streets as part of COVID response and recovery.

Thank you again for elevating this issue to the City Council. As the weather gets warmer in the coming weeks, we believe that the need to reallocate space on our streets will be more important than ever. Please let me know if WalkBoston can be helpful in any way.

Sincerely,

Stacey Beuttell, Executive Director
WalkBoston