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Work with Local Groups
The Neighborhood Streets Network has raised the profile of pedestrian
safety issues and has lent its clout to the installation of hundreds of
speed humps and the passage in 1999 of the NYC Traffic Calming Law. The
NSN works for citywide changes, but also works to help some member
groups to reclaim their streets each year.
126th St. Neighbors Look to Stanch Triboro Traffic
Harlem neighborhood groups are fed up with the speeding and illegal
truck traffic on West 126th Street, and demanding that the Department of
Transportation finally bring some solutions to the table. Four open
lanes for traffic, poor paving, a lack of deterrents to illegal truck
traffic, and a torrent of drivers using 126th Street as a shortcut from
the Triboro Bridge to the West Side are creating an unsafe and at times
unbearable situation. Neighborhood residents have long complained to DOT
about the speeding, illegal truck traffic, and noise and vibrations, but
have gotten little more than lip service, while basic issues such as
repaving the street and filling in mammoth potholes go unperformed.
The Network has made several site visits to the location, and
developed a proposal in conjunction with a traffic calming expert and
neighborhood groups to calm traffic on the street, and to deter illegal
truck traffic.
Tenants' Association Wins Round One
Another neighborhood group in Harlem, the Riverton Tenants' Association,
is working to improve pedestrian safety at the intersection of 135th
Street and Madison Avenue. Last year, the group got DOT Manhattan
Borough Commissioner Joe Albano, Assembly Member Jeffrey Wright, and
Councilman Bill Perkins to tour the intersection and see just how hard
it was to cross the street in the allotted time. In response, the group
won a seven second Leading Pedestrian Interval (LPI) and increased
crossing time from the Department of Transportation. While Riverton
Tenants' Association is happy with the improvements, they need speed
humps to reduce speeding on several of the side streets leading up to
the intersection. The Network agrees, and continues to support the
Tenants' Association in their call for pedestrian improvements.

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Slope Strives for Quiet Block
Residents of 10th Street between 5th and 6th Avenues in Park Slope are
justifiably proud of their block. Kids play up and down the street,
neighbors catch up with each other on their stoops, and well-tended
gardens stand in front of handsome houses. Unfortunately, speeding and
noisy through traffic are dangerous and jarring intrusions. The Network
is working with the 10th Street 5th/6th Block Association to design
plans for a community street where pedestrians and residents are given
priority, children can safely play, and cars are forced to slow down to
a human pace.

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Queens Odyssey for Traffic Calming
The Town Hall Civic Association in Springfield Gardens, Queens has been
trying for 15 years to get solutions to the speeding problem on 140th
Avenue-a straight, un-signed, nearly mile-long stretch of road between
Guy Brewer Boulevard and Farmer's Boulevard. Over the years, the Civic
Association has submitted countless requests to the Department of
Transportation to traffic calm the street. Most were not responded to.
Meanwhile, the unmitigated speeding ensures numerous wrecks on the
street each year. The Network made a site visit to Springfield Gardens
and worked with a leading traffic calming engineer and the Town Hall
Civic Association and neighborhood residents to develop several
different plans to traffic calm 140th Avenue and reduce speeding on the
street.
If you know a local group that is fighting for safer streets, let us
know. Send a note with the contact person, address, and phone number of
the group you have in mind to: Neighborhood Streets Network, 115 West
30th St. Suite 1207, New York, NY 10001, or email it to ped@transalt.org.
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