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Sharing The
Road.
Making America walk able:
It's a challenge we all share
U.S. streets are becoming
increasingly difficult for people to navigate on foot.
Where are pedestrians supposed to walk?
Julia Mitchell says she
would like to be able to walk to her neighborhood store, but there is no
safe way to get there.
"If you had a good arm, you
could probably throw a baseball all the way to the drugstore," she said.
"But it's very rare that you see pedestrians walking there."
That's because pedestrians
in her Arlington, Va. neighborhood must cross a busy four-lane road to get
to the store.
"I'd like to see a light put
in there," said Mitchell, the mother of two elementary-school-age
children. Right now, there's a crosswalk marked with white stripes painted
in the road and depending on the time of day, it can be difficult to
cross."
"Even though it's less than
an eighth of a mile, I'd rather drive it than walk it because it's much
safer," she said.
Evelyn Moe, 30, lives in
Sumner, Wash., but has the same problem as Mitchell. She says she would
like to be able to walk to the nearby Dairy mart for milk but there is no
safe route.
"I've done it a few times
but decided not to do it anymore because of cars roaring by so fast," she
said. "If there were sidewalks, I'd feel a lot more comfortable, but this
is a county area so funding for sidewalks is much more limited than in a
city."
"There's not even a shoulder
on the road," she added. There's just enough room for the cars to go by.
If you wanted to walk there, you'd be walking out in the muddy fields
along the side of the road."
No Room For
Pedestrians
The experiences of Mitchell
and Moe are increasingly common to many Americans, according to Jerry
Scannell, president of the National Safety Council in Chicago.
Everybody out there is a
legal user of the space between the right-of-way lines, but frequently,
there's only enough space for cars," he said. "And we have many situations
where we've almost designed out of our highway system any kind of
accommodation for pedestrians."
Scannell is the chairman of
the Partnership for a Walk able America" -- a coalition of private, state
and federal organizations united together with the common cause of raising
public awareness about the need for communities across America to have
safe and accessible places for people to walk. Another focus of the
Partnership is to emphasize the healthiness of walking -- both the
physical benefits it provides for those who do it and the social benefits
communities reap from this activity.
According to Dan Burden the
state bicycle and pedestrian coordinator for the Florida Department of
Transportation, pedestrians have been ignored by the transportation system
for many years.
"Since World War II, we've
largely built our cities with an outward sprawl where we have to drive a
lot of miles and drive them fast so we can keep the drive down to a short
commute," Burden said. What we've basically got now are designs based on
speed and moving high volumes of traffic. We're discouraging people from
walking because we're putting all of the designs into building high speed
turns and fast routes out of the city that make it to where it feels
uncomfortable and unsafe to walk."
Pedestrians In
Peril
The fact of the matter is
that these days, it often is unsafe to walk in many places in the United
States. Few people realize that for the past few years approximately one
in seven motor vehicle crash fatalities in the United States have involved
a pedestrian. According to the U.S. Department of Transportation (US DOT),
5,472 people were killed in pedestrian traffic crashes in the United
States in 1994 alone. That year, another 89,600 were injured in pedestrian
traffic crashes -- many of them quite seriously.
So how do we go about making
our roads safe places to walk?
One of the biggest things we
can do is put in sidewalks, said Charles Zegeer, associate director of
roadway studies at the University of North Carolina Highway Safety
Research Center in Chapel Hill, N.C and member of the Institute of
Transportation Engineers, a Partner agency.
"The lack of sidewalks or
even paved shoulders is a big problem," he said. "Many neighborhoods
across the country don't have sidewalks on either side of the street. This
is because many cities don't spend the money on sidewalk installations and
don't even require developers to build sidewalks in housing areas."
"In rural areas, where
pedestrian volumes are generally low, there's also very little
consideration for pedestrians," he said. "Not even a paved shoulder or a
shoulder of any kind is provided in many situations and pedestrians are
forced to walk in the street or in the roadway which can be very
dangerous, particularly at night."
Zegeer recommended that
cities require sidewalks on both sides of their streets and that rural
areas, which tend to have less pedestrian traffic, put in at least an
asphalt path or grassy shoulder on both sides of the road for people to
walk.
Many people claim, however,
that putting in sidewalks and pedestrian paths involves complicated legal
squabbles over land rights that local governments don't have the time or
finances to untangle.
Burden, however, says this
is no real excuse.
"Do you have the same
problems when you build a roadway?" he asked. "The answer is yes. But when
you're faced with traffic problems, engineers solve them. When it's just
sidewalk and pedestrian problems, they tend to let them slide."
Another argument often
raised against putting in sidewalks, especially in new subdivisions, is
that it will drive up the cost of homes.
But Burden said sidewalks
affect the social interactions of a community, which invariably affect
safety and quality of life issues in neighborhoods.
What we're discovering is
that once you lose the qualities of a street that make it walk able, you
lose the social space and you lose the interchange that normally takes
place on the street," he said. "So now we're seeing more serious security
problems along the streets and more violence on the streets. A lot of
school-age children no longer walk to school and the few who choose to do
it find that the bullies have taken over the street."
Partnership member Bill
Wilkinson agreed: "I think we're poised at our last chance to reclaim our
communities and rethink how communities go about developing transportation
systems."
Making Room for
Walkers
In order for the
transportation system to make ample space for pedestrians, a bit of
assertiveness training might need to take place, said Wilkinson, who is
the director of the Pedestrian Federation of America in Washington D.C.
People, when they are on
foot, are the most passive and tolerant of all the users of our
transportation system," he said. "People think nothing of sidewalks that
simply end or are blocked because of construction or some other
obstruction. Pedestrians put up with things that you wouldn't dream of
encountering, let alone tolerating in a car."
Other ways that streets
could be made safer for pedestrians would be to provide more frequent
crossings for pedestrians and longer crosswalk lights, Zegeer said.
"At many of our signalized
intersections in cities, the signal timing was not given any consideration
for the pedestrian at all," he said. "There's not enough time given for
pedestrians to safely cross, particularly pedestrians with slower walking
speeds or people in wheelchairs."
According to Burden,
pedestrians in many cities must walk as much as a half mile to a traffic
light simply to cross the street. These long distances between lights
inconvenience walkers and encourage jaywalking, which can be dangerous,
especially on busy, multi-lane streets.
"A lot of people, especially
older people and children, can't cross the street without a traffic
signal, but they try anyway," Burden said. "They end up jaywalking across
the street and then the motorist comes back and says the pedestrian is not
behaving. Well, the pedestrian is just trying to get from one side of the
street to the other in the best way they know how. Why should they walk
half a mile to a traffic light that doesn't give them enough time to cross
anyway? Pedestrians in the United States are inconvenienced in ways that
motorists in this country are rarely inconvenienced."
Another engineering
configuration that would help pedestrians would be to place cement median
islands or grassy medians in the center of busy, multi-lane streets,
Zegeer said.
"That way pedestrians don't
have to cross more than two or three lanes at a time and they don't have
to judge traffic coming from more than one direction," he said.
Additionally, intersections
with squared-off corners, rather than rounded ones, would help with
pedestrian safety, Zegeer said. That's because squared-off corners slow
down motorists making turns.
"Engineers have tried over
the years to provide better roadway systems to handle larger trucks which
have sometimes made situations worse for pedestrians," Zegeer said. "One
example is that engineers have tried to provide a much wider turning
radius at intersections to allow larger trucks to make these turns, but by
doing so, this has lengthened the crossing distance for pedestrians and
encourages all motor vehicles to make a much faster turn. This has
increased the hazards for pedestrians."
Pedestrian safety islands
placed just beyond right-turn lanes for motorists, would help pedestrians
cross more safely at busy intersections, Zegeer said.
Enforcing Traffic
Laws
These design factors are
complicated by human behaviors, according to Dr. Alfred Farina, a research
psychologist in charge of pedestrian and bicycle safety research for the US DOT
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
High pedestrian crash
figures are found in many of our large cities and design problems may
abound there," he said. "But poor pedestrian and driver behaviors also
contribute to the problem. Obviously both factors need to be addressed."
Zegeer and others in the
Partnership agreed, saying that enforcement of traffic laws is just as
important as improving engineering designs when it comes to making roads
safer for pedestrians.
Frequently, for example,
motorists making right-hand turns at intersections fail to yield the
right-of-wav to crossing pedestrians.
"Many drivers are not aware
that they are supposed to yield the right-of-way to pedestrians or they
choose not to obey that law," Zegeer said. "So many times you'll see a
pedestrian having to wait for the motorist to turn. Who's going to win if
the pedestrian steps out into the street? Are they going to win or is the
2,000-pound car going to win?"
"Of course pedestrians can
claim their share of the blame as well," he added. "They often choose to
ignore pedestrian signals and walk during the 'Don't Walk"'.
Zegeer cited Seattle as a
city that has done a particularly good job of enforcing traffic laws.
"Seattle gives thousands of
tickets every year to pedestrians and motorists who violate pedestrian
laws and partly as a result of that, pedestrian violations of the walk
signal and motorist violations of right-of-way laws tend to be much lessee
he said.
"If you go to Seattle and
watch pedestrians, if it says 'Don't Walk', the pedestrian will wait. It
doesn't matter that there's no traffic because pedestrians are conditioned
that cops will give tickets whereas in many northern cities, pedestrians
cross at will. Also, cars turning right in Seattle are conditioned to wait
for pedestrians to cross before making their turn because they know they
will be ticketed if they don't," he said.
Seattle's crackdown on
pedestrian laws began in 1987, said John Moffat, director of the
Washington Traffic Safety Commission and member of the National
Association of Governors' Highway Safety Representatives, a Partner
agency.
"To me, it's been a real
cultural shift for Seattle," Moffat said. "And now, when I go to other
locations and see the problems they have, I think we're making progress in
Seattle."
According to Wilkinson,
controlling speeding is another enforcement issue that would make streets
safer for pedestrians.
What we have right now is a
system that accepts speeding," he said. There's no effective enforcement
and we routinely let cars come off the showroom floor that have the power
to more than double the legal speed limit. Additionally, engineers are
designing roads that have speeds that far exceed the land-use setting that
they're in."
"Our public planning and
transportation agencies have got to be assigned and held accountable for
providing a friendly environment for people on footer Wilkinson said. When
people walk out the front door of their home, school or place of work,
they ought to have a choice about whether they want to walk, take a
bicycle; take their car to wherever they want to go and the majority right
now don't have that choice. The agencies that are in charge of developing
a transportation service have put all their eggs in one basket.
Scanned agreed: "I believe
that we can make significant strides in improving pedestrian safety
without sacrificing mobility. The technology is there. The resources are
there. All we've got to do is get people to ask for it."
This article was written
for the Partnership for a Walk able America by Emily Smith of the
University of North Carolina Highway Safety Research Center
Phone: (919) 962-2202
FAX (919) 962-8710 |