Regional Pedestrian Safety Summit
January 29, 2010


Mayor Bates was interviewed by KCBS Radio’s Bob Melrose
during the summit.

Miles, little brother of accident victim Zachary Michael
Cruz, and his grandmother, Beverly Shelton, were introduced
at the summit. www.zacharymichaelcruz.com

“Everybody here should be able to walk out of their
house and not feel like they’re somehow trapped in a
low-budget version of Death Race 2010,” said David Grant,
MTC citizen advisor.
Transportation professionals, local government officials and community
pedestrian advocates came together under the auspices of MTC to share
ways to reduce pedestrian injury accidents and fatalities at this all-day
event.
Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates, a long-time MTC commissioner, gave
the opening address at the summit. “I’m an avid walker,” he
said. “The reason
I’m an avid walker is because I sold my car. I’ve been walking 10,000
steps a day for the last year and a half and it’s changed my life. Pedestrian
safety is a real issue – 25 percent of accidents involve pedestrians.”
In a poignant and sobering
note near the beginning of the summit, Wendy Alfsen, executive director
of California WALKS, introduced family members of 5-year-old kindergartener
Zachary Michael Cruz, who was struck and killed in a crosswalk on Feb.
27, 2009 while being escorted by staff from his Berkeley school to
an after-school program. His tragic death was one of the catalysts
for convening this summit.
David Grant, an MTC citizen advisor, managed
to introduce some levity to this serious subject of pedestrian safety.
He joked that maybe the conference should have been titled “Run
for Your Life!” But in reality, he provided
statistics showing that there’s some basis for that call
to arms. He compared pedestrian injuries and deaths in the Bay Area
to local sickness and death rates for H1N1, the swine flu virus, pointing
out that hospitalizations and deaths from H1N1 in San Francisco are
less than half the number of pedestrian injuries and deaths. He made
a modest proposal: to reduce injury and death rates for pedestrians
to at least those for the flu.
Various meaty panels followed, including
one on pedestrian planning moderated by Oliver Gajda of the San Francisco
Municipal Transportation Authority. Robin Mayhew, Puget Sound Regional
Council member, flew in from the Seattle area to brief summit attendees
on how her agency made pedestrian planning an integral part of its
long-range Vision 2040 plan. John Brazil, City of San Jose, made a
compelling case for preparing a pedestrian master plan, and Robert
Guerrero of Solano County talked about creative schemes for setting
aside a funding pot for pedestrian projects. Summit attendees suggested
that all of the information regarding pedestrian policy and engineering
standards should be collected and made available on a Web site.
Project checklists – with
follow-through to see what enhancements for bicyclists and pedestrians
were actually provided – and review of projects and plans
by bicycle/pedestrian advisors were some of the recommendations of
the Best Practices panel, with Sean Co of MTC and Nora Cody from
TransForm. Providing Safe Routes to Schools is not simply an infrastructure
problem, but a need to engage parents, students, administrators,
teachers, law enforcement and the entire community.
The Solutions panel included Robert Schneider of UC Berkeley’s
Safe Transportation Research and Education Center, Meghan Mitman,
Fehr and Peers, Ana Validzic, San Francisco Department of Health,
and Nancy Baer, Contra Costa County Department of Health. They discussed
the merits of studies determining where it’s safe to cross, walking
audits, pedestrian safety plans and community outreach to foster public
support for pedestrian improvements, as well as the
health advantages of walking.
The final panel of the day, Funding Opportunities
and Project Delivery, included input from Guerrero, Brazil and Doug
Kimsey of MTC. Various funding opportunities were discussed, including
Alameda County’s local state tax (5 percent of
revenue from this sales tax funds bicycle and pedestrian safety), Regional
Measures 1 and 2 and MTC’s Smart
Growth/Transportation for Livable Communities program, which
supports community-based transportation projects and is available
regionally on a competitive basis.
Although much has been accomplished,
there was a general consensus by summit participants that a pedestrian
master plan to implement a regionwide policy, along with additional
funding, will be needed to improve infrastructure and create a sustainable
program to ensure increased pedestrian safety throughout the Bay Area.
— Brenda Kahn and Georgia Lambert

Over 100 people participated in the Pedestrian Safety Summit.

Panelists Robert Guerrero, Robin Mayhew and Oliver Gajda (left
to right).

Panelists Nancy Baer, Ana Validzic, Meghan Mitman and Robert
Schneider (left to right).
Audio Archive:
Presentations (PowerPoint):
- Regional Pedestrian Planning
Robin Mayhew, Puget Sound Regional Council
- Planning for Pedestrians in San
Jose
John Brazil, City of San Jose
- Solano Countywide Pedestrian
Plan
Robert Guererro, Solano County
- Pedestrian Fund Programming
Robert Guererro, Solano County
- Complete Streets:
MTC Policy and Programs
Sean Co, MTC
- Safe & Active Schools & Communities
Nora Cody, Transform
- Estimating Pedestrian Volumes
Robert Schneider, UC Berkeley Traffic
Safety Center
- Evaluation of Local Pedestrian
Safety: The California Pedestrian Safety Assessments Program
Meghan Mittman, Fehr and Peers
- WALK THIS WAY:
Connections between
Transportation & Health
Ana Validzic, San Francisco Department of Health
Nancy Baer,
Contra Costa County Department of Health
- Funding Opportunities & Project
Delivery
Doug Kimsey, MTC Planning Director
Robert Guerrero, Solano County
John Brazil, City of San Jose
If you have questions about the event, please email the MTC Public
Information Office: info@mtc.ca.gov.