Thursday, April 24, 2014

Street Smart Safety Zone Events to be Held in Montgomery County

Street Smart is launching their spring safety campaign to remind area drivers, pedestrians, and bicyclists to be alert and obey traffic safety laws. To make sure they do, area police will be stepping up enforcement and will ticket and fine violators – whether on foot, a bike, or behind the wheel. 

As part of the campaign, there will be a street team providing on-the-ground pedestrian safety education in downtown Bethesda (along Wisconsin Avenue) on Tuesday, April 29, from 4-7pm. Bethesda Transportation Solutions and the Montgomery County Department of Transportation will also have a tent set up outside of the Bethesda Metro station on Tuesday where you can come and pick up information and some swag!  There will also be a Safety Zone event held in downtown Silver Spring on Tuesday, May 6 from 4-7pm.

Street Smart reminds everyone to share the road and look out for each other. 
  • If you’re driving, watch for people in crosswalks and stop for walkers and cyclists. 
  • If you’re biking, ride in the direction of traffic and stop at red lights. 
  • And if you’re walking, cross in the crosswalk and wait for the "walk" signal. 
Learn more about the campaign at BeStreetSmart.net or www.montgomerycountymd.gov/walk

Friday, April 18, 2014

Warmer Weather Prompts Increased Outdoor Activity and Safety Enforcement

"Street Smart" Campaign Urges Drivers, Bicyclists and Pedestrians to Exercise Caution

Safety Zones will feature street teams
highlighting key campaign messages
En Español

CLICK HERE FOR INFORMATION ABOUT MONTGOMERY COUNTY SAFETY ZONE EVENTS!

PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, VA — After a long, cold winter, Washington-area residents are
ready to get outside and enjoy spring weather. With more people walking and biking, transportation officials from the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia are urging drivers, pedestrians and bicyclists, to take extra care and watch for each other when traveling around the region. To make sure they do, law enforcement agencies will be on the lookout for anyone not following traffic safety laws and will ticket and fine violators – whether on foot, a bike, or behind the wheel.
These increased efforts are all part of the spring Street Smart public awareness and enforcement campaign. From April 14 through May 11, officers in the District of Columbia, suburban Maryland, and Northern Virginia will be stepping up enforcement, watching for drivers, pedestrians and bicyclists who violate traffic safety laws. Drivers who fail to yield for people in crosswalks, for example, and pedestrians who jaywalk will face tickets and fines ranging from $40 to $500. Additionally, law-breaking drivers are subject to getting points on their driver records.
Gas Station Pump Toppers Remind
Motorists to Watch for Pedestrians
"This has been a particularly harsh winter, so we expect that, as spring unfolds, more people will be out walking and biking. With so many of us sharing the roads, it is critical that we make safety a top priority," said Prince William County Supervisor Frank Principi, who serves on the Board of Directors of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. "It's the duty of all drivers, bicyclists and pedestrians to work together, pay attention and follow traffic laws to make sure everyone arrives at their destinations safely."
Street Smart officials launched the spring initiative Thursday morning, April 17, at the Woodbridge, VA intersection where Sally Ann Okuly was killed last November. Okuly, a devoted wife and mother of two, was crossing with the light at the southeast corner of Opitz Boulevard at Montgomery Avenue when she was struck and killed by a car in the crosswalk. That morning was the first time she had taken a walk outside her home since surviving a motorcycle accident six months earlier.
In the wake of Okuly’s death, her friends, family and community leaders have successfully Street Smart officials hope to see similar improvements made at other treacherous intersections in the Washington region.
Bus Ads - Key Component of the
StreetSmart Campaign
advocated for engineering improvements to the intersection, including plans for crosswalk striping and the recent implementation of a Leading Pedestrian Interval (LPI) signal – a timing technique that allows pedestrians a few seconds headstart to begin crossing the street before cars get a green light. 
Street Smart aims to prevent pedestrian and bicyclist deaths like Okuly’s – let alone the countless injuries that occur each year –by urging people to pay more attention when they’re on the road and offering practical, easy-to-follow safety tips (see below). Drivers, bicyclists and pedestrians need to follow traffic laws, be aware of their surroundings, and avoid distractions such as cell phones. Street Smart reminds drivers to be alert and yield to anyone walking or biking at intersections, encourages those on foot to use crosswalks and wait for the walk signal, and urges people on bicycles to ride in the direction of traffic and stop at red lights.
While pedestrian fatalities in the DC metro area decreased from 2012 to 2013, bicyclist fatalities more than doubled, from three in 2012 to seven in 2013. In 2013, preliminary data indicate that 73 pedestrians and bicyclists were killed in crashes in the Washington metropolitan region. These deaths accounted for 27 percent of all traffic fatalities in the area.
Information on the Street Smart public education program may be found at www.bestreetsmart.net.


Press Articles about the Spring 2014 StreetSmart Launch:

NBC
WUSA9 (article 1)
WUSA9 (article 2)
Univision (article 1)
Univision (article 2)
CBS
Prince William Daily Monitor
InsideNOVA
Associated Press

About the Street Smart Campaign & the National Capital Region Transportation Planning Board (TPB)
Sponsored by the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (MWCOG) and the National Capital Region Transportation Planning Board (TPB), the Street Smart public awareness and enforcement campaign is in its twelfth year. Its goal is to reduce pedestrian and cyclist injuries and deaths in the Washington metropolitan area. For more information about Street Smart, please visit www.bestreetsmart.net and twitter.com/COGStreetSmart. The TPB is the regional transportation planning organization for the Washington region. It includes local governments, state transportation agencies, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) and members of the Maryland and Virginia General Assemblies.

El clima más cálido da a lugar a actividades al aire libre y al cumplimiento de las reglas de seguridad

La campaña “Street Smart” insta a los conductores, ciclistas y peatones a ser prudentes

Prince William County, VA– Después de un largo y frío invierno, los residentes del área de
Washington están listos para salir y disfrutar del clima de primavera. Con más personas caminando y en bicicleta, los funcionarios del transporte del Distrito de Columbia, Maryland y Virgina están pidiéndoles a los conductores, peatones y ciclistas que presten mayor atención y que estén pendientes los unos de los otros cuando se desplacen por la región. Para asegurarse de que así lo hagan, las agencias del orden público estarán vigilando a las personas que no estén cumpliendo las leyes de tránsito y multarán a los infractores, ya sea que vayan a pie, en bicicleta o detrás del volante.

Estos mayores esfuerzos forman parte de la campaña de concientización pública y cumplimiento de esta primavera Street Smart. Del 14 de abril al 11 de mayo, los policías del Distrito de Columbia, el área suburbana de Maryland y el norte de Virginia estarán reforzando las actividades de cumplimiento, estarán atentos a los conductores, peatones y ciclistas que violen las leyes de seguridad vial. Por ejemplo, los conductores que no les den paso a las personas en el cruce de peatones y los peatones que cruzan en rojo se enfrentarán a multas que van de $40 a $500. Por otra parte, los conductores que violen la ley estarán sujetos a recibir puntos en sus récords de manejo.


“Este ha sido un invierno particularmente duro, así que esperamos que, cuando se despliegue la primavera, muchas más personas comiencen a caminar y a montar bicicleta. Pero con tantos de nosotros compartiendo las calles, es crucial que mantengamos a la seguridad como una prioridad”, dijo el supervisor del condado de Prince William, Frank Principi, quien presta servicio en la Junta de Directores del Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. “Al tomar medidas sencillas como prestar atención y cumplir con las leyes de tránsito, cada quien puede ayudar a garantizar que las personas lleguen sanas y salvas a sus destinos”.

Los funcionarios de Street Smart introdujeron la iniciativa de primavera la mañana del jueves 17 de abril, en Woodbridge, VA, en la intersección donde murió Sally Ann Okuly en noviembre pasado. Okuly, madre dedicada de dos niños, estaba cruzando con el semáforo en la esquina sureste de Opitz Boulevard y Montgomery Avenue cuando fue atropellada por un auto en el cruce de peatones y murió. Esa mañana fue la primera vez que salía a caminar afuera de su casa luego de sobrevivir un choque en motocicleta seis meses antes.

A raíz de la muerte de Okuly, sus amigos, familiares y líderes de la comunidad han promovido con éxito varias mejoras de ingeniería en la intersección, incluyendo planes para el rayado del cruce de peatones y la puesta es práctica recientemente de una señal de Guía Peatonal por Intervalo (LPI, por sus siglas en inglés), una técnica de tiempo que les concede a los peatones algunos segundos de ventaja para comenzar a cruzar la calle antes de que los automóviles tengan la luz verde. Los funcionarios de Street Smart esperan ver mejoras similares en otras intersecciones traicioneras en la región de Washington.

El propósito de Street Smart es evitar más muertes de peatones y ciclistas como Okuly, sin contar las numerosas lesiones que ocurren cada año, instando a las personas a prestar más atención cuando estén en al calle y ofreciendo consejos de seguridad prácticos y fáciles de seguir (ver más abajo). Los conductores, ciclistas y peatones tienen que obedecer las leyes de tránsito, estar pendientes de lo que los rodea y evitar distraerse con cosas como sus teléfonos celulares. Street Smart les recuerda a los conductores que estén alertas y les den el paso a las personas que estén caminando o en bicicleta en las intersecciones, alienta a aquellos que vayan a pie a utilizar los cruces de peatones y esperar la señal de caminar, y les insta a los ciclistas a manejar en la dirección del tráfico y detenerse en los semáforos en rojo.

Si bien el número de muertes en el área metropolitana de DC disminuyó de 2012 a 2013, las muertes de ciclistas han aumentado más del doble, de tres en 2012 a siete en 2013.  En el 2013, los datos preliminares indican que 73 peatones y ciclistas murieron en choques en la región metropolitana de Washington. Estas muertes conforman el 27 por ciento de todas las muertes relacionadas con el tráfico en el área.

Puede encontrar información sobre el programa de educación pública Street Smart en www.bestreetsmart.net.

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Información acerca de la campaña Street Smart y la National Capital Region Transportation Planning Board (TPB)

Patrocinada por el Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (MWCOG) y la National Capital Region Transportation Planning Board (TPB), la campaña pública de concientización y ejecución Street Smart está cumpliendo su décimo segundo año. Su meta es reducir las lesiones y muertes de peatones y ciclistas en el área metropolitana de Washington. Para más información sobre Street Smart, por favor visite www.bestreetsmart.net  y twitter.com/COGStreetSmart. La TPB es la organización de planificación de transporte regional para la región de Washington e incluye los gobiernos locales, las agencias de transporte del estado, la Autoridad de Tránsito del Área Metropolitana de Washington (WMATA, por sus siglas en inglés) y los miembros de  las Asambleas Generales de Maryland y Virginia.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Pedestrian Crosswalk Stings are Back


A sting operation at an often disregarded Wisconsin Avenue crosswalk last week led to 24 citations for drivers who didn’t stop for an undercover cop posing as a pedestrian.
Next week, Montgomery County will launch a spring Street Smart campaign managed by the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. Jeff Dunckel, Montgomery County’s pedestrian safety coordinator, said part of that initiative will include a new wave of the undercover police crosswalk stings.
The sting last week was set up for two hours at the notorious intersection of Stanford Street and Wisconsin Avenue. Drivers there must stop for pedestrians in the crosswalk.
But with no traffic signal on the six-lane road, pedestrians say that rarely happens.
Last June, police nabbed 22 drivers for failing to stop with a pedestrian in the crosswalk. Last April, as county officials and police began an aggressive spring pedestrian safety initiative, a motorist mowed down one of the pedestrian signs at the crosswalk.
Esther Bowring, a county government spokesperson, said police do regular enforcement of pedestrian safety laws. The effort that will begin next week is a more concentrated effort to raise awareness with more and more pedestrians taking advantage of warmer weather.
The decoy pedestrian police stings started last year.  Officials began putting the enforcement focus on drivers who were violating the law, not just pedestrians jaywalking or crossing without the walk signal.
Source: Bethesda Now, April 11, 2014
To see a video about crosswalk stings, click here.
To hear an audio clip on the stings, click here.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Nationally, Accident Rates Improving for Older Drivers

Nationally, accident rates improving for older drivers
 
Safety researchers expressed concern a decade ago that traffic accidents would increase as the nation's aging population swelled the number of older drivers on the road. Now, they say they've been proved wrong. Today's drivers aged 70 and older are less likely to be involved in crashes than previous generations and are less likely to be killed or seriously injured if they do crash, according to a study recently released by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. That's because vehicles are getting safer and seniors are generally getting healthier. The marked shift began taking hold in the mid-1990s and indicates that growing ranks of aging drivers as baby boomers head into their retirement years aren't making U.S. roads deadlier. Traffic fatalities overall in the U.S. have declined to levels not seen since the late 1940s, and accident rates have come down for other drivers as well.

(Source: Boston.com (Boston Globe newspaper), March, 2014, as reported in the Network of Employers for Traffic Safety eNewsletter, March 14, 2014.)

Friday, April 4, 2014

Bicycle Safety Class April 12 Sponsored by Bethesda TMD

Class will help bicyclists become more comfortable biking on city streets
Class will help bicyclists become more comfortable biking on city streets

Bethesda Transportation Solutions, which operates the Bethesda Transportation Management District, and the Washington Area Bicyclists Association (WABA) are holding a bicycle safety class on confident city cyclingon Saturday, April 12, 11 am-2 pm. It will be at Bethesda-Chevy Chase Rescue Squad, 5020 Battery Lane, Bethesda, MD 20814. 

Registration is free to the first ten students to arrive within 15 minutes prior to class and to Capital Bikeshare members. The fee is $5 to WABA members and $10 to all others. Registration is online at WABA's website