Northern Light
Superstar
Some updates: https://www.thestar.com/news/city_h...icism-over-pedestrian-and-cyclist-deaths.html
Also this:
My first reaction: 120kph on Queen Street??? This is nuts, even worse than the 200 kph on Rexdale.
But reducing speed limits won't do anything if street design remains unchanged. Personally, I'm a big fan of curb extensions to make pedestrian crossings safer. Driving this winter I noticed the snow and ice mounds at street corners acted as fairly effective curb extensions, slowing down turning drivers.
That being said, I don't think we need to lower speeds on arterials. Unless we reduce the actual width of the road (lines of paint don't count), speeds won't come down. I would focus instead on residential streets, including speed bumps, curb extensions and much better illuminated pedestrian crossings. Oh and get rid of channelized right turns. As both driver and pedestrian, I shudder at pedestrian crossings going past these turns.
Road design is definitely the key, not signage or suggestions.
Safe speed should be intuitive to a great degree.
Enforcement is ideally for those determined to break the law and be dangerous not for the casual road user who should generally be driving at a speed that feels safe.
While I would agree that speed limits don't need to drop on most arterials I would differ in that I think there are design changes that can and should be made.
First off, channelized right-hand turns should be removed in all but the rarest of cases. They are a design feature designed to promote a no-stop turn, at speed.
They encourage a wrong-headed and unsafe approach to turns.
Highway acceleration lanes are another key, when you have a long build up lane that curves, stop-free onto a highway, and yet pedestrians are expected to cross at a point where motorists might be reasonable in having gotten to 80km/ph plus....it just begs for trouble.
Highway on/off ramps need to be T-ed with the major road and have a traffic-light regulated right-turn movement, from a stop position. Changing this will take time and money (and MTO cooperation) as it will mean redesigned ramps with longer lanes adjacent the main highway to permit acceleration.
Third, I think we need to make crossings, were we intend them to happen, safe. That means that traffic lit crossings should have pedestrian lighting on the corners, and the crosswalk area itself should be lit from above.
PXOs, I think, are inherently unsafe, and should either be removed or replaced with traffic lights.
Finally we do need to consider where we don't want pedestrians to cross.
This means reconsidering bus stop locations that may encourage dangerous crossings; as well as considering the use use of tree-lined medians that block road crossings in select locations.