Last week’s column on the increase in pedestrian deaths brought us a lot of comments. Here are a few for you to consider:
I have always enjoyed your column. Today’s was particularly
alarming, and perhaps a canary in the coal mine. There have been more
pedestrian deaths in the past twelve months here in West Hartford than I ever
recall reading about. But I’m not surprised. Driver behavior has
deteriorated from the time I was a Glastonbury police officer in the
1990s. Since those days, I have spent decades on our highways all over
the state, building a business, and I feel like I have some pretty on-point
observations at this point:
1) The speed and recklessness of Connecticut drivers is at levels I’ve never
witnessed before; approaching almost lawlessness - a real Mad Max vibe.
I’m pretty chill, and I’m alarmed.
2) Everyone is staring at their phones. People weave in and out of lanes
like they are driving to the basket; speeders come up on you so fast that if
you are not constantly on vigil you are in real danger. I can drive by
someone at 65 miles an hour and glance over to see them texting or looking at
their phone in their lap. It’s surreal. So good luck if you if you
are a pedestrian or on a bike and have to contend with that (at least on our
local roads).
3) I hear and read that police enrollment is down,
and their esprit de corps is as well, so work will have to be done with
municipal and state leadership to right that ship. But to that end, and
in the meantime, I rarely drive by state troopers engaged in traffic
enforcement / intervention, at least anywhere near the levels I used to
witness. They may have statistics that contradict my observations, but I
see what I see. Nine out of ten times when I see a state trooper, they
are cruising past me at high speeds in the left lane, without lights and siren.
I’ll often draft ten or so car lengths behind them at the same speed, and
they don’t care whatsoever. So from what I see, the reckless drivers
have little to dissuade them from continuing to operate with impunity.
4) And because of this, I’m re-thinking my opposition
traffic cameras, especially if they can document reckless driving, beyond just
the speed itself. If the police can’t ensure public safety by smacking
down all of the aggressive drivers, then I think I’m ready to over-pay a third
party to big brother us into safety on our roads, with all the downside that
entails. Because right now…we can’t be in any more danger than we are
currently.
I have teenage boys who will soon be driving, and while I’m
hopeful they will be respectful drivers, I fear for their lives from the
simmering chaos on our roads.
DOUG RANKIN – West Hartford
I
appreciate your column pointing out the rising number of pedestrian deaths and
how we all need to pay attention and address this problem. I'm troubled,
however, by the column's closing point, which is about how pedestrians can keep
themselves safe. Your article begins with a woman who was struck while standing
in a park. What could she have done or what should she need to do to keep
herself safe when she is already in what is presumably a safe place? Isn't the
more important point that drivers need to drive safely? Shouldn't we focus
first on infrastructure that encourages safe driving and then on driver
responsibility?
REBECCA
HUSSEY – Bethel
What
do you think is causing this? I understand CT ranks like 3rd in
DUI stuff. It appears to me our drivers ed courseware should entail more
of the science of why speed, distracted driving, substances, & weather
conditions bring us this stuff daily. Maybe as part of drivers ed they
can include simulated model driving complete with a computer screen & the
student has to learn to navigate on screen as well. I think we will see a
lot more of this given the cannabis bill & our lazy prosecution. They
should open up the HOV lane to all so as to disperse traffic, not score social
credit points. This way we may incur less tractor trailer accidents. I
have recommended to DOT a new type of highway barrier that is designed to disperse momentum.
KIM
LIBERA - Cromwell
People often
cross midblock because they have better visual of cars versus having to contend
with drivers blowing a red light or turning right on red. I don't give a flying F if a pedestrian is
looking at their phone while walking - the assumption should be safety when on
our sidewalks or in bus shelters. The onus is on the driver in the 2 ton steel
box.
KATE ROZEN - Twitter
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