It's a mistake to remove "Enforcement" from the "E's framework" of bicycle and pedestrian planning
Originally, planning documents for bicycle and pedestrian planning outlined a framework of "five E's":
- Evaluation (planning)
- Engineering (infrastructure)
- Encouragement
- Education
- Enforcement.
- Equity.
- Need for Geographic Equity: Geographic equity ensures that all parts of the city will see the same types of facilities at the same density and quality.
- Need for Demographic Equity: Demographic equity ensures that people of all age, race, ethnicity, and gender are treated equally.
- Need for Modal Equity: Modal equity is achieved when bicycling is treated as an equal mode of transportation alongside autos, trucks, motorcycles, buses, and pedestrians.
- Engagement
... “Enforcement” does not equal “Safety” for many People of Color, particularly Black Americans. The racial disparities in over-policing of our streets is a barrier that prevents many from considering biking for transportation or recreation. Enforcement as a stand-alone traffic safety tactic is not particularly effective in achieving long-term safety outcomes for anyone biking or walking.
-- "A reminder about how the entitlement of automobility is embedded into law and democratizes death by accident," 2014
“The question before us yesterday wasn’t the efficacy of helmets,” said Girmay Zahilay, a board member who is also a member of the King County Council. “The question before us was whether a helmet law that’s enforced by police on balance produces results that outweigh the harm that that law creates.” ...
The board of health, made up of elected officials and appointed medical experts from across the county, began to scrutinize the helmet rule in 2020 after an analysis of court records from Crosscut, a local news site, showed that it was rarely enforced, and enforced disproportionately when it was. Since 2017, Seattle police had given just 117 helmet citations, over 40 percent of which went to people who were homeless. Since 2019, 60 percent of citations went to people who were homeless.
A separate analysis from Central Seattle Greenways, a safe streets advocacy group, found that Black cyclists were almost four times as likely to receive a citation for violating the helmet requirement as white cyclists. Native American cyclists were just over twice as likely to receive one as white cyclists. ...
“It was a law that really just allowed the Police Department, the Seattle Police Department, to harass Black and brown community members,” said K.L. Shannon, an organizer for Seattle Neighborhood Greenways and police accountability chair for the Seattle King County chapter of the N.A.A.C.P.
Ms. Shannon’s nephew was just 8 years old when he and three friends were stopped by an officer a few blocks from their houses for not wearing helmets, Ms. Shannon said. She said the officer accused them of stealing the bikes. “Until this day my nephew doesn’t ride a bike,” Ms. Shannon said. “He’s never forgotten that.”
WRT the general point that such regulations are disproportionately enforced, the Times article also reports on a study in Chicago:
Across the country, other kinds of biking regulations have also been found to be enforced in discriminatory ways.
In Chicago, a study found that tickets were issued to cyclists eight times more often in majority-Black parts of the city. An investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice found that 73 percent of bicycle stops in Tampa, Fla., between 2014 and 2015 involved Black cyclists, despite the fact that Black people made up 26 percent of the population.
“The data revealed that the stops did not reduce crime or produce any other positive outcome,” such as reducing bike crashes or injuries, the report said.
So I understand the concern. Again though, the point shouldn't be to eliminate enforcement but to fix it. And the basic point is that enforcement activity should be directed to motor vehicle operation, which is far more problematic.
The Traffic Company is primarily composed of police officers assigned to motorcycles to provide traffic enforcement, accident investigations and to raise public awareness of traffic-safety measures. The company’s primary mission is to reduce injuries and fatalities and to provide traffic and pedestrian safety through investigations and traffic management. The company’s involvement is key in major citywide events, such as parades and demonstrations, and provides essential services in the event of a major disaster.
- Enforcement and Criminal Justice Systems.
- Equity
- Encouragement
- Education
- Engagement
- Engineering (infrastructure)
- Enforcement and Criminal Justice Systems
- Evaluation (planning)
Labels: bicycle and pedestrian planning, criminal justice system, equity planning, policing, traffic engineering, traffic safety and enforcement, transportation planning, urban design/placemaking
6 Comments:
"8 common traffic violations no longer warrant a police stop in Philly"
https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia/philadelphia-police-wont-stop-drivers-minor-offenses-20220303.html
"Philadelphia is the first major U.S. city to ban police stops for low-level traffic offenses, which studies have shown disproportionately affect Black drivers."
Again, we have to separate misuse of enforcement from the need for enforcement to improve traffic safety.
The 8 violations:
"Under the law, drivers can no longer be stopped for:
Vehicle registrations expired for 60 days or less.
Temporary registration permits that are in the wrong location, but otherwise clearly displayed in the rear window.
Unfastened registration plates, as long as they are still visible.
A single brake or headlight out.
Other obstructions, like rearview mirror decorations.
Minor bumper damage.
Operation of vehicle without official certificate of inspection.
Unlawful operation without evidence of emission inspection.
Drivers may still receive a secondary-offense ticket for any of the listed violations if they’re pulled over for a separate, primary offense like dangerous driving."
===
So except for the one about headlights or brake lights out, this change isn't unreasonable.
It happens that in Salt Lake City, cars are frequently broken into at trailheads. I've advocated for security plans including cameras.
https://www.post-gazette.com/local/region/2022/03/08/allegheny-county-police-cars-parks-vehicles-theft-patrol/stories/202203080078
The Wall Street Journal: Drivers Face Hefty Fines as More School Buses Get Traffic Cameras.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/drivers-face-hefty-fines-as-more-school-buses-get-traffic-cameras-11647345600?mod=flipboard
https://www.fox13now.com/news/local-news/over-100-cars-caught-speeding-through-west-valley-city-crosswalk
Apparently a study in Chicago found that Blacks and Latinos disproportionately receive tickets for cycling on the sidewalk.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-biking-where-black-chicago-study-20211012-7awkcrwm7fgbfieeyfo3lrbcom-story.html
"Chicago police issued some bike tickets at higher rates in Black and Latino neighborhoods: study"
Chicago police issued sidewalk cycling tickets more often in Black and Latino areas in recent years, even as they issued fewer tickets overall, according to a recent study of bike ticketing practices.
The findings highlight policing practices in Black and Latino neighborhoods in the city, and the unequal distribution of the city’s bike lanes and resources, said study author Jesus Barajas, an assistant professor at the University of California, Davis.
In the neighborhoods most affected, high cycling ticket rates could put a damper on jobs, residents’ health and efforts to reduce violence, said Olatunji Oboi Reed, president and CEO of racial equity-focused nonprofit Equiticity, which partnered on the study.
TRB is going to study the issue.
https://rip.trb.org/view/1864198
"Assessing and Mitigating Racial Disparities in the Enforcement of Pedestrian, Bicycle, and Micromobility Traffic-Related Laws"
https://apps.trb.org/cmsfeed/TRBNetProjectDisplay.asp?ProjectID=5187
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