Contact: Jared Sanchez, policy director, CalBike (714) 262-0921, jared@calbike.org
SACRAMENTO – Governor Gavin Newsom has signed the Complete Streets Bill, SB 960, authored by Senator Scott Wiener (pictured above) and sponsored by CalBike, SPUR, AARP California, and others.
The Complete Streets Bill will require Caltrans to consider the needs of people riding bikes, walking, and taking transit on our state roadways, many of which serve as local streets. Caltrans policy mandates this, but the agency often doesn’t follow through.
SB 960 will increase accountability by requiring the agency to set targets for active transportation improvements in State Highway Operation and Protection Program (SHOPP) projects and add elements for people biking, walking, and taking transit when it repairs roadways. It will also establish a transit priority policy, placing greater emphasis on transit improvements on state roadways.
Complete Streets are safe and comfortable streets for people biking, walking, rolling, and taking transit, as well as driving motor vehicles. Protected bikeways, a key element of many Complete Streets, have been shown to reduce fatalities and injuries for road users in all modes of transportation.
“Californians who get around by biking, walking, rolling, or taking transit have the same rights to safe passage on our streets as people driving cars. True Complete Streets provide equitable use of our public space regardless of transit mode, economic status, or race,” said Jared Sanchez, policy director for CalBike. “The Complete Streets Bill becoming law today moves us closer to the day when California state routes are among the safest streets in our communities, rather than the most deadly.”
Background
CalBike sponsored SB127, the Complete Streets for Active Living Bill, in 2019. The bill would have required Caltrans to follow its own Complete Streets Policy and prioritize the safety of everyone who uses our roads, not just drivers, on every repaving, maintenance, and rehab project. Despite overwhelming support in the legislature and from constituents, Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed that Complete Streets Bill.
In 2019, Caltrans had a new leader and the governor stated in his veto message that he wanted to give the agency a chance to reform its practices without legislative oversight.
Five years on, CalBike examined Caltrans’ record and found that, while there are some positive changes, more needs to improve safety for people who bike, walk, and take transit.
Over the weekend, advocates in Northern and Southern California rallied to ask Governor Gavin Newsom to sign the Safer Vehicles Save Lives Bill, SB 961, and the Unsafe Speeds Bill, SB 1509. CalBike cosponsored Senator Scott Wiener’s bill, SB 961, which will require passive intelligent speed assist (ISA) technology on most vehicles sold in California by 2030. And we also support SB 1509, by Senator Henry Stern, which increases penalties for driving more than 25 mph over the speed limit on roads with speeds set at 55 mph or less. With these two crucial bills now on Governor Gavin Newsom’s desk, California is poised to lead the nation in road safety reform.
Every year, 4,000 people die on California roads. One-quarter of those deaths are vulnerable road users: people walking or riding bikes. Speed is a factor in many of these deaths and countless more injuries.
Researchers estimate that speed is a factor in around 30% of motor vehicle fatalities. Speed is particularly lethal to pedestrians. A pedestrian’s chance of dying when hit by a vehicle moving at 20 mph is 7%; at 30 mph, it nearly triples to 20%; at 40 mph, the death toll is 45%. The risk is higher for older people, with a 70% fatality rate at 40 mph.
The Safer Vehicles Save Lives Bill requires new vehicles to warn drivers when they exceed the posted speed limit by 10 mph through a sound or vibration. All new cars sold in the EU now come with ISA. It’s a widely available technology that automakers can easily add to cars sold in the U.S.
The Unsafe Speeds Bill will penalize reckless drivers and could lead to drivers who habitually speed getting enough points on their licenses to have them suspended.
We hope Governor Newsom signs both of these essential bills.
The toll of traffic violence is much greater than injury and fatality statistics can convey. Near misses and minor collisions that don’t get reported create a climate of fear, discouraging people from biking or walking. People who survive collisions may have their lives upended by injuries that leave them with chronic pain or other health issues and may affect their ability to work or enjoy life.
And each fatality affects far more than one person. Traffic deaths reverberate through families and communities, leading to many more than 4,000 personal tragedies in our state alone every year.
We spoke with one survivor, Michel Shane, who lost his daughter, Emily, to a reckless driver on the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu. Here is the aftermath of this tragedy, in his words.
“On April 3, 2010, at 5:59 p.m., our lives changed forever. A man, allegedly wanting to end his own life, aimed his car at our 13-year-old daughter Emily, the youngest of our three children, and took her life. He walked away with only a few scratches while we were left with immeasurable grief.
Experiencing these events has profoundly changed us. Some people may understandably be consumed by darkness and never return, having lost a piece of themselves. However, we have chosen to move towards the light, using this tragedy to create something that helps us cope. Life is uncertain and brief, and we have learned that there is no time to waste. We realize that plans can become meaningless in an instant, as we cannot predict what tomorrow holds, or even what the next five minutes will bring.”
When asked what changes he would like to see on this stretch of state roadway to prevent future tragedies, Shane had this response:
“This is a crucial issue. The road in question is a major highway for Malibu and other communities, with around 40,000 cars passing through daily and even more during the summer. It consists of four lanes with a center turn lane, bordered by mountains on one side and the ocean on the other, making significant changes difficult. The road also accommodates bikes, pedestrians, deliveries, and parking, creating dangerous conditions. The city lacks control over this main thoroughfare and cannot afford to manage it. In light of recent tragedies, the focus is on this road. I believe that measures should be taken to discourage racing, and the city should take control of a portion of the road with the highest activity, slowing down traffic and implementing speed cameras. Ultimately, a complete redesign is necessary, considering that the road was designed for speeds of up to 65 miles per hour. With modern technology and knowledge, this road could serve as a model for other communities to follow.”
There shouldn’t be one more person like Emily Shane needlessly killed, nor one more grieving family. California has a chance to lead the nation in traffic safety. The time is now.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/SB-961-3x2-1.png7211081Andrew Wrighthttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngAndrew Wright2024-09-09 15:27:462024-09-12 16:23:56Advocates Call on Governor to Slow Drivers to Save Lives
Wes Marshall’s new book, Killed by a Traffic Engineer, is a must-read for bike and walk advocates and anyone who cares about reforming our backward approach to road safety. At 370 pages, it’s a tome, but Marshall, a professor of civil engineering at the University of Colorado, fills it with enough humor and Simpsons references to make it an easy read.
I spoke with Marshall recently to get his take on some of the issues California is grappling with, most specifically getting Caltrans to serve needs other than vehicle throughput. As CalBike prepares to issue a report analyzing how well Caltrans serves the safety needs of people biking, walking, and taking transit, Marshall’s ideas on what’s wrong with traffic engineering and how we can fix it are particularly relevant.
Here’s our conversation, edited for length and flow.
CalBike: You made what could be a very dry subject very interesting. I totally appreciate it. Love the Simpsons references.
Wes Marshall: I am literally talking about kids dying. So, if there isn’t some levity in it, it would be a tough read.
CalBike: The thing that took a lot of mental space for me while I was reading was that I was relitigating every argument I’ve had with a civil engineer over the last 15 years.
Marshall: One of my goals was to give folks like you ammunition so the next time you’re having a discussion with someone like that, you have a little bit more insight into what they’re thinking, where they’re coming from, and where there’s leeway.
CalBike: As a total transportation nerd, this is my angry/happy place, reading your book.
Marshall: It gets a lot of people fired up.
CalBike: CalBike is running a bill, SB 961, for intelligent speed assist. It’s gotten the most angry responses from our list, as if people feel driving above the speed limit is their God-given right. But reading your book I thought, “Maybe that’s understandable based on road design.”
Marshall: It seems so un-American, right? The same goes for red light cameras and things like that. It devolves into “freedom” and “Big Brother.” It’s never really about safety. This is one of the things a lot of other countries do better than we do. They keep the focus of the discussion on safety. When you’re driving and you feel like you’re artificially driving lower than what the built environment is telling you to do, you feel restricted. You don’t feel the same when you’re in a place where the design matches the speed. I’m not against all the cities that are trying to just change the speed limits. You don’t get the full effect you hope but it’s heading in the right direction. At the same time, that’s not enough. You need changes in the built environment to go hand in hand with this. That’s where you’re going to get the real safety benefits.
CalBike: The other thing I wanted to ask you about is quick-build, which I think is similar to the tactical urbanism you mention in your book, testing things out. How do we get engineers to better solutions than just following the manual that isn’t very accurate? Can quick-build help?
Marshall: The way I try to teach my students when we’re talking about designing streets or anything is having the mantra that design is iterative. If you’re a mechanical engineer and you’re designing anything, you have all these prototypes. You’re testing everything and meandering towards your goal and you get closer and closer to it. For whatever reason, in transportation, we put out our final solution on the first day and just hope it works right. It doesn’t make a lot of sense, both financially or in terms of design and understanding that humans sometimes behave differently than we expect. It makes perfect sense to put something out there with cheaper materials and see how people react to it, learn from it. You might pull back in some places and double down in others, but treat it as an experiment almost. When we change an intersection, change signalization or something, you can test it. See what happens. See how people react. Traffic engineers need to go back to treating design as an iterative, incremental thing. It’s a mindset.
“Instead of just assuming we need to accommodate X number of cars per day, figure out how many cars is the right number for this street and don’t provide capacity for more than that. There is nothing that says you have to design for the peak or for 20 years from now. It’s a choice we’re making.”
CalBike: I think the mindset is the trickiest thing. It’s part of why this problem with Caltrans is so intractable because people are very set in their ways.
Marshall: A lot of the reasons I think engineers want to seem more authoritarian, that they know everything, is that they are scared of liability. But if we treat design as iterative and you are actually measuring something and seeing if your design is improving that something, that also protects them from liability. I think their mentality is they can’t do testing because they’re scared of liability. But I would argue that would actually help the cause. If you are using the rational process I talk about in the book — testing things, seeing if it is helping the problem you’re setting out to solve, improving on it — that protects you from liability. If you know you have a problem, sticking your head in the sand is going to be the liability problem.
CalBike: Another issue you highlight in your book is how the ways we engineer the roads today exacerbate social inequities.
Marshall: What always bothers me, when I’m doing any safety study, I need to control for things like income and race because it’s a known fact that low-income neighborhoods have worse crash outcomes. Instead of trying to figure out why, we just control for it and don’t look for what other factors might be causing the crashes. There’s a particular street here in Denver, Montague Boulevard. It goes from a really wealthy white neighborhood near the zoo and the science museum. And at that point, it’s a beautiful street with two lanes, bike lanes, sidewalks, giant street trees that cover the street. But you start heading towards Aurora, out of Denver, once you kind of hit that line, it becomes a four-lane. The sidewalks almost disappear, the bike lanes go away, and there are sharrows in the street. The neighborhood is more minority-focused, and you’re going to get worse safety outcomes on that street, regardless of what kind of cars people are driving. People can too easily fall into the trap of just blaming the people who live there as opposed to blaming the infrastructure. We forced highways through neighborhoods in a lot of places. Then you’re sort of forcing people into a car. You’re forcing people onto the high-injury network. We haven’t given them any other options. None of this is controlled for; we just treat it as a given. We’re narrowly focused on how to fix a particular intersection as opposed to how to fix the systematic street design and neighborhood community design.
CalBike: I feel like I got an education from your book. Things that I thought were true aren’t true. The systemic overview is a microcosm of what we do with all traffic problems; we look at very specific things and we don’t ask that “why” question you kept emphasizing.
Marshall: That speaks to crash data. We all want to have a data-driven approach to road safety and Vision Zero, but all the data is telling us we have a human error problem. So when somebody in a poor Black neighborhood jaywalks, it’s easy for the traffic engineers to look at the data and say, “We have a human error problem. We need to teach these folks not to jaywalk, or we need to put up barriers.” But when you zoom out and think about the situation we put them in, where’s the nearest crosswalk? It might be half a mile away. The sidewalks we provide in between where they are and the crosswalk are probably nonexistent. When you zoom out, maybe they did the rational thing. That’s where I’m trying to put the onus back on the traffic engineers, to think about all these things as a potential engineering solution, as opposed to just education and enforcement. You have to think about the crash data very differently than we do now.
CalBike: CalBike and other advocates have been working for years to try to change Caltrans. It’s like turning around a giant ocean liner. How do advocates do this? How do we change this culture?
Marshall: All our protocols are set up to design a road for not just the car capacity today but the car capacity 20 years in the future. They’re not designing for safety; they’re designing for this futuristic capacity. I’ve written 75 published academic papers, and I feel like those are chipping away the tip of the iceberg with the problems. The book was more meant to hit the foundation. Those protocols aren’t as steeped in science as any of us think. We need to go back to the drawing board. At some level, it’s a longer-term problem: engineers acknowledging that all of these protocols should not be set in stone.
I feel like a lot of these things can change quickly. If you look at the evolution of bike lanes and bike facilities, what was the gold standard 10 years ago isn’t good anymore. If I started getting too specific, I felt like the book would age too quickly, so I tried to focus more on the fundamentals.
CalBike: One of the things that hit me in your book was the concept of “Safety Third” at some DOTs, rather than safety first — and sometimes not even third. Looking at documents from Caltrans, it seems like they don’t think safety for people who bike and walk is even their job. I get the sense that being forced to build a bike lane is annoying to them. How do we get them to feel like people who bike and walk are their constituents?
Marshall: That’s why I titled the book Killed by a Traffic Engineer. A lot of engineers are angry with me, but you’re describing exactly what I’m saying. It’s easy for them to blame those crashes on human error, either the driver or that pedestrian or bicyclist. My point is, these are systematic crashes that are happening. If we can predict them, we should be able to fix them, and we’re not doing that. We can do better. We always can find money for a multimillion-dollar highway interchange, and we can never find money for a sidewalk or bike lane. You can no longer blame these on human error; we have to do something. If engineers can get over the hurdle and read the book, I think we’ll see some shifts.
CalBike: I’ve seen the shift in my town. The younger generation of engineers, probably like your students, have a more progressive attitude.
Marshall: I’ve seen the same thing here. There are designs out on the streets today that I would have considered a moonshot 10 years ago. It is shifting. It’s hard to be patient when you know what it could be like, but we are heading in the right direction.
CalBike: Even though we don’t use level of service as a required standard in California, it still creeps into design discussions. Somehow, they manage to use vehicle miles traveled and come to the same conclusions as if they’d focused on level of service. What I’ve never seen considered is that 20 years from now, we expect 50% less driving and 100% more biking and transit use. Is that something we can expect from the traffic engineers of the future?
Marshall: I would hope so. I joke in the book that when we look at a bike lane that went from 10 bikes a day to 100, we never extrapolate that number the way we would with cars. If we did the same thing, you could say we’re going to have 10,000 bicyclists per day in the year 2050. But we don’t use the same growth factors. Towards the end of the book, I argue that we should be focused more on the vision for the community. Instead of just assuming we need to accommodate X number of cars per day, figure out how many cars is the right number for this street and don’t provide capacity for more than that. There is nothing that says you have to design for the peak or for 20 years from now. It’s a choice we’re making. I think a lot of engineers believe that safety is steeped into all those things, but it has nothing to do with safety. It’s just a thing we’re doing to fix congestion, and it doesn’t even do that well.
CalBike: I think what you’re getting at is the heart of why it’s so hard to change. There’s so much of a mindset of engineers knowing what they want to do and reverse engineering the process to do that.
Marshall: We can’t often use rational arguments against car-oriented designs and car-oriented places. It has to be ridicule. Make fun of the engineers who think induced demand is a myth as opposed to explaining the rational arguments to them. Sometimes, that can be a more effective way to shift mindset.
CalBike: There are so many rational arguments against everything that they’re doing, and obviously it doesn’t matter. The question becomes, “How do you manifest that social shift?”
Marshall: All DOTs have to spend a certain amount on safety. It’s easiest to check that box with education, so they do PSAs that say, “Wear your seatbelt,” or “Don’t jaywalk.” We know those don’t work, so why are we wasting our money on that sort of stuff? That’s a pot of money that could be used for something more tangible instead of checking a box.
CalBike: We might have to define safety. One of the things I took away from your book is that what a traffic engineer thinks when they hear the word safety is not what I would think.
Marshall: They can define anything as safety. I give the example in the book of the Legacy Parkway in Utah, where they increased the speed limit to fix wrong-way driving. Or taking away crosswalks. If we gave the engineers all the money in the world, they’re not going to fix these problems because they’re not going to spend it like any normal human being would think it should be spent. What the book is trying to do is change those fundamentals. If we change what we’re actually measuring when it comes to safety, that’s a step in the right direction. If we are treating our crash data like there’s a potential engineering solution as opposed to just blaming human error, that’s a step in the right direction. Then, we can start looking at safety for what it is.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/marshall_wes-1-e1724966693690.jpg10132000Laura McCamyhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngLaura McCamy2024-08-29 14:28:132024-09-04 19:26:34Killed by a Traffic Engineer: An Interview with Wes Marshall
Last week, the Complete Streets Bill, SB 960, passed the Assembly Transportation Committee by a wide margin (11-4). As Streetsblog correctly pointed out, the bill exited the committee weaker than it entered it, but CalBike still supports the measure, and we remain optimistic that its passage will spur Caltrans to do a better job providing infrastructure for people biking and walking.
Caltrans comes to the table
The good news is that Caltrans has stepped forward to offer amendments to the Complete Streets Bill. Reaching an agreement with Caltrans means the agency is less likely to oppose the final bill if it makes it to the governor’s desk. The last time Senator Scott Wiener introduced a Complete Streets Bill, SB 127, in 2019, the bill passed the legislature, but Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed it, so getting Caltrans’ (and CalSTA’s) approval could make the difference between passing and failing.
Unsurprisingly, the Caltrans amendments weaken provisions in SB 960, making it easier for the agency to find reasons not to include elements that improve safety for people biking, walking, or taking public transportation in its repaving projects. Critically, the changes would allow Caltrans to continue citing budget limitations as a reason to exclude Complete Streets from the project scope. However, SB 960 increases scrutiny and accountability of Caltrans’ decision-making process and will pull back the bureaucratic curtain that the agency uses to the detriment of people biking and walking in their communities.
CalBike wants more State Highway Operation and Protection Program (SHOPP) dollars (our state highway maintenance program) to go to active transportation infrastructure, moving us away from our car-dominated transportation system. We will keep moving further from Vision Zero as long as Caltrans corridors prioritize fast-moving motor vehicles without providing complete sidewalks and crosswalks, protected bike lanes, and safe bus stops. And we have no hope of averting our shared climate crisis if we don’t create comfortable, appealing connections for active transportation.
Still, we see the glass as half full with the Complete Streets Bill. Caltrans is a huge agency with entrenched operating systems. Change may be slower than we want and need, but codifying a Complete Streets requirement in state law will certainly bring even more change in the coming years.
Fate of safe streets package rests with Assembly Appropriations Committee
The legislature is on recess until August 5. When it returns, the Complete Streets Bill will have until August 18 to clear the Assembly Appropriations Committee. Bills for that committee are placed in the Suspense File (cue ominous music) and only move forward for a full floor vote if they are released from suspense. Senator Wiener’s companion bill, SB 961, the Safer Streets Save Lives Bill, is also in Appropriations.
The Appropriations Committee in either house is a fraught step in the life of a bill. Even measures that have no fiscal impact can die in suspense, sometimes due to opaque backroom negotiations, multimillion-dollar lobbying groups, or the opposition of a single powerful legislator.
The best antidote is a strong show of public support. CalBike has created an action allowing you to directly voice your support for the Complete Streets Bill to East Bay Assemblymember Buffy Wicks, the influential Appropriations chair. Feel free to customize your email and let Assemblymember Wicks know if you’re in her district.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/complete-streets-silhouettes.png171864Jared Sanchezhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngJared Sanchez2024-07-11 13:10:462024-07-11 13:10:46Next Steps for Complete Streets Bill
Contact: Jared Sanchez, jared@calbike.org, (714)262-0921
SB 960 Complete Streets Bill Hearing in Assembly Transportation Committee Monday, July 1, 2024
SACRAMENTO – The Complete Streets Bill of 2024, SB 960, authored by Senator Scott Wiener, will be heard in the Assembly Transportation Committee on Monday, July 1, 2024, at 2:30 pm.
The Complete Streets Bill requires Caltrans to consider the needs of people riding bikes, walking, and taking transit on our state roadways, many of which serve as local streets. Caltrans policy mandates this, but the agency often doesn’t follow through; SB 960 will codify Caltrans policy in state law and increase accountability.
What is a Complete Street?
Complete Streets are streets that are safe and comfortable for people biking, walking, and taking transit, as well as driving motor vehicles. Protected bikeways, a key element of many Complete Streets, have been shown to reduce fatalities and injuries for road users in all modes of transportation.
“People who get around by biking, walking, or taking transit have the same right to safe passage on our streets as people driving cars. True Complete Streets provide equitable use of our public space regardless of transit mode, economic status, or race,” said Jared Sanchez, policy director for CalBike.
Caltrans and Active Transportation Projects
While Caltrans has made incremental progress in adding more bike- and pedestrian-friendly features to its repaving projects, the 2023 firing of one of the agency’s strongest voices for active transportation shows the need for greater oversight and accountability.
The agency’s Complete Streets checklists treat any element that makes biking or walking even marginally safer as a “Complete Streets” feature, ignoring the fact that a single crosswalk or “Share the Road” sign is often not enough to create a Complete Street.
The Complete Streets Bill requires Caltrans to set objective goals and to better implement comfortable, convenient, and connected facilities for pedestrians, bicyclists, and transit users on all projects in the [SHOPP funding] program, where applicable.
Background
CalBike sponsored SB 127, the Complete Streets for Active Living Bill, in 2019. The bill would have required Caltrans to follow its own Complete Streets Policy and prioritize the safety of everyone who uses our roads, not just drivers, on every repaving, maintenance, and rehab project. Despite overwhelming support in the legislature and from constituents, Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed the Complete Streets Bill in 2019.
In 2023, CalBike joined with over 100 mobility, climate justice, and transportation organizations to send a letter to Governor Gavin Newsom, urging an independent investigation of Caltrans, a moratorium on freeway expansion, and better oversight of the agency.
In 2024, CalBike is sponsoring a Complete Streets Bill introduced by Senator Wiener, SB 960.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/RectangleBikes.png7241825Brian Smithhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngBrian Smith2024-06-28 16:12:262024-06-28 16:12:26SB 960 Complete Streets Bill Hearing in Assembly Transportation Committee Monday, July 1, 2024
SAFER Streets Bills to Be Heard at Senate Transportation Committee on Tuesday, April 23, 2024
SACRAMENTO – The Senate Transportation Committee will convene on April 23, 2024, at 1:30 p.m. to discuss the SAFER California Streets package of bills. The hearing will take place at 1021 O Street, Room 1200, Sacramento State Capitol, and will be televised.
The Speeding and Fatality Emergency Reduction on California Streets (SAFER California Streets) Package, comprising Senate Bills 960 and 961 authored by Senator Scott Wiener, aims to enhance safety and accessibility on California roads for all users.
The SAFER California Streets package will have the combined effect of creating safe passage for people biking, walking, and taking transit through infrastructure improvements and simple vehicle safety measures.
As traffic fatalities surge across the United States, particularly in California, amid a spike in reckless driving since the pandemic’s onset, the urgency for such measures is undeniable. According to a recent report by TRIP, a national transportation research group, California has witnessed a 22% increase in traffic fatalities from 2019 to 2022, compared to the national average of 19%. Shockingly, in 2022 alone, 4,400 Californians lost their lives in car crashes.
“Other nations are making progress to protect road users, while in the U.S., the problem grows steadily worse,” said Jared Sanchez, policy director for CalBike. “CalBike is proud to sponsor the SAFER California Streets bills because the continuing killing and maiming of vulnerable road users on California’s streets must end.”
The SAFER Streets Bills
SB 960: Complete Streets Bill SB 960, The Complete Streets Bill of 2024, mandates Caltrans to incorporate safe infrastructure for pedestrians, bicyclists, and transit users when repaving state routes serving as local streets. The bill includes provisions for transit needs, facilitating the establishment of more bus-only state highway lanes and transit enhancements on local streets. The Complete Streets Bill requires Caltrans to establish objective goals and prioritize the implementation of comfortable, convenient, and connected facilities for pedestrians, bicyclists, and transit users.
SB 961: Safe Vehicles Save Lives Bill SB 961 protects vulnerable road users by focusing on vehicle safety enhancements. This bill mandates the installation of truck side guards to protect cyclists and pedestrians from being pulled beneath the rear wheels of trucks during accidents. Side guards also prevent cars from running under trucks during crashes, significantly reducing fatalities.
Additionally, SB 961 requires speed governors or intelligent speed assistance (ISA) technology in all passenger cars sold in California from the 2032 model year onwards. ISA technology will warn a driver when the vehicle exceeds the speed limit through visual, sound, or haptic alerts and is expected to reduce fatalities among pedestrians and cyclists, aligning with the state’s Vision Zero goals. The EU has implemented a similar law, with ISA required on new cars starting this July.
These bills represent a comprehensive approach to tackling the pressing issue of road safety in California, addressing both infrastructure and vehicle safety concerns. The outcome of the Senate Transportation Committee hearing on April 23, 2024, holds the potential to catalyze transformative changes that will save lives and make California’s streets safer for all.
On January 24, Senator Scott Wiener unveiled the Speeding and Fatality Emergency Reduction (SAFER) on California Streets bill package that includes a Complete Streets Bill, SB 960. CalBike is a sponsor of the bill, the latest of several we have partnered on with Senator Wiener, a stalwart bike champion in Sacramento.
The 2024 Complete Streets Bill will require Caltrans to consider the safety of people biking, walking, and taking transit when it repaves state-controlled roadways. Caltrans’ jurisdiction includes many state routes that double as local streets. These streets can be critical connectors through urban areas and serve as small-town main streets, but they are also often among the most dangerous roads in the community.
The Complete Streets Bill is an excellent approach to make Caltrans-controlled streets safer. It might seem like a no-brainer, but similar legislation has faced opposition in the past. Here’s what you need to know to join the fight for Complete Streets.
The history of Complete Streets in California
This isn’t CalBike’s or Senator Wiener’s first attempt to pass a Complete Streets Bill. CalBike and our allies campaigned hard for SB 127, the Complete Streets for Active Living Bill, in 2019. The bill, which would have required Caltrans to consider adding elements to make biking and walking safer each time it repaved a state-controlled road, made it through the legislature only to be vetoed by Governor Gavin Newsom. In his veto statement, the governor said the law wasn’t needed because Caltrans already had a Complete Streets policy and would take the steps required by the bill.
Five years later, Caltrans has updated its Complete Streets policies and does include consideration of biking and walking in many project plans. On projects like the San Pablo Avenue Corridor Project, Caltrans hasn’t stood in the way of significant roadway changes to improve active transportation. But, as CalBike’s recent user survey showed, our state road system doesn’t serve the needs of people who get around by bike or on foot. In many projects, the Complete Streets elements selected by Caltrans represent the bare minimum of improvements for people biking and walking; in some projects, cost is used to justify these mediocre facilities, and in others, to justify the absence of Complete Streets elements altogether. We need the 2024 Complete Streets Bill to codify the approach to roadway improvements that the Caltrans Complete Streets policy promised but has not delivered.
What’s in the 2024 Complete Streets Bill?
The new Complete Streets Bill includes many of the elements of SB 127, Senator Wiener’s 2019 Complete Streets legislation, but with several notable improvements.
Similar to the earlier bill, SB 960 requires “all transportation projects funded or overseen by the department to provide comfortable, convenient, and connected complete streets facilities unless an exemption is documented and approved[.]”
However, it goes a step further and mandates the California Transportation Commission (CTC) to develop 4-year and 10-year objective targets. The key word is “objective.” By setting objective targets and requiring plain language reporting of progress, the bill holds Caltrans accountable for meeting California’s climate goals for its transportation sector.
Another new element in the 2024 bill is prioritizing public transit. The bill mandates objective targets to support efficient movement of transit vehicles on state roadways and includes transit prioritization as a required feature during road repairs.
Like earlier bills, highways that don’t allow bicycle or pedestrian access will be exempted from the requirement to build Complete Streets. However, it includes a provision to improve safety for people biking, walking, or taking transit at freeway over- and underpasses and interchanges. This is crucial, because freeway on and off ramps are often some of the most dangerous spots to walk and bike through our communities.
Fact-checking Caltrans Complete Streets policy
CalBike and our allies are in the process of gathering data and analyzing how well Caltrans serves the many California residents who aren’t in cars or trucks. We aren’t ready to release the data yet, but preliminary analysis highlights the need for the 2024 Complete Streets Bill.
Our review of Caltrans’ planning documents shows the agency has set up processes to consider Complete Streets in each road repair project. For projects where people biking and walking aren’t excluded, agency staff often recommend elements to make active transportation safer.
However, the recommended Complete Streets elements aren’t always included in the final project. And the way Caltrans uses the term Complete Streets is troubling.
A Complete Street is one that includes the infrastructure needed to safely bike, walk, and use public transit, allowing any of these modes to be safe and convenient options. In its planning documents, the agency considers a project incorporating “Complete Streets” to mean that any elements that increase the safety of people biking or walking are included, without consideration of whether it includes all the features needed to truly make a roadway safe for all users. For example, a project that only includes bicycle signage or sharrows can be claimed as having added “Complete Streets” elements, even if it falls short of the treatment appropriate for the roadway type or doesn’t include all the recommended elements.
To hold Caltrans accountable, CalBike and our allies must sort through and analyze hundreds of documents, a time-consuming task that few outside the agency have the time or resources to do. The 2024 Complete Streets Bill will make the agency’s processes more transparent, and that will make it easier to monitor its actions and provide public oversight.
We hope you’ll join us in supporting SB 960. Look for opportunities to take action as this critical bill moves through the legislative process.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/CompleteStreets-v4-1030x666.jpg1891001Jared Sanchezhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngJared Sanchez2024-02-05 16:41:112024-02-05 16:41:11Complete Streets Bill Will Help Build Crucial Connections