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Time to take losses of life seriously

LINDA VAN DE LAAR

https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/analysis/2024/12/31/time-to-take-losses-of-life-seriously

WINTER is here and that means drivers slipping and sliding through intersections. While pedestrians clamber over windrows, users of mobility aids are forced to use the road, and space dedicated to active transportation becomes even less accessible.

On Dec. 12, I appeared in front of city council hoping for an early Christmas miracle to keep those vulnerable road users safe from the increasing road violence perpetrated by inattentive and rushed drivers. I am a year-round bicycle commuter, cycling about five km each way to my job at St. Boniface Hospital. I also reluctantly choose to run most errands by foot.

That Thursday, a motion in front of city council to implement an immediate speed limit reduction to 30 km/h from River Avenue, where the protected bike lane starts, to Academy Road, where the multi-use path starts, no longer included an actual speed limit reduction.

It had been a long road for this weakened motion to reach the city council. During the preceding Executive Policy Committee meeting, more than 50 individuals relived the traumas related to the dangers and close calls they had experienced on this particular stretch of Winnipeg’s bicycle network. It did nothing to sway those in charge. Another traffic flow study was the only thing city council promised.

I voiced opinions prevalent among those who pursue an active, vehicle-free lifestyle in a city dominated by cars — disappointment and outrage at the slow pace this city moves towards safe roads for all. It took until 2022 to fund a road safety unit. Up to November 2024, 14 pedestrians and two cyclists were killed by drivers on our roads. We can now add an 84-year-old man killed in Westwood to the tally. We are in a road safety crisis.

The tragic death of Rob Jenner has left our community in mourning, highlighting the city’s neglect in promptly addressing road violence. It took six months for the city council to consider a weakened speed limit motion after Rob was killed by a reckless 19-year-old driving three times the limit. Winnipeg needs safe speeds, enforcement, and adequate infrastructure to protect all road users.

We need a city that takes each life lost seriously.

I asked city council to reconsider the original motion and reduce the speed limit on Wellington Crescent to 30 km/h for the full length. But I really wish city council would reduce speeds on all residential streets to 30 km/h and consider a speed limit reduction on major arteries such as Portage Avenue, St. Mary’s Road and St. Anne’s Road.

All available evidence points towards 30 km/h being the only safe speed when pedestrians and cyclists are made to share roads with drivers in 5,000-pound vehicles. The City of Winnipeg is stalling on international guidelines from the World Health Organization and the United Nations while continuing to look for Winnipeg-made solutions.

When a pedestrian or cyclist is hit at 30 km/h, their survival rate is 90 per cent. At 40, it plummets to 60 per cent.

That’s not an abstract number, those are people. Those are lives. It is also no secret that reduced speeds lead to lower collision rates, reductions in noise and air pollution and an increase in walkability and livability. As an added bonus, it is the fiscally responsible thing to do as lower speeds reduce wear and tear on our already overburdened road network.

We do not need more studies. The data is already available on the city’s own website! We don’t need another report to tell everyone what we already know.

The city has set itself goals in the Transportation Masterplan 2050 and Our Winnipeg 2045 and it is crawling to those goals at a snail’s pace. The city put up green bike route signs in 1999, 25 years ago, and has done little to improve cycling on those routes since. The city knows 30 km/h is the only safe speed for residential streets, that is why 30 km/h school zones exist, but we leave children unprotected on our roads outside of school hours.

On my walks and rides, I often feel that driver convenience and status quo is more important to the City of Winnipeg than protecting lives. I want streets where children can walk and bike to school without fear. I want connected, safe bike routes. I want neighbourhoods where drivers don’t terrorize and endanger us.

So here we are in 2024, anxiously awaiting the Reduced-Speed Neighbourhood Pilot to tell us what we already know. We need to move beyond collecting data and start implementing change. The city cannot rely on yard signs; it must take decisive action.

As we approach 2025, my New Year’s wish for Winnipeg is for safer streets across the city — an environment where every user can feel secure.

Linda van de Laar is a registered nurse in Winnipeg.