We could use some sort of crackdown here as many drivers seem to have settled 
into hyper-aggressive holiday driving mode.

>From the Chicago Tribune:

Jon Hilkevitch 

Arrogant drivers best look both ways
Officers, cameras will be on lookout to protect pedestrians 

Published December 18, 2006

Attention, drivers who rip around corners without yielding to pedestrians: 
Starting in the spring, city officials posing as pedestrians will be sent to 
high-accident intersections as part of a new crackdown on motorists who 
endanger walkers.

"We all have families with children and elderly members, who are the most 
vulnerable in traffic situations. We are trying to cool tempers that flare when 
people get behind the wheel and remind drivers that they cannot treat 
pedestrians as if they were just another vehicle on the street," said Cheri 
Heramb, acting commissioner at the Chicago Department of Transportation.

On average more than one pedestrian is killed in a traffic accident each week 
in Chicago. Accidents involving pedestrians in the city have dropped from 4,478 
incidents in 2000 to 3,632 in 2004, the most recent year for which data are 
available from the Illinois Department of Transportation. But some experts say 
the drop could partly be a sign that fewer people are walking city streets out 
of fear of getting hit.

Officials from the city Transportation Department and the Office of Emergency 
Management and Communications are working with Chicago Police Department 
commanders on an approach to carry out stings on motorists who drive 
dangerously near walkers at hazardous intersections. But the Police Department 
has not yet committed to using plainclothes officers to pose as pedestrians, 
said police spokeswoman Monique Bond. It could be city traffic-control aides 
working with uniformed police, officials said. At first, warning citations will 
be issued to drivers who fail to yield to pedestrians. Tougher steps would 
follow, officials said.

The city had been focusing on decreasing pedestrians' risks, but the effort 
gained momentum in May after a hit-and-run driver struck and killed a 
4-year-old girl, Maya Hirsch, who was walking with her family near Lincoln Park 
Zoo.

Mayor Richard Daley named Heramb co-chair of the newly formed Mayor's 
Pedestrian Advisory Council, which will meet in January for the first time.

Under Daley's Safe Streets for Chicago plan, the look of intersections will 
begin to change. Corners will be equipped with "bulb-outs"--an extension of the 
curb that reduces the roadway in traffic lanes. With the "bulb-outs," 
pedestrians will be in the street for a shorter amount of time.

Bulb-outs will be installed first at spots where there are many senior citizens 
and schoolchildren. A number of bulb-outs have been installed recently on the 
North Side near the lakefront, including at Foster Avenue and Marine Drive.

Also islands in street medians, called "pedestrian refuges," will be 
constructed to provide places for pedestrians to wait if they cannot cross 
streets in the allotted "walk" time. The crosswalks at some intersections will 
be elevated several inches to make pedestrians more visible to drivers, city 
officials say.

One example that the city is testing is in a parking lot on Science Drive at 
the Museum of Science and Industry. The raised crosswalk also creates a speed 
bump to remind drivers to slow down.

Crosswalk striping also is being intensified with bolder lines to alert drivers 
to pedestrian traffic.

"The new design guidelines are intended to remind pedestrians that they are 
equal users of the road and to remind drivers to give pedestrians the respect 
they deserve," said Beth Gutelius, pedestrian safety coordinator at Chicago 
Department of Transportation.

Safe Streets' educational component also will remind pedestrians to walk at 
crosswalks and intersections and avoid crossing in the middle of a block or 
against traffic signals. Counselors will be sent to schools to encourage 
children to make eye contact with drivers before trying to cross streets and to 
wear reflective clothing when going out after dark or in bad weather.

Plans are under way as well to convert some four-lane streets into three lanes 
with marked bicycle lanes.

Officials are plastering the city with public service announcements to counter 
the image of aggressive driving behavior that is often portrayed in 
advertisements for new cars, such as a recent TV commercial for the Nissan 350Z 
that brags the roadster "Goes Like Hell."

City-sponsored posters on the back of downtown newspaper racks show 
schoolchildren walking along with a reminder to motorists to slow down. Other 
posters warn drivers to obey the law, showing a Chicago police officer using a 
hand-held laser device to enforce the speed limit.

These measures are in addition to the planned expansion of red-light-running 
enforcement cameras and more pedestrian countdown traffic signals, officials 
said.

Red-light-running violations have declined 55 percent with the surveillance 
cameras, said Andrew Velasquez, executive director of the Chicago Office of 
Emergency Management and Communications. Drivers caught on camera running red 
lights receive $90 tickets in the mail.

"This program has allowed us to change negative driving behavior, and it has 
saved countless numbers of pedestrians and drivers from fatal injuries," 
Velasquez said.

Thirty red-light cameras are installed citywide, with 20 more scheduled to be 
added beginning this month and 50 more next year, Velasquez said.

A primary goal of the Safe Streets for Chicago campaign is making it more 
attractive and fun to walk, officials said.

People are walking less than folks did a generation ago. Part of the reason is 
that it has become more dangerous, but the unhealthy trend also is increasingly 
difficult to buck in a society of couch potatoes, experts say.

Children, who are walking less on average than at any point in the last 30 
years, are a special concern. Childhood obesity has become a national health 
crisis because of decreased physical activity, said Dr. Katherine Kaufer 
Christoffel, a pediatrician who is co-chair of the Mayor's Pedestrian Advisory 
Council.

It is difficult to recommend that parents encourage their children to walk more 
without also significantly reducing the risks of walking in urban areas, said 
Christoffel, noting that children between ages 5 and 9 are among the age groups 
at the highest risk of getting injured in a pedestrian accident. Intoxicated 
young adults and the elderly also fall into the high-risk group, she said.

"If you don't have cars racing through residential streets, parents won't be as 
concerned about their children walking around," said Christoffel, who is the 
director of the Center for Obesity Management and Prevention at the Feinberg 
School of Medicine at Northwestern University.

"We need to get more people walking, safely," she said.

----------

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Stephano

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