NYC crosswalks urge pedestrians to LOOK!

My Fox Spokane Biz
NYC crosswalks urge pedestrians to LOOK!

By VERENA DOBNIKAssociated Press

NEW YORK (AP) - At bustling intersections where fast-walking, rapid-texting New Yorkers come together with cars, cabs, carriage horses and daredevil bicycle messengers, the city is trying to slip in an emphatic message: LOOK!

That word is being stenciled onto the crosswalks of 110 of the city's most dangerous intersections, where officials hope it will catch the eyes of pedestrians who walk with their heads buried in their smartphones.

"New Yorkers are driven to distraction with their smartphones, and the simple act of looking can prevent thousands of crashes and injuries every year," said city Department of Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, who borrowed the idea from crosswalk signs in London that warn tourists to "Look Right" for traffic coming in a direction they may not expect.

But she gave New York's signs some in-your-face twists: the exclamation mark and little eyeballs peering from the Os in the direction of oncoming traffic.

It's the most visible part of a $1 million campaign aimed solving a chronic problem. More than 9,000 New York pedestrians were injured and 41 killed in 2010, the last year for which detailed traffic crash data is available.

"It won't make any difference to me," 58-year-old Patrick Egan said after stepping over a "LOOK!" sign at Second Avenue and 42nd Street, an intersection where 75 pedestrians were injured between 2006 and 2010.

Egan, who works in video production and lives on the Upper East Side, says he walks around the area frequently and is always very careful. "I tell my wife to step back even when she's standing and waiting, because you never know where a car will come from."

Looking at the white letters, he added, "If you're looking down at this, you're not looking at the traffic and paying attention."

But Seema Seembersad, 37, a nanny from Queens cautiously taking a toddler and a 3-year-old across the street, said the "LOOK!" is eye-catching. "It's a good idea. It makes you pay attention; it makes you more careful, because suddenly, you see this word!"

Sadik-Khan says progress will be tracked, comparing injuries at each targeted intersection.

In addition, the transportation department is putting ads on bus shelters, telephone kiosks and subway entrances. One ad says: "Mom was right. Look before you cross the street."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Most Popular Stories

Small Fla. city anxious to learn jackpot winner

Small Fla. city anxious to learn jackpot winner
By TAMARA LUSH and BARBARA RODRIGUEZAssociated Press ZEPHYRHILLS, Fla. (AP) - It could be an anxious wait of up to two months for people in a small Florida city to find out who won the highest Powerball jackpot in history: an estimated $590.5 million. The lucky ticket was bought sometime Saturday

O'Malley using agenda, fundraising to explore 2016

O'Malley using agenda, fundraising to explore 2016
By KEN THOMAS and BRIAN WITTEAssociated Press ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - His latest legislative achievements put him in the vanguard of his party's liberal base. He's been a top fundraiser for President Barack Obama. And he's ramping up his travel to help fellow Democrats around the country

Public Memorial For Fairchild Airmen Of KC-135 Tanker Crash In Kyrgyzstan

Public Memorial For Fairchild Airmen Of KC-135 Tanker Crash In Kyrgyzstan
AIRWAY HEIGHTS, Wash. - A public memorial for the patriots who lost their lives onboard a KC-135 that crashed May 3 will be held May 28, 2013 at the Inland Northwest Bank Performing Arts Center at 1 p.m. Capt. Mark Tyler Voss, Capt. Victoria Pinckney and Tech. Sgt. Herman "Tre" Mackey III will be