How rich do you need to be to be against sidewalks? The lack of sidewalks in lower-income areas is a recognized problem. Youβre forced to spend extra money on gas/transit to run short-distance errands. Local shops canβt operate. Groceries are an ordeal; missing sidewalks and βfood desertsβ are correlates. You canβt take walks. The air quality ends up worse when more driving is required. If youβre living in reality, sidewalks are good and necessary.
Yep. Itβs an overlapping class and racial issue. The most lethal roads for pedestrians are all in the South, and in the big cities here, itβs the African-American and Latinx neighborhoods where the most people dieβ¦Β
Smart Growth America noted 46,149 pedestrians were struck and killed by cars in the U.S. in the 10-year period, at a rate of about 13 people per day. The study found that minorities and older Americans are overrepresented among pedestrian deaths.
βEveryone involved in the street design processβfrom federal policymakers to local elected leaders to transportation engineersβmust take action to end pedestrian deaths,β notes the studyβs authors. βSo long as streets are built to prioritize high speeds at the cost of pedestrian safety, this will remain a problem.β
Florida was the top state on the pedestrian danger index, and had eight of the top 10 metro areas. Jackson, Mississippi, and Memphis, Tennessee also came in the top 10. The reportβs data is pulled from the U.S. Census Bureau and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administrationβs Fatality Analysis Reporting System.
Lack of sidewalks in more affluent neighborhoods have the same origins. It discourages lower income people from entering the neighborhood because they donβt have cars and there are no sidewalks. This is why those neighborhoods are set up the way that they are. There are no bodegas on the corner. You canβt walk to the store. You must drive at least two miles to reach a store.
^^ and those kind of sidewalkless neighborhoods often go through unintended demographic change. For example, when Buford Highway in Atlanta became a heavily immigrant neighborhood, many people now live there in high-density apartment buildings, many are carless, there are bodegas and small businesses owned by immigrants up and down the highway. But because the immigrants lack the political power to improve the neighborhood like they desperately want to, itβs become ridiculously lethal. The latest statistic I found says that every year, 30 pedestrians are killed on Buford Highway and 250 are injured. Just look at these pictures of people trying to do normal activities back and forth across a seven lane highway. The trails where the grass is worn down have the depressing name of βdesire paths,β according to this article.
public school is so weird thoΒ because you have this institution with all these potentially brilliant minds who will go on to do great things for humanityΒ
and then you look down at your textbook and its like
let it be known that i have received like 20 different messages from 20 different people claiming to have drawn that very cocket. what a tangled web we weave