Greater Greater Washington periodically publishes opinion posts on topics of interest to our readers. The views expressed are those of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views of Greater Greater Washington.

On Wednesday night, a tour bus driver struck and killed two people crossing Pennsylvania Avenue. The victims were two woman visiting DC: one was the mayor of Skagway, Alaska, and the other was her mother who lived in Elbe, Washington.

The pair had just spent the evening enjoying holiday decorations around the capital. Instead of going home to celebrate the holidays with their loved ones, their relatives are on the way to DC to claim their bodies. This is not ok.

Sadly, stories like this are all too common in 2018. Month after month, the number of traffic fatalities creeps higher and higher. In October, the same month Mayor Muriel Bowser hosted Vision Zero Week, the year-to-date tally reached the 2017 traffic fatality total. This is not ok.

With the end of this deadly year in sight, we remember the 35 people drivers have killed in DC this year. These 35 people will never celebrate another holiday, and never hug another loved one. So on Thursday, we turned our collective grief into action.

We hand delivered the letter below and attachments to Bowser’s office, personally handed a copy to Councilmember Jack Evans, and dropped copies off for several other councilmembers. We followed up by emailing a copy to every single councilmember, Attorney General Karl Racine, DDOT Director Jeff Marootian, and Police Chief Peter Newsham.

Left to right: Rachel Maisler, Robb Dooling, Jack Evans, and Matthew Sampson. Image by the author.

We refuse to sit idly while drivers continue to kill people traveling in Washington, DC. Our elected and appointed officials can and must do more to keep all road users safe.

December 20, 2018 Mayor Muriel Bowser

1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20004 Dear Mayor Bowser, As you know, a tour bus driver killed two pedestrians last night at 7th & Pennsylvania Ave NW, one block from the National Mall, within eyesight of multiple bus stops and a Metro station, and just six blocks from the Wilson Building. The timing of these deaths are uncanny because just a couple weeks ago, you asked DC residents what we’d do if we weren’t afraid to fail. Our answer to your question is quite simple: we’d do whatever it takes to eliminate traffic-related fatalities in Washington, DC. Here are a few suggestions: Ban right turns on red citywide as soon as possible

Ban private vehicles from certain downtown streets

Expedite creation of a protected cycletrack network

Install curb extensions at crosswalks in commercial areas or busy pedestrian areas

Reduce speed limits by 5 MPH citywide

Expedite creation of dedicated loading/unloading zones for ride-hailing services

Enable DDOT to experiment and study with tactical urbanism

Develop a long-term plan to reduce the size of delivery trucks and tour buses As Councilmember Mary Cheh said during the Council’s Roundtable on Vision Zero in September (paraphrased): DDOT studies, and studies, and studies until the studies are obsolete then needs to start the study again. Please direct DDOT to stop studying and start implementing. Vision Zero is not a blitz, it is an ongoing campaign to protect the lives of the most vulnerable users. Studying is not enough, only implementation will protect us. The two fatalities last night bring the total number of traffic fatalities in 2018 to 35. That’s 35 too many; 35 people will never celebrate another holiday or hug a loved one. 35 families have gaping holes in their hearts. Like you, we want to live and work in a city where we can live, work, play and travel without fearing for our lives. Nobody should die while traveling on DC roads. We need action, not words. Sincerely, Rachel Maisler, Bicycle Advisory Council and Age-Friendly DC Taskforce

Matthew Sampson, 2B01 Commissioner-Elect

Robb Dooling, Multimodal Accessibility Advisory Council and 6C06 Commissioner-Elect cc: DC Department of Transportation Director Jeff Marootian

Metropolitan Police Department Chief Peter Newsham

At-Large Councilmember Anita Bonds

At-Large Councilmember David Grosso

At-Large Councilmember Elissa Silverman

At-Large Councilmember Robert C. White, Jr.

Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau

Councilmember Jack Evans

Councilmember Mary M. Cheh

Councilmember Brandon T. Todd

Councilmember Kenyan R. McDuffie

Councilmember Charles Allen

Councilmember Vincent C. Gray

Councilmember Trayon White, Sr.