On March 8, Tess Rothstein was tragically killed while riding her bicycle on Howard Street approaching 6th Street. Moreover, like all traffic fatalities, it was preventable. San Francisco's Vision Zero commitment to ending traffic fatalities demands a data-driven approach to transportation safety. Friday's fatality is the fourth traffic death on Howard Street in the past three years and Howard Street is part of San Francisco's High Injury Network, the 13 percent of city streets that account for 75 percent of traffic injuries.

Given the street's status as a High Injury corridor, we are advancing the Folsom-Howard Streetscape Project to transform both streets into safe and vibrant community spaces. While this vision will take several years to fully realize, we know that we cannot wait to make the needed improvements on Howard Street. In fact, in December 2018, we completed a protected bike lane on Howard Street between 6th St and 11th St. The recent fatality between 5th St and 6th St, just before the protected bike lane begins, is yet another tragic reminder of the urgency to continue and expand this work, quickly.

In alignment with Mayor Breed’s directive to the SFMTA to move forward with quick near term safety enhancements on high injury corridors, we are taking the following steps to immediately improve the safety on Howard Street:

Effective immediately, we will restrict parking on the north side of Howard Street between 4th St and 6th St. This temporary emergency measure will increase safety for people bicycling until a more permanent improvement can be installed.

Effective immediately, we will add striping and physical barriers to reinforce the temporary parking restrictions.

We will immediately begin designing a parking-protected bike lane on Howard St between 3rd St and 6th St, similar to the protected bike lane recently completed between 6th St and 11th St. This new parking-protected bike lane will be installed as early as April 2019, if approved by the SFMTA Board. This will then allow much of the parking removed as part of the emergency safety improvements to return.

We will identify further improvements to the existing parking-protected bike lanes on Howard Street, particularly focused on intersection approaches, known as "mixing zones", which are often the most difficult location for people biking. We will make near-term changes this spring, which may include additional green markings, posts and signs.

Even as we move forward to immediately protect Howard Street, we will continue doing the more comprehensive civil engineering required to address longer-term improvements to this street as quickly as possible. These efforts include new mid-block crossings, corner bulb-outs, a two-way protected bike lane, and protected bike signals at every intersection.

Nothing can return the lives lost on our city streets. However, we at SFMTA understand the urgency and share your commitment to making San Francisco’s streets safer, and we appreciate your support of Vision Zero. We know that achieving the city’s vision of zero traffic deaths is an ambitious goal, but nothing else is acceptable.