Skip to Content
Streetsblog Empire State home
Streetsblog Empire State home
Log In
City Council

Dov Hikind Demagogues Against Safer Streets

4:12 PM EST on December 1, 2010

    Via Gothamist, here's Assembly Member Dov Hikind railing against the new pedestrian refuges on Fort Hamilton Parkway at a Brooklyn Community Board 12 meeting last week. Hikind apparently can't comprehend a program to install street safety amenities that reduce crossing distances in parts of town where lots of seniors live. His 13-minute tirade followed City Council Member Brad Lander's defense of the ped refuge installation by NYC DOT.

    Hikind uses the same rationale about emergency response that Marcia Kramer has deployed in two separate CBS2 pieces on these refuges. See our post last month for a few reasons why the "slowing down ambulances and fire trucks" argument obscures the real public safety risks at work on our streets.

    I'll add that Hikind's vow to "undo" the refuges is tantamount to a pledge to increase the risk of chronic disease for his constituents. While public health professionals, including NYC Health Commissioner Thomas Farley, are making the case that incorporating physical activity into our daily routines can help reduce the incidence of heart disease, diabetes, and high blood pressure, Hikind is doing his best to make streets in his district less safe and welcoming for walking.

    This flare-up over the Borough Park pedestrian refuges comes at an interesting moment. The City Council just passed a bill requiring NYC DOT to post standards explaining why traffic calming projects are implemented. A write-up in the Post today gleefully calls it "a new weapon to fight bike lanes, pedestrian plazas and other traffic measures."

    The actual bill is more innocuous than that. Not everyone is going to see a new street treatment like a pedestrian refuge and get it right off the bat, and anything that helps people understand why their streets are changing could also help build public buy-in for those projects. (Though I can easily see someone at a community board meeting brandishing a print-out of these standards while shouting a non-reality-based screed against a new project.)

    There will always be a hard core of opponents, however, who look at a ped refuge and just see an object in the roadway, something that forces them to pay more attention while driving and could potentially damage their property if they're not sufficiently careful with their multi-ton vehicle. These are probably the same people who are most likely to call up their local representatives and complain about a new street design.

    The question for New York City's elected officials is this: Are they going to indulge their most change-averse constituents, amplify those who complain the loudest, and do their utmost to keep pedestrians, cyclists and motorists at risk from reckless driving and dangerous street designs? Or are they going to help their constituents understand why change is happening, inject reason into the public debate, and do what's in their power to improve the safety and health of New Yorkers?

    Stay in touch

    Sign up for our free newsletter

    More from Streetsblog Empire State

    Friday Headlines: 205 Million Reasons To Be Happy

    Stopping New York's transportation goals is harder than it looks. Plus more news.

    February 13, 2026

    Talking Headways Podcast: Concrete Doesn’t Spend Money, People Do

    Dr. Lawrence Frank shows how the decisions we make about the built environment are a symbol of why the world is so f'd up. A very special edition of Talking Headways.

    February 12, 2026

    NYC Mayor Mamdani Pitches Free Buses (Cheap!) Plus Other Transportation Needs on ‘Tin Cup’ Day

    Mamdani gave his former colleagues in state government a glimpse of his thinking on transportation and city operations, and hopes they can send more cash his city's way.

    February 12, 2026

    Thursday Headlines: Is Your Tin Cup Full Edition

    Tin Cup day for many mayors is basically like returning to your alma mater for alumni weekend, except you're asking them for money. And more news.

    February 12, 2026

    ‘Everyone’s At Fault’: NYC Government Pointing Fingers Over Lowering Speed Limits

    The mayor and the City Council are using the "art of deflection" to keep the status quo instead of lowering the speed limit to a safer 20 miles per hour.

    February 12, 2026

    More Troubles for Fly E-Bike: Feds Order Costly Moped Recall

    Federal officials have ordered Fly E-Bike to recall all Fly 10 mopeds, the latest troubles for the micromobility company.

    February 11, 2026
    See all posts