The ambitious project to create a bike lane on 31st Street in Astoria is one step closer to its implementation, having managed to gather the much-needed support of the Old Astoria Association (OANA) . However, this consent is far from being a “blank check” to the Authorities.
In a detailed and highly documented position, the association makes it clear that its support is strictly “conditional” , setting as an absolute condition the full, fair and horizontal implementation of an integrated traffic management system. A system that will leave no one unscathed, regulating traffic with the same rigor for cars, heavy vehicles, bicycles, pedestrians, but also the increasingly popular, yet uncontrolled, means of micromobility .
The big bet, according to OANA representatives, is not hidden in the architectural designs but in the everyday life of the street. For the local community, these regulations are not just some “optional improvements”, but a matter of vital importance for the safe operation of the entire corridor. In this context, the issue of policing and enforcement of the rules emerges as a major and non-negotiable priority. According to the association’s explicit statement, “without enforcement, even the best-designed systems fail” . For this reason, the demand for a noticeable, physical presence of the Police (NYPD) at key intersections during critical rush hours is urgently raised. Going one step further, the creation of an innovative registration and identification system —on the model of license plates— for all bicycles and scooters is requested. The goal is to make it completely possible to confirm violations through special cameras , ensuring the necessary technological accountability, as it is considered completely utopian to expect voluntary compliance without the fear of scrutiny.
Two more “red lines” that the local community is emphatically setting concern the most vulnerable groups and preparedness to deal with crises.
Special and resounding reference is made to the public school PS 85 , where the current traffic planning is considered dangerous, creating conditions for direct collision between young students and passing cyclists. In order to prevent a tragic accident, the association proposes the mandatory disembarkation of cyclists from their vehicles during the sensitive hours of arrival and departure of children. At the same time, enormous importance is given to the unhindered movement of emergency vehicles.
Although the central leadership of the Fire Department (FDNY) has given the institutional “green light” to the Department of Transportation (DOT), frontline workers at local fire stations are expressing strong professional concerns . Their anxiety centers on the unhindered access of bulky fire engines and the ability to fully and safely deploy rescue ladders — concerns that OANA demands be taken extremely seriously before the fatality occurs.
This specific proposal, although already supported by the local community council, elected officials and local businesses after extensive consultation, is indeed divisive even within the OANA Board of Directors. However, its members realistically chose not to get caught up in endless theoretical debates. Instead, they agreed to give the green light, however, characterizing the approval of the project as “strictly tentative” .
The association is demanding an open, public evaluation after one year of the bike path’s delivery, asking for tangible and measurable data on safety levels, traffic congestion and the actual operational performance of the network to be examined. As the announcement summarizes with absolute clarity and maturity, the future and survival of this project will not be decided in the design studios of engineers, but on the road itself, by “how effectively it is controlled, enforced and evaluated in practice” .