Home » Accessibility »Events/Meetings » Currently Reading:

One pedestrian route complete, more needed

November 25, 2009 Accessibility, Events/Meetings 2 Comments

In early November 2005 Elizabeth “Lisi” Bansen died a few days after being struck by an SUV as she was traveling the two blocks from the nearest store to her apartment.  Lisi Bansen was disabled and using a manual wheelchair.  She was in the roadway because what sidewalks existed were impassable and curb cuts non-existent.

Two years later, in December 2007, the City of St. Louis lost a lawsuit with the jury finding them negligent in Bansen’s death.  But the city admitted as much by offering a settlement to Bansen’s family.  The jury awarded more than the city’s offer.  Of course you can’t put a price tag on a child or sibling.

By the time this case went to the jury a part of the route between the store and the apartments where Bansen lived had improved.  The state of Missouri constructed sidewalks and curb cuts adjacent to land it owns across the street from the Scott Joplin House museum.  City officials in statements to the press said they thought all was fixed.  They must have done a quick drive-by and saw some new concrete and assumed all was well.

In December 2007 I showed that it was not well.  Earlier this month on the four-year anniversary of Bansen being struck I showed that the route still remained impassable from end to end.  Sure, one portion was new but someone traveling between the same two places would still end up in the road.  After getting the city to finally complete the route between the apartments and the store I decided a celebratory walk was in order.

So last Saturday a few readers joined me as I walked from the store to the apartments and back.

Steve Patterson (with cane) speaks at the beginning
Westbound along Delmar on the new sidewalk. Scott Joplin house in background.

Lisi had another way to reach her apartment door but this shows how we don’t build for walking.  The sidewalk at the apartments is for reaching cars — not the public sidewalk a few feet away.  Make walking enough of a challenge and people who can will do otherwise.

I arrived at the starting point about a half hour early.  In that time I saw at least 8 people walking between the apartments and this store.  Thank you to Richard Reilly for the photos and to the others that joined me.

– Steve Patterson

 

Currently there are "2 comments" on this Article:

  1. Thanks for the persistence you and others showed in making something good happen from this tragedy. I just highlighted your story on our Planning News Story of the Day blog: http://pcj.typepad.com/planningnews/2009/11/tra

    You and others might also be interested in an effort here in Burlington, Vermont, to improve safety for bicyclists and pedestrians that also resulted from a bad accident. It's led to a collaborative effort between local citizen activists and organizations and our police department. See the Safe Streets Collaborative web page for more details: http://www.localmotion.org/education/safestreets/

     
  2. pcjournal says:

    Thanks for the persistence you and others showed in making something good happen from this tragedy. I just highlighted your story on our Planning News Story of the Day blog: http://pcj.typepad.com/planningnews/2009/11/tra

    You and others might also be interested in an effort here in Burlington, Vermont, to improve safety for bicyclists and pedestrians that also resulted from a bad accident. It's led to a collaborative effort between local citizen activists and organizations and our police department. See the Safe Streets Collaborative web page for more details: http://www.localmotion.org/education/safestreets/

     

Comment on this Article:

Advertisement



[custom-facebook-feed]

Archives

Categories

Advertisement


Subscribe