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Charlottesville officials and activists discuss potential pedestrian safety improvements

After two pedestrian fatalities in October, safety for Charlottesville-area walkers and cyclists has been top of mind for local leaders and community members. While city officials are putting forward proposals and taking emergent action, some activists are frustrated with the long timelines and dismissive attitudes.

The first fatality occurred on October 3, when 64-year-old Charlottesville resident Mamawa Simai was hit by a motorist at the marked crosswalk on South First Street and Elliott Avenue. Simai was transported to the University of Virginia Medical Center, where she died. She was on her way to work at the same facility when she was hit by 19-year-old driver Matthew Kozub. An investigation of the crash determined that poor lighting and a lack of signage or signals for the crossing were factors in the accident.

Just outside the city, a second fatality occurred around 7pm on October 28, when four pedestrians, a 38-year-old woman and three children, were struck while crossing Stony Point Road near Riverside Shops Way. All four were seriously injured, and one of the children, a 4-month-old, died at the hospital on October 30. The driver remained at the scene, and the incident remains under investigation by Albemarle County Police.

Following the death of Simai, the City of Charlottesville installed plastic bollards at the intersection of South First Street and Elliott Avenue. The emergency improvement is the first of many to come, according to city leaders, but timeline and funding details remain unknown.

City Manager Sam Sanders laid out a series of traffic safety improvement options for councilors at the October 21 City Council meeting. Proposed solutions include reducing the speed limit city-wide, with the exception of the 250 bypass, to 25 miles per hour; consideration of speed bumps and similar measures; and the creation of a tiered sidewalk priority list. All of these proposals are still in their initial stages, though multiple councilors expressed excitement about the efforts.

“I think lowering the speed limit across the city to 25, if that’s something we could do by waving a wand, I would do that tomorrow,” said Vice Mayor Brian Pinkston at the meeting. Other members also voiced support, including Natalie Oschrin, who campaigned on pedestrian safety in her 2023 run for council.

“Bike ped[estrian] infrastructure is kind of my whole deal,” said Oschrin at a November 7 meeting of the Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee. The councilor and committee members focused heavily on rapid and long-term safety improvements, though several attendees voiced frustration with the city’s history of inaction, namely the cancellation of millions of dollars of Virginia Department of Transportation projects announced at the November 4 council meeting.

“This is a group that has spent hundreds of hours on projects that we just saw got canceled,” said one committee member. “We’re not seeing projects rolling out.”

While Oschrin has expressed appreciation for community feedback and support for pedestrian safety improvements, local activists say other city officials have been decidedly more dismissive.

A frequent walker, Charlottesville resident Renee Byrd started a petition calling for the installation of a marked crosswalk at the intersection of South Second Street and Elliott Avenue by IX Art Park, just one block from the crossing where Simai was killed. After gathering more than 900 signatures, Byrd sent her petition to the city’s traffic engineer and presented it to City Council. When the city failed to give a clear response, long-time local pedestrian safety advocate Kevin Cox joined Byrd’s effort to get a marked crossing installed.

C-VILLE obtained the email thread between Mayor Juandiego Wade, Councilor Lloyd Snook, Byrd, and Cox.

In a November 4 email, Wade outlined a statement from city staff, who are working to identify and develop actions that can be implemented within a year through the use of the Urgent Infrastructure Fund. When Cox asked for comment on the petition calling for a crossing at South Second Street and Elliott Avenue, Snook wrote on November 5: “As I understand the debate internal to the City staff, it comes down to ‘There is no good way to make a Second Street crossing safe, because the Second Street crossing isn’t even visible to folks coming from Avon Street, so maybe the better bet is to try to induce pedestrians to use the First Street crossing and then focus on getting people to slow down enough to make the First Street crossing safe.’”  

“I don’t understand why you and your friends have used the tragedy at First Street as a reason for seeking a crossing at Second Street” he continued. “If the reason were that Second Street is inherently safer than First Street—which it does not seem to be—I could understand the public push for constructing a safer crossing at Second Street. But that doesn’t appear to be the situation.”

While the request for the crossing at South Second Street and Elliott Avenue is related to the safety concerns that contributed to Simai’s death, Byrd says the lack of understanding between officials and community activists boils down to a misunderstanding of how pedestrians actually use sidewalks and crossings in Charlottesville.

At press time, the city has not responded to a request for comment.

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Unbound

Riding lessons: A cyclist learns a lot about himself—and America—on an epic tour

On six-week jaunts over several years, Charlottesville’s Chris Register crisscrossed the country on his bike, interviewing people for his book series Conversations With US: Two Wheels, Fifty States, Hundreds of Voices, One America. The first volume, published in early 2019, is based on his 1,916-mile trip through the Midwest and Great Lakes states. Here, he offers a personal account of his journey and mission.

When I graduated from law school in Washington, D.C., in 2009, partisanship and political bickering were the worst I’d ever seen. I thought it would be cool to get out there, talk to people, and find what’s really going on. I did my first tour in 2010, nearly 2,000 miles, interviewing at least one person a day about their views on America.

After that tour, I took a break to work and save up my money, always knowing I’d get back to my tours and writing. In 2015, I quit my job and started my second tour. That’s recorded in the first volume.

Register’s book and more information about his travels are available at conversationswithus.com.

I’ll write about Charlottesville in the book that covers what I call Appalachia and bluegrass country. I remember coming down out of the Shenandoah mountains and riding straight to the Lawn. I interviewed two students—one of them came to the book-release party. That was cool. The next day I rode up to Monticello and spoke to Linnea Grim, the director of education and visitors’ programs. I ended up settling down here.

In all the ground I’ve covered, two stories really stand out. One is about the vastness of this country, and the other is about learning to walk in another person’s shoes.

I’m 39, so I grew up well after the civil rights movement. Most people my age or a little younger haven’t actually talked to someone who had to sit at the back of the bus. But when I was in Elgin, Illinois, I interviewed Ernie Broadnax. Ernie was the only black player on his debate and basketball teams in high school and community college. He told me, after a win, his white teammates would celebrate at a restaurant, but one of them would have to bring his meal to him on the bus. That upsets me. It gets me in the gut.

The other story unfolded at the Grand Canyon. I arrived at dusk. There was a full moon rising. After I set up camp on a rock outcropping at the edge of the canyon, I looked down and thought I saw the haunch of a large, brown animal that had moved around a rock. An hour later, after sunset, the moon was bright. I stood up and was looking out over the canyon. There was a sort of gray-blue hue to everything. I was soaking it all in. It was beautiful, an endless view. I looked to my left and saw bright flashes, like Morse code: dot, dot, dash. I finally realized what it was—a mountain lion. It had looked right at me, and the moonlight reflected off the lenses of its eyes. I never saw it again. If he wanted to get me, he would have. But he didn’t.

Ultimately, I’ve learned that I can do more than I ever thought I could. I climbed 12,000 feet to Independence Pass, outside Aspen, Colorado. My bike and gear are 125 pounds in all, and the oxygen gets kind of thin up there. I pressed on slowly, and I made it. Writing is like that, too. If you just keep going, you can do anything. Determination is the most important factor in success.
Chris Register, as told to Joe Bargmann

Chris’ stats

15,769 miles

6,307,600 crankshaft revolutions

376 interviews

355 days on the road

47 flat tires