The pace of violations, recorded since the city restricted turns at 97 downtown intersections, amounts to an average of about seven tickets per month.

Two pedestrian advocates told Mirror Indy they would like to see more enforcement, but city officials said the number of tickets issued is only one metric — and not the most indicative of success when it comes to pedestrian safety measures.

“Their desired effect was not to increase (the) number of tickets issued by IMPD. It was to ensure the safety of pedestrians and bicyclists in the Mile Square,” Vop Osili, the Democratic president of Indianapolis City-County Council, said in an emailed statement to Mirror Indy.

The policy change followed a study from the Indianapolis Department of Public Works that looked at a five-year history of pedestrian-related crashes in the downtown area. It found that 57% of were the result of vehicles failing to yield to pedestrians at intersections with traffic signals.

Data also showed that downtown pedestrians were more than twice as likely to be involved in a crash compared to pedestrians in the rest of Marion County.

Freeman, who was a city-county councilor from 2010 to 2016, argued that the policy would “create confusion and congestion” and “won’t stop distracted, reckless or aggressive driving.”

  • @ilinamorato
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    18 months ago

    As a commuter, I hate the parking limitations and costs.

    I mean, I get it. But parking destroys downtowns by replacing destinations with car storage, which pushes the destinations further apart, which reduces the number of people who can walk to the destination, which requires more car storage. It’s a vicious cycle that can absolutely destroy downtowns, and has in a lot of places. So it’s bad for commuters, too. Just less visible.

    If I was a resident, I would hate people meddling in city business. Pretty easy to happen since state legislation is there.

    Yeah, it’s awful. And it keeps happening: Indianapolis votes for a thing. Freeman gets a bee in his bonnet about it—even though he doesn’t live here—and thinks he can makes some noise with it. Freeman gets the other Republicans to sign on to it, and invalidates the will of the people who actually live here. Then he takes a victory lap while the residents have to live with his meddling.

    • RedFoxOP
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      18 months ago

      One of the reasons I really like DC. You legit don’t need a car there.

      • @ilinamorato
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        18 months ago

        We’re a pretty large family with only one car, which is about as close as we can be to that in Indianapolis. Bikes are awesome, and we’re close to a trail, so we can get mostly anywhere in the city we want to go in a reasonable amount of time.

        • RedFoxOP
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          28 months ago

          Wow, you guys are rare I think. For here.

          I’m on call 24/7, so I have to be able to drive to work in x amount of minutes. I have to live within a radius too. My wife worked up in Lebanon before she was downtown. Couldn’t have even done one car.

          I really like walkable and bikable movement of late. Were only decades behind other parts of the world 😋

          • @ilinamorato
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            18 months ago

            Yeah, I think we’re probably fairly uncommon. Especially being single car by choice. Maybe someday it’ll be doable enough that we won’t be as unusual.