A new report from the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) estimates that the number of walkers killed on roadways hit a 33-year high in 2017, even as all other kinds of traffic deaths decreased. Curbed Urbanism Editor Alissa Walker sits down with Alyssa Julya Smith to talk about what this means and what cities can do to help bring those numbers down.
According to GHSA’s 2017 data, five states—California, Florida, Texas, New York, and Arizona—account for 43% of all pedestrian deaths, and Arizona had the highest rate of pedestrian fatalities.
Walker explains that its speed not distraction that actually kills pedestrians. She says the idea that smartphones and marijuana has led to the increase in pedestrian deaths is unlikely the case.
Cheddar recommends "Muppets Haunted Mansion" and "Black Widow" on Disney+ and "Alice in Borderland" and "The Exorcist III" on Netflix.
Jill and Carlo discuss an historic victory in the fight against one of humanity's biggest killers, Senate set to kick the debt-limit can down the road, natural gas prices signal a rough winter ahead and Squid Game's prank-call apocalypse.
New York's new Cannabis Control Board met Tuesday for its inaugural meeting to expand the Empire State's medical cannabis program effective immediately and appoint key staffers following months of delays.
Jill's back with Carlo to talk Facebook, at-home Covid testing, and the theory behind the trillion-dollar coin. Plus, Adele has a new single, postseason baseball and more.
A former Facebook data scientist has told Congress that the social network giant’s products harm children and fuel polarization in the U.S. while its executives refuse to change because they elevate profits over safety.
A Russian actor and a film director have rocketed into space to make the world’s first movie in orbit.
The day Facebook went dark, New Zealand gives up on 'zero Covid', a global energy crunch is coming for your heating bills and Russia just beat the U.S. in sending an actor to space.
Jeff Bezos’ space travel company, Blue Origin, announced Monday that William Shatner will blast off from West Texas on Oct. 12.
Carlo and Baker have the headlines you missed from the weekend, starting with a growing ecological disaster on the southern California coast, Dems blow their infrastructure deadline, what to expect in a blockbuster SCOTUS term and more.
Elite, teen basketball players are facing more choices than ever with the NBA's developmental league and the NCAA loosening its financial compensation rules. Cheddar's Michelle Castillo reports.
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