Zero in 10: City of Chicago rolls out new pedestrian safety plan - Chicago News and Weather | FOX 32 News

Zero in Ten: City of Chicago rolls out new pedestrian safety plan

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CHICAGO (FOX 32 News) -

Careful at those crossings.

The Chicago Department of Transportation is working on a plan to improve pedestrian safety.

It's called "Zero in Ten." The plan's goal is reduce pedestrian deaths to zero in the next ten years, and engage pedestrians to take an active role in their own safety.

CDOT made a list of more of more than 250 recommendations. They include better-marked crosswalks, more pedestrian islands, and more speed bumps on residential streets.

Some of the safety improvements have already been implemented. At the corner of Randolph and Clark, there's an example of a new and improved marked crosswalk - or what it's called in the business a standard continental crosswalk.

Other pedestrian safety features will be cemented not just in the Loop or on the North Side, but across the city.

There were 17,487 pedestrian-involved incidents between 2005 and 2009, with nearly 20,000 people hit by a car or truck walking down street during that time.

Chicago pedestrians think it's about time an initiative like this was launched, but they're skeptical of how effective it will be in the end.

They said safety improvement plans like this one will only work if pedestrians start paying attention. Talking on the phone, texting or web browsing while crossing streets keeps no one safe. That's the individual's responsibility in the Zero in Ten plan.

The plan will be formally laid out Thursday at 11 a.m.

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