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People to Feds: Design Streets Better!

A proposed revision of the Federal Highway Administration’s Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways generated unprecedented public interest.
People to Feds: Design Streets Better!
Photo: Lauren Rushing

A nearly 900-page federal rule book of arcane street design regulations that virtually no one has heard of just received an unprecedented amount of public interest — which street safety advocates chalk up to widespread concern about America’s perilous roadways.

The rule book — the incredibly influential but largely unknown Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways — is getting revised for the first time since 2009, and the public comment period the just ended yielded more than 25,000 contributions from advocates, activists, pols, engineers and everyday people.

That’s a huge increase over the public input last time, according to the National Association of City Transportation Officials, which says the revision of the Federal Highway Administration’s road bible has the potential to improve the design of every public roadway nationwide (or, in the infamous case of the MUTCD-denied crosswalk, the lack of design).

“To make our streets safe, sustainable, and equitable, FHWA must commit to reforming this motor-centric regulatory document that affects every street in the country, and upgrade it to better reflect how we actually use, and want to use, our streets,” said Corinne Kisner, NACTO’s executive director.

The FHWA purports to be on the same page, saying its 132 substantive revisions would make streets safer and more accessible for pedestrians and cyclists. The agency cites proposed revisions that touch on crosswalk marking patterns, pedestrian push buttons, painted bike boxes at intersections and dedicated cyclist traffic signals.

Still, NACTO and other advocates say those changes wouldn’t go far enough. NACTO itself submitted more than 400 comments on the revision that call for, among other things:

  • Making the effort to end traffic injuries and deaths a “guiding principle” of the document.
  • Abandoning the much-derided 85th-percentile rule in establishing speed limits.
  • Lowering the bar to install protected crosswalks so that the MUTCD no longer requires “either a high volume of people crossing the street without a protected crossing — or, more grimly, waiting for multiple traffic injuries or deaths to occur — in order to justify installing traffic signals or beacons for pedestrians,” NATCO said in a statement.
  • Nixing a proposed chapter on autonomous vehicles and instead prioritizing “people over robots on our streets.”

A FHWA spokeswoman, who declined to speak on the record, did not respond to the criticism leveled by NACTO. But she said the agency is “extremely pleased” about the intense interest in the revision.

“We look forward to reviewing every one of those comments to learn how the public viewed the proposed updates and determine what comes next,” she said.

She said the agency can’t yet divulge details about the timeline for the remaining revision process.

It’s not just advocates and transportation wonks calling for the FHWA to go further with its changes.

“As our city works on ambitious plans to make our streets safer and more accessible … we are too often finding that the MUTCD conflicts with new mobility best practices,” New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said in a statement. “The federal manual must be reformed so that it more closely aligns with the equity, safety, and sustainability goals of the Biden administration.”

The public comments that were submitted — cataloged here — included minute technical recommendations as well as big-picture ideas, with the occasional angry screed mixed in for good measure. But for many commenters, the gist was the same: create street design standards with all road users in mind, not just drivers.

“It is insane that road regulations and initiatives that benefit anyone [else] besides drivers are so goddamn difficult to maintain or improve,” one particularly ticked-off commenter wrote. “Cities should be designed around people and not vehicles.”

Photo of Jesse Coburn
Jesse Coburn was an investigative reporter at Streetsblog from 2021 to 2024. His series on the black market for temporary license plates led to enacted or proposed laws in three states and won the George Polk Award. The series was also a finalist for the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting. His work has also received awards from IRE, the Overseas Press Club Foundation, the Sidney Hillman Foundation, the Deadline Club, the Sigma Awards, and the Silurians Press Club. Coburn now works at ProPublica.

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