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A Resident's Guide for Creating Safe and Walkable Communities
Chapter 2: Who can help me make my neighborhood a safer place to walk?Step 3: Identify the department or agency responsible for making improvementsIt is important to figure out which department or agency is responsible for maintaining the roads in your community. In the U.S., some roads are controlled and maintained by the state (roads with state route numbers), while others are under the jurisdiction of counties, cities, or towns. Still others are privately owned and maintained. Your local planning or transportation department should be able to tell you who owns and maintains the road in question. Decisions about roadway improvements and programs on public streets are made by the agencies that have jurisdiction over them. Below are descriptions of the typical roles of agencies to help you determine who may be responsible for addressing the pedestrian safety concerns you've identified on your roadways.
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Program ContactTamara Redmon Dick Schaffer What's NewThe FHWA Safety Office is continually developing new materials to assist states, localities and citizens in improving pedestrian and bicycle safety. The materials listed on this page were completed recently. Examples of State/Local Pedestrian Safety Action Plans LTAP/TTAP Interchange, Tamara Redmon Evaluation of the Focused Approach to Pedestrian Safety Program (PDF 225 KB) “Not in Roadway” Pedestrian and Bicycle Crashes (PDF 132 KB) How to Develop a Pedestrian Safety Action Plan (PDF 5.14 MB) FHWA Guidance Memo Contains Provisions to Improve Pedestrian Safety Toolbox of Countermeasures and Their Potential Effectiveness for Pedestrian Crashes Pedestrian Safety Guide for Transit Agencies Evaluation of Pedestrian Countermeasures in Three Cities: San Francisco, Las Vegas and Miami |