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Group crossing tactics

1 min video · safe-or-risky quiz

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Key rules

Do

  • Wait for the steady walker as a group before stepping off.
  • Keep the group tight enough to cross in one signal cycle.
  • Let the slowest person set the pace, not the fastest.

Avoid

  • Following the person in front of you without checking the signal.
  • Splitting the group mid-crossing on the flashing hand.
  • Letting a driver wave you across against the light.

Day 19: Group crossing tactics. Learn the small habit that prevents the most common pedestrian incidents in NYC. Week 3 of the year-long curriculum. Here are the rules for this one. Run this through your morning routine: a Bronx corner during the school run. Lean on the same rule you'd use anywhere else. A group is not a shield. Each person crosses on their own read of the signal, with their own scan, in a single tight cluster. Practice it a few times and it becomes automatic. Three things to do. Do 1: Wait for the steady walker as a group before stepping off. Do 2: Keep the group tight enough to cross in one signal cycle. Do 3: Let the slowest person set the pace, not the fastest. Three things to avoid. Avoid 1: Following the person in front of you without checking the signal. Avoid 2: Splitting the group mid-crossing on the flashing hand. Avoid 3: Letting a driver wave you across against the light. Why this matters: In a group you inherit other people's mistakes. Drivers see a wall of pedestrians and the slow one in the middle gets hit. Safe move: Stopping at the painted edge of a bike lane and looking left first. Exactly the routine that prevents the most common bike-lane collisions. Risky move: Walking out from behind a tall SUV without leaning to look first. Drivers in the next lane can't see you and you can't see them — a classic blind-pull collision. Safe move: Pulling out one earbud as you approach an intersection. Restoring your hearing restores most of your situational awareness. Risky move: Crossing a one-way street while only looking the way cars come. Cyclists, scooters, and wrong-way drivers come from the other side too. Safe move: Standing behind the tactile strip until the train fully stops. Keeps you outside the danger zone for sway, suction, and the platform gap. Risky move: Walking next to a truck that has its right turn signal on. Truck right turns are the deadliest interaction for pedestrians. Stop and let it pass. Safe move: Waiting on the curb until the steady white walker appears. Steady walker is your green light. Cross at a normal pace. Risky move: Crossing while a delivery e-bike is approaching at speed. E-bikes are faster and quieter than they look. Let them pass first. Safe move: Crossing only at the marked crosswalk even if it adds 20 seconds. Drivers expect pedestrians at corners and almost never expect them mid-block. Risky move: Darting out from between two parked vans. Drivers cannot see you and you cannot see them. Classic dart-out collision. Safe move: Stepping back when a cyclist rings a bell behind you. A bell is a request for space. Giving it prevents a sudden swerve into traffic. Risky move: Standing at the edge of the platform with toes over the yellow strip. A bump or a gust from an approaching train can pull you forward. Stay behind the tactile strip. Safe move: Walking an extra block to a lit, signaled corner after dark. Lighting plus a signal dramatically cuts your risk at night. Risky move: Hopping off the curb to wave down a cab in a moving lane. Drivers behind the cab won't expect a pedestrian in the lane. Wait at the curb. Safe move: Pausing audio before stepping into the crosswalk. A second of silence is cheap insurance against the thing you did not see. Risky move: Trusting a turn signal as a promise the driver will yield. A blinker shows intent, not yielding. Wait until the vehicle actually slows. Safe move: Letting passengers exit the subway car before stepping on. Prevents the shoving that pushes people toward the platform edge. Risky move: Sprinting across on a solid red hand because traffic looks clear. Turning vehicles and e-bikes appear fast. The signal protects you from things you cannot see. Safe move: Letting a right-turning truck complete its turn before stepping off. Removes you from the truck's huge right-side blind spot. Safe move: Holding kids' hands and keeping them on the inside of the sidewalk. Puts an adult between them and the curb — the simplest, strongest protection. Watch the clip, then decide which of these reads is the safer call for group crossing tactics.

Spot the behavior
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Stopping at the painted edge of a bike lane and looking left first.

Is this safe or risky?