1 min video · safe-or-risky quiz
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Day 22: Audible pedestrian signals. Build muscle memory for one specific street scenario. Week 4 of the year-long curriculum. Here are the rules for this one. Picture this on a real block: a Long Island City crossing near a truck route. Here's what keeps you out of trouble. APS units chirp, cuckoo, or speak the street name to tell you when to walk. Learn the pattern at intersections you use daily. Notice how often this comes up — it's nearly every block. Three things to do. Do 1: Press and hold the APS button to hear the street name. Do 2: Wait for the rapid-tick walk tone before stepping off. Do 3: Use APS intersections after dark when visual signals are harder to read. Three things to avoid. Avoid 1: Crossing on the slow locator tone — that's not the walk phase. Avoid 2: Blocking the APS button with bags or strollers. Avoid 3: Assuming every corner has an APS — many still don't. Why this matters: APS signals are the only crossing cue for blind and low-vision walkers. Respecting them keeps the system working for everyone. Risky move: Crossing mid-block in dark clothing at night. You are nearly invisible. Walk to the lit corner and use the signal. 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: Following a runner who crosses against the light. Their gap is not your gap. Decide for yourself at every crossing. 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: Crossing a wide avenue without checking the median for turning traffic. Medians hide left-turning cars accelerating across your second half of the crossing. 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: Walking behind a stopped bus to flag a cab. Buses pull out without warning and the next vehicle is often right behind. Safe move: Letting passengers exit the subway car before stepping on. Prevents the shoving that pushes people toward the platform edge. Risky move: Wearing both earbuds at full volume through a busy intersection. You lose horns, sirens, and bike bells. Pause audio at the curb. Safe move: Letting a right-turning truck complete its turn before stepping off. Removes you from the truck's huge right-side blind spot. Risky move: Stepping into a crosswalk while a driver is staring at their phone. If their eyes aren't up, treat the car as if it has no driver. Wait. 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. Risky move: Stepping straight into a bike lane to look for cars. Treat the bike lane as its own crossing. Check it before you step in. 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: Crossing in front of a stopped school bus that still has its stop arm out. Kids are crossing or about to cross. Wait for the arm to retract. Safe move: Carrying or wearing something reflective on a dark walk home. Reflective gear can double or triple the distance at which drivers see you. 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. 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. Risky move: Stepping off the curb the moment the hand starts flashing. The flashing hand means do not start a new crossing. Wait for the next steady walker. 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. Watch the clip, then decide which of these reads is the safer call for audible pedestrian signals.
Crossing mid-block in dark clothing at night.
Is this safe or risky?