Skip to main content

Chicago mayor unveils Vision Zero Action Plan

Chicago Mayor Emanuel has announced the city’s Vision Zero Chicago Action Plan, a multi-Agency approach which aims to improve traffic safety for all road users. The ultimate goal of Vision Zero is to reduce roadway crashes and eliminate traffic fatalities and serious injuries in Chicago by 2026. A dozen City departments and agencies have been working for months with traffic safety stakeholders to develop the Vision Zero Action plan, which covers the first three years of the effort and is based on the princi
June 13, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Chicago Mayor Emanuel has announced the city’s Vision Zero Chicago Action Plan, a multi-Agency approach which aims to improve traffic safety for all road users. The ultimate goal of Vision Zero is to reduce roadway crashes and eliminate traffic fatalities and serious injuries in Chicago by 2026.


A dozen City departments and agencies have been working for months with traffic safety stakeholders to develop the Vision Zero Action plan, which covers the first three years of the effort and is based on the principles of the international Vision Zero movement.  It incorporates traffic crash data, identifies the greatest opportunities for change and establishes the City’s priorities and resources for addressing the challenge.

1001 Chicago Department of Transportation (CDOT) has long-used crash data in planning engineering improvements, but this process will be strengthened under Vision Zero.

As part of the planning for Vision Zero Chicago, the City has used crash data to identify 43 high crash corridors and eight high crash areas. Of the high crash areas, seven of the eight are on the west and south side of the city, with the remainder being downtown where the higher crash rate is correlated with higher density and higher volumes of vehicles and pedestrians. In addition, the data shows that people who live in areas of high economic hardship are three times as likely to die as a result of a traffic crash.

Police efforts under Vision Zero will be focused on education and engagement events in high crash areas and corridors.  While enforcement is an important and effective tool in preventing dangerous driving behaviours, Chicago Police Department will work in partnership with communities and residents to ensure that all traffic safety interventions are fair and focused appropriately.

Communities most heavily affected by severe traffic crashes will be prioritised for outreach and education, starting with a pilot project this summer on the West Side, funded by an US$185,000 grant from the 4953 National Safety Council.

Under the three year plan, CDOT is committed to improving 300 intersections to make them safer for pedestrians. CDOT will also work with the 1000 Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) to improve access and safety at 25 transit stations, encouraging the use of transit through targeted safety improvements in the vicinity of CTA stations and bus stops, particularly in high crash zones.

Vision Zero will also implement policies, training and technologies that create safer vehicles and safer professional drivers throughout the City, including with drivers in the City’s fleet of vehicles as well as taxi and transportation network provider drivers.  

The City will lead by example through the installation of low-cost, life-saving equipment on large trucks in the City fleet, such as the installation of sideguards and convex mirrors on its large trucks. It will also propose an ordinance that will require City contractors to make these same safety improvements on their large trucks.

“Chicago has made progress in making our streets safer, but we still experience far too many traffic crashes. The status quo is unacceptable,” Mayor Emanuel said. “We will streamline our efforts to protect the lives, health and well-being of all Chicagoans.”

Related Content

  • Drivers get eyes in the back of their heads
    April 18, 2013
    Drivers of the new Nissan Note will be able to see a full 360-degrees, compared to the average human’s field of vision of around 120 degrees, thanks to Nissan's advanced engineering and sophisticated technologies. The new model, unveiled at last month's Geneva Motor Show, is the first Nissan to feature its advanced safety shield - a package of technologies that delivers a new level of driver assistance in the small car segment - along with the advanced around view monitor.
  • New research finds distracted driving on the rise on I-95
    May 12, 2014
    Transurban-Fluor and AAA Mid-Atlantic have released the second annual report on distracted drivers on I-95 in Northern Virginia, which found that despite major construction, distracted driving is a growing problem on the heavily travelled corridor. The report, part of the Orange Cones, No Phones campaign focused on reducing distracted driving in the 95 Express Lanes construction zone, found that the number of frequent I-95 drivers likely to use their cell phone while driving has increased from 56 percent i
  • US DOT proposes broader use of event data recorders
    December 10, 2012
    In an effort to help improve vehicle safety, the US Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has proposed a new standard that would capture valuable safety-related data in the seconds before and during a motor vehicle crash. The proposed rule would require automakers to install event data recorders (EDRs), devices that collect specific safety related data, in all light passenger vehicles beginning in September 2014. “By understanding how drivers respond in a cras
  • Report finds speed cameras reduce crashes, injuries in DC
    February 10, 2014
    A new report carried out by Parsons Brinckerhoff on behalf of the DC Department of Transportation (DDOT) finds that speed cameras are helping to reduce accidents and injuries and slowing drivers down. The DDOT conducted an engineering study to determine a link between traffic safety and placement of automated speed enforcement devices (speed cameras) in the District of Columbia. As part of this study, Parsons Brinckerhoff and its team members conducted speed and volume studies, carried out field assessme