610.954.5744

CAT@lvcat.org

Donate/Join

Become a CAT member & help bring healthy, clean, and safe transportation options throughout the Lehigh Valley.

Volunteer

Join our team of dedicated volunteers.

Bike Rides

Join us for social rides on our trails & streets.

Bike Co-op

Take bike classes. Or come to work on your bike or help others!

Walking

Yield to Pedestrians!

Walking is the most elegant means of transportation for its simplicity and ability to connect people and places. CAT promotes pedestrian/ADA access and quality of experience across the Lehigh Valley. Walking reduces reliance on automobiles for short trips and encourages physical fitness and overall health.

walking

See our page for CAT’s 2022-2023 “Yield to Pedestrians-Slow Down and Look Around” Initiative

 

CAT works to improve walkability in the Lehigh Valley:

    1. Distribute our handout, “What to know about Crosswalks and Pedestrians
    2. Educate drivers and pedestrians that every intersection has crosswalks, whether painted or not. Drivers must yield to pedestrians who have one foot off of the curb into a crosswalk and must yield to a visually impaired person with white cane, anytime, anywhere. Pedestrians must use crosswalks (cross at intersections) and where signalized, wait for the WALK signal or cross with the green light. Download pedestrian/crosswalk info docs. Police departments can assist this education with pedestrian sting operations.
    3. Urge enforcement of speed limits that provide drivers adequate reaction time and reduce severity of injury if a pedestrian is struck (25 mph is the goal for dense/urban locales, 35 mph for suburban areas)
    4. Encourage municipalities to install ADA accessible curb ramps and high-visibility crosswalks. Street lighting at intersections is also helpful for drivers to see and yield to pedestrians at night. Shorten pedestrian crossing distances with fewer travel lanes or curb extensions/bulb-outs.
    5. Encourage property owners to install and maintain sidewalks for ADA access, including timely snow removal in winter.
    6. Designing new development to have sidewalks and inviting people to live near enough (under one mile) to walk to work, school or shopping.
    7. Engineering using traffic calming methods, such as siting new buildings close to the street and converting very wide streets to human spaces with wider sidewalks and street trees.

 

Are you a Driver and/or Pedestrian? Take CAT’s Yield to Pedestrians Survey!

 

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Read CAT’s posts on pedestrian laws and safety:

Yes Pedestrian – Creating a Culture for Walking

Crossing the Street Should Not Have to be a Protest

Take a second and yield to Pedestrians. You might like the result.

PA Pedestrian Laws Dissected

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More links for walkability and pedestrian concerns:

  1. Lehigh Valley Sidewalk Inventory Report (LVPC)
  2. Get your local neighborhood walk score by clicking here (walkscore.com)
  3. Technical paper about high-visibility crosswalks