Legislative package seeks to increase affordable housing development in Philly
The bills are part of a broader effort to expand and protect affordable housing in the city amid an ongoing crisis.
5 hours ago
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Distracted driving claims thousands of lives each year. We’ve all seen drivers talking or texting on their phones. Last week, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro signed a new law that bans handheld devices while driving. The bill is named after Paul Miller, a 21-year-old who lost his life to a driver who was reaching for his phone at the time of the collision. Since his tragic death, Paul’s mother Eileen Miller has advocated for safe roads and joins us to talk about the new law and how it will save lives. We’re also joined by Liz Walshe, a cognitive neuroscientist at the Center for Injury Research and Prevention at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Walshe leads the Neuroscience of Driving research program focused on reducing motor vehicle crashes, particularly among young drivers.
Philadelphia plans to add speed cameras to more roads to slow down speeders. After the success of Roosevelt Boulevard’s cameras in reducing speeds and crashes, Mayor Cherelle Parker wants to install them on five of the city’s most dangerous streets, including Broad Street. Are speed cameras the answer to improve safety? What are the downsides to this form of automated enforcement? We’ll talk with Christopher Puchalsky, director of policy and strategic initiatives for the Office of Transportation, Infrastructure, and Sustainability, as well as Latanya Byrd, co-founder of Families for Safer Streets Greater Philadelphia, whose nieces and three nephews were killed on Roosevelt Boulevard. We’ll also hear from Jay Beeber, director of public policy and research for the National Motorists Association, which opposes speed cameras.