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CSUN-area death renews fears about pedestrian safety ALARMING TREND: Cars have struck seven people on foot in six months near the sprawling Northridge campus.


Byline: Sue Doyle, Staff Writer

NORTHRIDGE - Already stuck with the reputation for being one of the Valley's most dangerous crossing zones for foot traffic, the area around CSUN's sprawling campus added one more fatality fa·tal·i·ty
n.
1. A death resulting from an accident or disaster.

2. One that is killed as a result of such an occurrence.
 Monday to a growing list of pedestrian casualties.

The death of a 60-year-old woman, who was struck just moments after stepping into a crosswalk at Zelzah Avenue and Lassen Street at dawn Monday, renewed concerns among residents who are working to make the area safer.

"It may have happened in years past, but this time around it certainly seems more concentrated around CSUN CSUN California State University Northridge ," said Steve Patel, president of the Northridge East Neighborhood Council.

"I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 if more people are walking now or riding their bikes. These accidents are disturbing and alarming."

In the last six months, cars have struck seven pedestrians on streets near the 356-acre campus - killing two, leaving another two with life-threatening injuries and injuring three others.

The latest victim was Victoria Santos Santos (sän`ts), city (1996 pop. 412,288), São Paulo state, SE Brazil, on the island of São Vicente in the Atlantic just off the mainland.  of Panorama City, who died at 6:40 a.m. while trying to cross Zelzah Avenue.

A pickup truck driver traveling east on Lassen Street had turned right onto Zelzah as the light turned green when he hit Santos, said LAPD 1. LAPD - Link Access Procedure on the D channel.
2. LAPD - Los Angeles Police Department.
 Officer Ana Aguirre.

The man pulled over and called 911. He told officers that he didn't see the woman in the crosswalk, Aguirre said.

The high frequency of crashes between cars and pedestrians is characteristic of the dense, 54-square-mile area of the San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley

Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills.
 known by the LAPD as the Devonshire area. In 2007, the area had 88 such accidents, a 21 percent jump from 2005. The West Valley area also had a 21 percent increase in the period, but the next-highest area was North Hollywood, with just an 8 percent increase. The Mission and Foothill areas saw a decline.

Home to wide boulevards, fast-food outlets and tens of thousands of students and residents, the area around California State University, Northridge CSUN offers a variety of programs leading to bachelor's degrees in 61 fields and master's degrees in 42 fields. The university has over 150,000 alumni. It's also home to a summer musical theater/theater program known as TADW (TeenAge Drama Workshop) that leads teenagers through an  is ripe for pedestrian versus auto collisions. Add cell phones to the mix, and you have extremely dangerous Exteremely Dangerous is a 1999 four part series for ITV starring Sean Bean as an ex-MI5 undercover agent convicted of the brutal murder of his wife and child who goes on the run to try and clear his name. He sets out to follow up a strange clue sent to him in prison.  conditions, said Anne Glavin, chief of CSUN's public safety office.

"We see it all the time - pedestrians on cell phones walk off the curb without looking and into the street with oncoming on·com·ing  
adj.
Coming nearer; approaching: an oncoming storm.

n.
An approach; an advance.
 traffic," Glavin said. "Then you also see drivers on cell phones."

The Northridge East Neighborhood Council wants to do more than educate residents about the high number of pedestrian-related accidents around the campus, Patel said. The group is looking into the costs to install crosswalks with flashing lights Flashing Light is a rhythmic light in which the total duration of the light in each period is clearly shorter than the total duration of the darkness and in which the flashes of light are all of equal duration. , which the city of Glendale has adopted in several areas.

The Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  Department of Transportation is also getting involved. To alert motorists to their speeds near CSUN, the department is installing two digital feedback signs that flash drivers their speeds. The signs, paid for by federal grant money, will go up on Devonshire near Zelzah Avenue and Balboa Boulevard, said department spokesman Bruce Gillman.

In addition to Santos, the following people were struck by cars near CSUN over the past several months:

Olivia Almalel, 33, suffered several spinal injuries after being intentionally plowed down on Dec. 25 by a car that struck her from behind and threw her 35 feet as she crossed Reseda Boulevard near Devonshire Street.

Three men in their 20s were seriously injured Dec. 12 when a car hit them during rush hour at Louise Avenue and Roscoe Boulevard.

Yao Lu, a 22-year-old exchange CSUN student from China, was in a coma for eight days and suffered internal bleeding after being mowed down by a hit-and-run driver hit-and-run driver nconductor que tras atropellar a algn se da a la fuga

hit-and-run driver nchauffard m

hit-and-run driver hit n
 Nov. 3 at Reseda Boulevard and Superior Street.

Another hit-and-run driver killed Johoney Lobos, a 19-year-old CSUN student, on Sept. 23 as she crossed the 10300 block of Lindley Avenue near Devonshire Street. Police caught the 42-year-old driver and charged her with gross vehicle manslaughter while intoxicated in·tox·i·cate  
v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates

v.tr.
1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol.

2.
 and fleeing the scene.

After 74 traffic accidents were reported in and around the campus perimeter in 2006, community outcry forced the school to launch an educational and enforcement campaign targeting motorists and creating safety hazards for pedestrians.

The school's specialized safety program is launched several times a year, with signs flanking the campus alerting motorists to focus on the roads and for pedestrians to use crosswalks.

"This is not a new phenomenon," said Glavin. "I've been at CSUN for seven years, and there have always been these kind of issues in this area."

sue.doyle@dailynews.com

818-713-3741

CAPTION(S):

photo, map

Photo:

(color) California State University, Northridge students Yuesha Li, left, and Yiling Zhou cross as a car turns behind them Monday at the corner of Zelzah Avenue and Lassen Street in Northridge, where a woman was hit and killed hours earlier.

Tina Burch/Staff Photographer

Map:

Northridge
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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 10, 2009
Words:789
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