
 
        
         
		Astoria community members call on DOT to study  
 ‘dangerous’ 24th Ave. after death of delivery worker 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 Councilman Costa Constantinides  
 and local community  
 members are calling on the  
 Department of Transportation  
 (DOT) to drastically improve  
 24th Avenue in Astoria, where  
 delivery worker Mario Canales  
 was killed while riding a scooter  
 last month. 
 “For too long, 24th Avenue  
 has functioned like a piecemeal  
 highway, with dangerous  
 turns and cars speeding into  
 the  middle  of  intersections  to  
 check for oncoming traffic,”  
 said Constantinides. “The DOT  
 must look at this avenue, from  
 21st Street all the way to where  
 it meets the Grand Central  
 Parkway at 37th Street, and  
 determine what measures will  
 improve the health and safety  
 of all Astoria residents.” 
 During a Zoom press conference, 
  Constantinides said  
 he made a formal request for  
 the study in a letter to the  
 DOT on Oct. 13. The Astoria  
 native outlined some of the issues  
 of 24th Avenue, noting the  
 two-way street is still used by  
 trucks from 21st to 29th streets,  
 despite measures to prevent  
 the vehicles from getting stuck  
 as  they  approach  the  Robert  
 F. Kennedy Bridge (formerly  
 known as the Triborough  
 Bridge). 
 He  said  he  followed  up  on  
 a previous request from last  
 year, asking the DOT to find  
 an alternative route for large  
 trucks, given the current path’s  
 proximity to an elementary  
 school. 
 Mario Canales, who was a  
 27-year-old father of two living  
 in Woodside, was traveling  
 eastbound on 24th Avenue  
 while operating a 2020 Yamaha  
 Chappy Scooter on Sept. 23, according  
 to the NYPD Highway  
 District’s Collision Investigation  
 Squad.  He  was  approaching  
 the  intersection  at  33rd  
 Street — with no traffic signal  
 — when he struck a white 2005  
 Chrysler Town & Country, police  
 said. 
 Canales was heading back  
 to his restaurant at the time of  
 the crash. 
 “We’re seeing buildings going  
 up, we’re seeing new businesses  
 added to the streetscape.  
 We’re not seeing the traffic  
 calming, and the street design  
 keep up with what is happening  
 in  the  community,”  said  Constantinides. 
  “As we’re seeing  
 new buildings go up, as we’re  
 seeing  new  things  happening,  
 there has to be a response.” 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.18     COM   |   OCT. 23-OCT. 29, 2020 
 A DOT spokesperson told  
 QNS they’re received the requests  
 from Constantinides. 
 “We are reviewing the  
 requests from the Council  
 member and the advocates,” a  
 spokesperson said. 
 Senate  Deputy  Leader  Michael  
 Gianaris backed Constantinides’ 
  call for a safer 24th  
 Avenue. 
 “Fatal crashes are unacceptable  
 and  we  need  to  take  
 action to prevent further senseless  
 deaths,”  said Gianaris.  “I  
 urge the DOT to implement  
 desperately needed safety measures  
 as soon as possible.” 
 Constantinides  was  joined  
 by Chair of Community Board  
 1 Marie Torniali, Queens Organizer  
 for Transportation Alternatives  
 Juan Restrepo, Julie  
 Huntington of Families for Safe  
 Streets as well as a representative  
 from Assembly member  
 Aravella Simotas’ office. 
 Simotas urged for the DOT  
 to conduct a full traffic study. 
 “There’s  no  question  that  
 drivers treat many parts of  
 Astoria as open roads. So, it is  
 prudent and important to study  
 each major avenue and street  
 with an eye towards installing  
 new traffic calming measures  
 and improving public safety,” 
  said Simotas. “Mariano  
 Canales deserves justice. Astoria’s  
 pedestrians,  bicyclists  
 and drivers deserve safe streets  
 and the DOT should meet its  
 responsibility of studying 24th  
 Avenue and making whatever  
 changes are needed to prevent  
 unnecessary, future tragedies.  
 This  is  the  responsible  thing  
 to do.” 
 Constantinides  and  advocates  
 say 24th Avenue is particularly  
 dangerous from 31st  
 to 37th Street, due to the road’s  
 diagonal pathway, on a hill and  
 feeding  into  Grand  Central  
 Parkway. 
 They  say  cars  will  often  
 speed down side streets, stop  
 deep  into  the  intersection,  
 and look for oncoming traffic.  
 Meanwhile a limited view on  
 the street has presented serious  
 safety risks to pedestrians,  
 cyclists and drivers. 
 “I walk many times to work  
 from  23rd  Street  and  24th Avenue, 
  all the way to 37th … it  
 is a scary, scary walk,” said  
 Torniali. “I think it’s long overdue  
 that they study the street,  
 which is for the majority of  
 residential street.” 
 Advocates cited the DOT’s  
 past success in partnering with  
 the community to mitigate dangerous  
 traffic on Hobart Street  
 from 30th to 31st avenues. 
 Photo via Google Maps 
 “The death of working  
 cyclist Mario Canales was  
 preventable, and we implore  
 the city to take swift action  
 to ensure this never happens  
 again,” said Restrepo. “We  
 know that improvements like  
 daylighting street corners to  
 improve  visibility  at  intersections, 
  creating protected bike  
 lanes, and other Vision Zero  
 measures are proven to reduce  
 crashes and save lives.” 
 Huntington said Astoria  
 residents, whether they’re  
 walking,  cycling  or  riding  in  
 a car, know how dangerous  
 24th Avenue is. She also emphasized  
 how Families for Safe  
 Streets members have all been  
 tragically  impacted  by  traffic  
 violence. 
 “My dad was one of the  
 38,800  people  who  were  killed  
 by traffic violence in the United  
 States last year. Dad was killed  
 just a few days before what  
 should have been a celebration  
 of 46 years of marriage with my  
 mom. His death,  like  so many  
 others, was completely preventable,” 
  she said. “It should not  
 take a sudden, senseless and  
 violent  death,  like  my  dad’s,  
 to change the way that large  
 commercial vehicles are regulated  
 on our roads and in our  
 neighborhood.”