Los Angeles, California, has caused a significant amount of environmental damage as it has expanded. It has seemed the iconic imagery and sense of opportunity that the city provides came with an inherent cost.
But now the L.A. City Council has taken an impressive new approach, which looks set to change L.A. for very much the better, whilst also maintaining what has made it great.
Leaders have endorsed sweeping changes to the arrangements of roads in the city, including some of its major boulevards, including adding more bike and bus lanes, and removing car lanes.
The policy approach is called Mobility Plan 2035, and among its goals will be to improve travel efficiency and safety for pedestrians and cyclists, whilst also enticing people to stop driving cars. It specifically intends to reduce the fatality rate from traffic collisions to zero within 20 years, making L.A. a greater city to live in.
City Councillor Mike Bonin, a lead supporter of the plan, says L.A. currently has a "legacy of shame" in the number of children and senior citizens who have died on the city's roads. He points out that at present, 80 percent of residents who are hit by a car travelling at 65kmh are killed.