LOS ANGELES – Mayor Karen Bass announced hundreds of new street safety improvements installed by the City to make it safer for children and families to walk safely to and from school. Improvements include installing new speed humps, signage and intersection treatments which help ensure drivers are traveling slowly and with control near schools. Last year, Mayor Bass announced the first installation of street safety infrastructure along with historic hiring of crossing guards.
“As the school year begins, the City has doubled down and completed hundreds of new street improvements to keep families and children safe as they get to and from school,” said Mayor Bass. “We will do all that we can to continue to make communities safer and focus on ensuring a safe experience for students this year.”
Under Mayor Bass’ leadership, the City has completed installation of projects and taken action to make areas around schools safer, including:
- Establishing School Slow Zones with reduced 15 mph speed limit at 625 schools, including 343 new street segments near 201 schools ahead of the new school year.
- Completing 469 speed hump or steed table installations near 117 schools since 2023 – with 30 new schools receiving speed humps over the recent summer break.
- Installing safety improvements including quick-build intersection tightening, new “No Right Turn on Red” restrictions, and Leading Pedestrian Intervals at more than 75 schools.
- Deploying nearly 500 crossing guards to help escort elementary and middle-school students across busy corridors.
“This expanded school safety program scales our ongoing efforts to address dangerous speeds and driving behavior that put young lives at risk,” said LADOT General Manager Laura Rubio-Cornejo. “Under Mayor Bass and the City Council’s leadership, this initiative has delivered improvements at hundreds of schools to reduce driver speed and ensure children can get to school safe and ready to learn.”
Last week, Mayor Bass announced that more than 110,000 Angelenos came to Summer Night Lights. Part of Mayor Bass’ comprehensive approach to public safety, Summer Night Lights is a program that provides safe and community-centered programming as a means to prevent violence in neighborhoods throughout Los Angeles. Crime is down in Los Angeles and the city is on pace to reach a 60 year low in homicides.