Memorial Bike Ride to the DOT Headquarters on the One Year Anniversary of Elizabeth Padilla's Death

June 9, 2006
Noah Budnick 1 646-873-6022

What: A memorial for Elizabeth Padilla followed by a group ride to DOT Commissioner Iris Weinshall's office in Manhattan to call for stronger bike safety measures

Where: In front of 79 Fifth Avenue, at the corner of Prospect Place, Park Slope, Brooklyn

When: Friday, June 9th, 8:00 am

Who: Park Slope Neighbors, Transportation Alternatives, Park Slope Civic Council, Councilmembers David Yassky and Bill DeBlasio and Community Board 6, and neighborhood cyclists

On June 9, 2005, 28-year-old pro bono lawyer and Park Slope resident Elizabeth Kasulis Padilla was hit by a truck and killed on the corner of Fifth Avenue and Prospect Place while riding her bicycle to her new job at the Brooklyn Bar Association.

One year later, members of Park Slope Neighbors, Transportation Alternatives, the Park Slope Civic Council and Visual Resistance, along with elected officials, local bike commuters and members of Elizabeth’s family will gather to honor her and to announce bicycle safety improvements that the NYC Department of Transportation has agreed to make on Fifth Avenue between Carroll and Dean Streets.

After the brief memorial, cyclists will ride to DOT headquarters in Manhattan at 40 Worth Street. There, Commissioner Iris Weinshall will be presented with flowers and requests from cyclists for safe streets for bike riding in Brooklyn and stronger street design standards to encourage bicycle commuting by better protecting New Yorkers on bikes.

*****
Elizabeth Padilla worked as a pro bono lawyer and legal services coordinator with the Brooklyn Bar Association and was a tireless volunteer with a number of organizations. After graduating from Cornell, Ms. Padilla spurned a six-figure starting salary with a Silicon Valley law firm to do poverty law. She worked at the Family Center in New York, providing pro bono legal services to indigent persons suffering from terminal illnesses, primarily people living with HIV-AIDS. She volunteered for Human Rights Watch, taught English as a second language to immigrant high school students, and worked in a soup kitchen run by New York Cares. A cyclist, swimmer and marathoner, as well as a personal trainer, Ms. Padilla was a member of the Achilles Club, an organization that enables people with all sorts of disabilities to participate in mainstream athletics.

thepadilla.com/LizkP/Lizindex.html
washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/29/AR2005062902889.html
naparstek.com/2005/06/brooklyn-neighborhood-cyclist-killed.php
visualresistance.org/wordpress/ghostbikes/memorials/elizabeth-padilla

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Submitted by forrest on December 12, 2007 - 12:12. categories [ ]