Blue graphic block with seatbelt icons and text: seatbelts were “controversial” until outcomes beat outrage; speed cameras are in the same phase and work until concrete catches up. Below, paragraph explains why new safety measures feel like overreach and disruption, followed by Ontario examples: seatbelts (1976), booster seats, keeping kids out of the front seat, and smoke-free cars with minors—each became normal once outcomes were clear.
Yellow ripped banner headline: “Real leadership doesn’t feed frustration. It listens to experts, weighs evidence and considers lived experience.” Paragraphs state leadership is holding steady through discomfort and rejecting sensationalism; experts agree ASE reduces harm; communities walking and crossing daily confirm it. Bold line: “Lived experience matters,” with examples of parents, disabled neighbours, elders, school staff, cyclists, and pedestrians; concludes their stories are frontline data.
Blue headline bar. Body: bold “Bottom line,” stating we’ll take a million ways to reduce speeds—build them now. Next paragraph: until the street makes speeding difficult by design, don’t remove a tool already lowering speeds in school and community safety zones. Closing line: “Cameras are our training wheels. We ditch them when the street can balance on its own.” Black silhouette of Toronto skyline with CN Tower.
Blue header with a trillium graphic. Text: “Make it additive, not subtractive”—fund Complete Streets infrastructure now and keep ASE active until concrete catches up; “Why” paragraph says these designs permanently lower operating speeds and ASE is the bridge. Second section: “If you insist on deactivation,” fund and deploy interim protection the same week; “Why” explains removing deterrence without substitution lets speeds creep back up.
#SchoolZones #TrafficCalming #SpeedCameras #ASE #SafeStreets #RoadSafety #DataOverDrama #PhysicsOverPolitics #KidsFirst #Transparency #FairProcess #CompleteStreets #BYCS #BicycleMayor #HumanInfrastructure #Ontario #ONPoli #VisionZero