The aftermath of a crash within the Bronx in April 2023.
File Picture by Dean Moses
Only a 12 months in the past, my life turned the wrong way up instantly. I used to be crossing the road with the right-of-way when a driver struck me and practically killed me. Within the months since, my life has been consumed by restoration from catastrophic accidents: collapsed lungs that compelled me to hold my very own blood in a briefcase, and in depth facial reconstruction after harm so extreme my jawbones had been described by my physician as “cottage cheese” from the wheels working over my head.
Gov. Kathy Hochul has proposed modifications to legal guidelines regulating auto insurance coverage in New York. These proposals are being offered as a repair to affordability, however the actuality is that they revictimize folks like me who had been severely injured via no fault of our personal.
This crash value me my independence, my profession, and the life I as soon as knew. Once I first regained consciousness, an instantaneous concern was the overwhelming monetary burden I knew was forward. The motive force accountable carried minimal insurance coverage, and it was solely via my very own restricted well being protection that I used to be in a position to restore any diploma of stability to my day-to-day life.
It’s unjust for New York to additional hurt the injured by stripping away our entry to the courts and denying accountability. It’s outrageous that the governor is making an attempt to remove my rights when present insurance coverage minimums don’t even start to cowl the price of my hospitalization. These priorities are deeply offensive to victims of harmful drivers.
If policymakers actually wish to make New York extra reasonably priced, they need to concentrate on stopping crashes, safer streets, actual accountability, and stopping harmful driving.
That’s the reason it’s encouraging {that a} refrain of legislators, clergy and shopper teams are all telling the governor to decelerate.
If the purpose is to cut back premiums, Hochul ought to concentrate on stopping crashes earlier than they occur — not leaving victims with traumatic mind accidents, shattered bones, and misplaced limbs to navigate crushing medical payments and a dehumanizing authorized maze. This proposal does nothing to make our streets safer. It merely makes it tougher for injured New Yorkers to heal and shifts the monetary burden onto households and taxpayers who’re already struggling.
Alison Sirico is a Brooklyn-basd arts curator and an advocate for safer streets





