Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In
CA State Assembly

Assemblymember Phil Ting Reintroduces Bill to Decriminalize Jaywalking

One of Sacramento’s poorest neighborhoods doesn’t have enough crosswalks. It also has a high rate of jaywalking arrests. Image: KXTV

Note: GJEL Accident Attorneys regularly sponsors coverage on Streetsblog San Francisco and Streetsblog California. Unless noted in the story, GJEL Accident Attorneys is not consulted for the content or editorial direction of the sponsored content.

Citing statistics that show that jaywalking laws in California are mostly used to cite Black and brown people in California, Assemblymember Phil Ting introduced a new bill, A.B. 2147, to end the practice of stopping and citing pedestrians that pose no danger to themselves or others when they cross a street.

At a press conference on a busy San Francisco street this morning, Assemblymember Ting stated that the "Freedom to Walk" bill, A.B. 2147, would not mean that dangerous behavior is suddenly legal.

"Law enforcement still has every ability to stop and cite anyone who is crossing unsafely," he said. A.B. 2147 simply clarifies that any reasonable person crossing a street in a safe manner has the right to do so.

A similar bill from the same author last year, A.B. 1238, made it all the way through both legislative houses, only to be vetoed by Governor Newsom.

Ting cited data from the city of Beverly Hills, where almost every jaywalking citation issued in the city was handed out to Black people. "Clearly jaywalking laws are being used to dissuade certain people from being in, and walking in, that city," he said.

Ting also mentioned cases in San Clemente and Millbrae in which Kurt Reinhold and Chinedu Okobi were killed by police after what began as a stop for jaywalking, and another case in Sacramento where police beat Nandi Cain for a similar offense. All three of them are Black men, and all three incidents were captured on video.

Rio Scharf, an attorney with the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights, which is sponsoring the bill, said at the press conference that while a citation for jaywalking "might seem minor, it could have a profound impact" on someone's life. In addition to the stark racial disparities in who is usually cited, he said, "current jaywalk laws give law enforcement an excuse to stop anyone they want for engaging in everyday behavior. This can lead to dangerous and even fatal interactions between police and pedestrians, and it can saddle people with debt."

A.B. 2147 "is a safety bill, a justice bill, and an economic justice bill," he said.

Scharf also pointed to data from around the country and globally where jaywalking is not a crime. In many of those places, "pedestrians are safer" than they are in California. "All that jaywalking does is criminalize people; it does not increase safety," he said.

Assemblymember Ting made some changes in response to Newsom's veto of A.B. 1238. "We spent the fall working with the governor's office and the CHP" to resolve their concerns, he told Streetsblog. In contrast to last year's bill, A.B. 2147 "doesn't repeal the jaywalking law," he said. "Instead, it defines when an officer can stop someone." That is, police can still stop a pedestrian for unsafe crossing but only in a situation when "a reasonably careful person would realize there's an immediate danger of collision."

"We don't want anybody to cross the street in a dangerous way," said Ting, but "we also know that when people are in their right mind no one crosses in front of a vehicle. People don't want to get hit by cars."

And, as Ting pointed out, the state is trying to encourage more people to walk, and encourage people to walk more. In areas that lack crosswalks, where a person can legally walk is tightly circumscribed if it is illegal to safely cross a street outside of a crosswalk.

"People shouldn't be cited for reasonable behavior," he said.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

Wednesday’s Headlines

The op/ed on LA Metro is CRAZY.

October 29, 2025

An Olympian Task: Replicating Paris’s Bike Boom in Los Angeles

The Olympics can help transform the streets of Los Angeles — if they look to the example of Paris.

October 28, 2025

Eyes on the Street: North Berkeley BART Bike Improvements

Advocates celebrate another ribbon cutting on some great bike infrastructure to improve connections at North Berkeley BART. It needs more concrete though.

October 28, 2025

LAX Is Spending More Than A Billion Dollars To Make Horseshoe Traffic Worse

LAX roadway expansion is "a zombie project, carried forward solely by inertia, by an airport going through the motions for literally no reason."

October 28, 2025

Crunching Numbers to Curb Crashes: Using Federal Data to Make Our Roads Safer

Upholding federal data transparency is key to understanding and reversing the alarming level of crashes, fatalities, and strained infrastructure. Here's where we have more work to do.

October 27, 2025
See all posts