Metro

Woman hit by cyclist sues city for $3M

A beautiful Brooklyn stage actress who was mowed down last summer in a near-fatal collision with a bicyclist is suing the city for $3 million, claiming Prospect Park has become a hazard to pedestrians due to speeding cyclists, The Post has learned.

Dana Jacks, 37, who recently was a cast member in a critically acclaimed Off-Broadway production of “Our Town,” said her crackup with cyclist David Sonenberg left her with brain trauma and face and skull fractures that kept her hospitalized for 25 days.

In her notice of claim, Jacks blames the city’s Parks Department and NYPD for their “negligent, careless and reckless” lack of traffic enforcement inside the bucolic greenspace, court documents show.

“You don’t allow cars to race in the park; you shouldn’t allow bikes to race, either,” Jacks’ husband, Forrest Cicogni, said at a meeting of a new city-task force to improve park-traffic safety.

He later compared navigating bike lanes to a game of “Frogger.”

The suit comes as the city is dealing with a rise in both cycling-related accidents in Prospect Park, and complaints that some bikers have turned the park’s popular circular roadway into their private raceway.

“Just because they wear spandex doesn’t mean they know what they’re doing,” Windsor Terrace dad-of-three Henry Astor said of the cyclists..

“I’m a hard-core cyclist, and I’m telling you these guys are out of control, and it’s threatening my children’s safety.”

City officials have recently instituted a pilot program aimed at slowing bike traffic in certain areas, but some residents say it’s done little to slow down speeding cyclists.

Three other pedestrians have been injured in collisions with bikers since Jacks’ accident, including avid power-walker and park volunteer, Linda Cohen, 54, who was struck Nov. 3.

On June 11, Jacks was walking along West Drive — shared by bikers, drivers and pedestrians — when she crossed a bike path at the intersection of Center Drive and West Lake Drive.

Her collision with cyclist Sonenberg, of Park Slope, underscored the “dangerous and hazardous” conditions in the borough’s largest park — where bikers have no speed limits and pedestrians walk at their own risk, the suit claims.

After the accident, Jacks was in Kings County Hospital for more than three weeks — two of them in intensive-care, according to family members.

Jacks, of Windsor Terrace, declined to discuss the case, but said, “My recovery is ongoing but I am receiving excellent rehabilitation.”

The couple last July filed a separate lawsuit in Brooklyn Supreme Court against Sonenberg; he and his wife, Julie, countersued Nov. 7, claiming Jacks was at fault, walking “unlawfully outside the crosswalk” and “knocking him to the ground,” causing him serious injuries.

Sonenberg declined to comment.

City lawyers declined to comment on pending litigation, saying they had not yet received a copy of the lawsuit.

Additional reporting by Amber Sutherland and Cathy Burke