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Ok, I'm going to say up front what this post is. It is a rant, followed by a legitimate idea thought of while ranting about the problem in my car. To understand the motivation behind the idea, you just have to hear the rant first. If you prefer your HB reading experience to be light on rants, skip the
next
paragraph, and it'll be rant free from there on.
So I was driving down the main road that cuts through the Gonzaga University campus. I drive down this road frequently, for both business and personal travel. There are crosswalks at each of 8 intersections along this annoyingly-long stretch of road, 2 at each intersection in fact. During certain times of day, this stretch of road becomes heavily congested with motorized traffic, and also heavily congested with pedestrian traffic. Now, we all know what a crosswalk means. It means pedestrians have the legal right of way and a car can't move until there are no pedestrians in the crosswalk. There is no burden upon the pedestrians to look around and realize that car has been stopped for over 5 minutes waiting for an unending stream of college students and let the poor car pass. Oh no.
End rant. Deep breath in... deep breath out. Ok.
So the idea is a change in right-of-way law to only require a vehicle to allow up to 5 pedestrians to cross before said vehicle can cross. So in a long line of pedestrians, every 5 must stop and let one car cross in each direction, if cars are waiting. Should speed things up a bit and restore a bit of fairness to the system. That is all.
[link]
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What happens if a pedestrian mis-counts the people
in front of him? Would women with pushchairs
count as two?
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Surely on busy streets, crossing lights are normally
used that balance pedestrian and traffic rights of
way? |
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If you can't count 5, you shouldn't be out in public without supervision. And this is for crossings that don't have lights. I'd say a pushchair counts as two. |
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Because of the wording of the title, I'm waiting for
the Borg to associate this Idea with something
known as a "bag limit" |
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I hate to say this, but cars don't have any more
right to the road than the pedestrians. Or
cyclists. Or skateboarders. If it's really a problem
for you, route around the pedestrian area.
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If you need to get somewhere inside it, park on
the fringes and become one of the pedestrians.
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As MB said, if it's really causing traffic problems (as
opposed to just delaying you for a minute or two)
petition the town/university (depending on
whose
road it is) to put in a light, or under/overpass as
appropriate.
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And as far as counting to five (or ten, or twenty),
pedestrians aren't a single file line. If four step off
the curb at once (from one direction) and three
step of the curb from the other, which two are
required to step back and let the others go? And
how long is that going to take to negotiate while
you're waiting on people standing in the middle of
the lane? |
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Like many such laws, it should be a 'use your best judgement' kind of law. |
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Ah yes, the old "saunter-by" shooting scenario.
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The annoyance is more probably from the feeling of being swarmed than from lost time... so the obvious solution is to electrify the body panels. |
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//I hate to say this, but cars don't have any more right to
the road than the pedestrians. Or cyclists.//
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By that logic shouldn't cars have just as much of a right to
use the road as pedestrians? 21 is even offering pedestrian
a 5:1 advantage over cars. That seems fair to me
especially since, logically, cars should have the rught of
way. Think about it - cars sittin in line cause traffic
backups, burn gas, hurt the environment and a distrcte
driver can easily kill a pedestrian even if they do have the
right of way. |
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//It means pedestrians have the legal right of way
and a car can't move until there are no pedestrians
in the crosswalk.//
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I don't know about your local laws, but in Californee
at least that's not exactly true. You can proceed
through a crosswalk as long as you're not interfering
with or endangering any pedestrians in the
crosswalk. So if a pedestrian is a good twenty yards
away and there's no way he or she will get to you
before you completely pass, you can drive on
through. Likewise, if the only pedestrian in the
crosswalk has already crossed past your vehicle's
path, you may proceed with impunity.
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Anyway, as others have pointed out, there are far better
solutions to this problem, and no pedestrianleast of all a
bunch of college studentsis going to bother obeying this
law since it's effectively unenforceable anyway (Some cop is
going to sit there at the intersection counting the number
of pedestrians crossing and determining which one was sixth
in line? Yeah right.) If it's at an intersection, simply make it
a controlled intersection and problem solved. If it's just a
crosswalk in the middle of a stretch of road, put in a light
that goes from green to flashing red when the crossing
button is pushed. |
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In Maine the protocol is that a pedestrian must stop at the
curb
before entering the crosswalk and a driver must stop for a
pedestrian who is at the curb or in the crosswalk. Maine,
however, does not suffer from a great deal of crosswalk
congestion. In rural areas there is no clearly defined
pedestrian crossing protocol that I'm aware of, but in speed
limit zones of 35mph or less use of the crosswalk protocol
is common practice. My town, for instance, has three
crosswalks, but we mostly just cross wherever our paths
intersect the road and people mostly aren't run down like
roadkill. |
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"I met her on a crossing and my car stood still.
da do, rant, rant, rant, do do, rant, rant"
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(sung to tune of famous Crystals song of 1963) |
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//stopped for over 5 minutes// Oh, you poor dear. |
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There are a lot of laws which are supposedly unenforceable. Doesn't mean they're bad laws. |
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I've looked but am unable to find the link to the student stunt where they kept going through the crosswalk, down the stairs to the subterranean crossing, back to the other side and up and across again, in an endless loop, some changing shirts on the way to further the illusion. |
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I confess, I did think "bag limit" when I read the title.
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No kittens or ferrets for me, I prefer a puppy.
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Cow-catcher on the front of the car. These are just
Gonzaga students, after all... |
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