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  3. Cyclists may be right to run stop signs and red lights. Here’s why

Cyclists may be right to run stop signs and red lights. Here’s why

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Canada
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  • M monogram@feddit.nl

    Totally, why would you want to stop at a stop sign as a cyclist it’s not like you’re driving 50km/h

    C This user is from outside of this forum
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    Cyborganism
    wrote on last edited by
    #18

    Yeah as long as you slow down a bit to check if there’s incoming cars or pedestrians you’re fine.

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
    • kevincox@lemmy.mlK This user is from outside of this forum
      kevincox@lemmy.mlK This user is from outside of this forum
      kevincox@lemmy.ml
      wrote on last edited by
      #19

      How is this faulty? The degree of damage is incredibly relevant. We don’t make everything that could ever cause damage illegal, because we have nothing left. Laws are a balancing act of pros and cons to society.

      A car has far less visibility (they are inside a box with a few windows) will will do far more damage if they hit someone. A cyclist has dramatically better visibility (they have basically an unobstructed 180° view) and especially when going slow is very unlikely to cause significant damage (posing risk of significant harm only the the most frail and elderly).

      If not requiring complete stops for cyclists leads to 1% more cyclists on the road (because their travel is easier) it almost certainly causes less harm overall due to how dangerous cars are and also their indirect health effects (both inactivity when driving and the pollution).

      So no, the logic isn’t faulty at all and probably one of the most important arguments.

      G 1 Reply Last reply
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      • ikidd@lemmy.worldI ikidd@lemmy.world

        Furthermore, the efficiency of cycling depends on maintaining speed.

        That’s some pretty specious logic. I would use less fuel if I didn’t foolishly waste it stopping at red lights too.

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        periodicallypedantic@lemmy.ca
        wrote on last edited by
        #20

        It terms of the energy that the human puts in, which is a pretty big factor in how people choose their modes of transportation

        1 Reply Last reply
        6
        • ikidd@lemmy.worldI ikidd@lemmy.world

          Furthermore, the efficiency of cycling depends on maintaining speed.

          That’s some pretty specious logic. I would use less fuel if I didn’t foolishly waste it stopping at red lights too.

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          fireretardant@lemmy.world
          wrote on last edited by
          #21

          I think it is a little different given the physical demand of starting and stopping is on the person rather than on machinery. Adding say a dozen stops to what would have otherwise been relatively smooth speed on a bicycle will significantly increase the energy expended by the person cycling.

          W C 2 Replies Last reply
          9
          • ikidd@lemmy.worldI ikidd@lemmy.world

            Furthermore, the efficiency of cycling depends on maintaining speed.

            That’s some pretty specious logic. I would use less fuel if I didn’t foolishly waste it stopping at red lights too.

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            corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
            wrote on last edited by
            #22

            You’re gonna get a bike-splanation on that.

            1 Reply Last reply
            2
            • F fireretardant@lemmy.world

              I think it is a little different given the physical demand of starting and stopping is on the person rather than on machinery. Adding say a dozen stops to what would have otherwise been relatively smooth speed on a bicycle will significantly increase the energy expended by the person cycling.

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              washedupcynic@lemmy.ca
              wrote on last edited by
              #23

              This right here. I stress fractured my ankle making hard stops over and over and over.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • M monogram@feddit.nl

                As a Dutch citizen: NO, stop at red!

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                psx_crab@lemmy.zip
                wrote on last edited by
                #24

                In a lot of place around the world where a green light needed to be triggered by metalic object, then the rule is really : Stop at red, only go when it’s safe. Else you will wait forever. In Netherland, the development favour cyclist and pedestrian so it’s best to follow the existing rule, as the experience is already smooth.

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • F fireretardant@lemmy.world

                  Drivers will criticize cyclists while drivers themselves rarely stop for a right turn on red and rarely make a full stop at a stop sign

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                  psx_crab@lemmy.zip
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #25

                  Just look around in this thread and you will find driver talking as if all cyclist is bad.

                  A 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • I This user is from outside of this forum
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                    indridcold@lemmy.ca
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #26

                    As a driver, I want to know what to expect from bike riders. Having them follow the same rules on the road cars do just makes sense.

                    T 1 Reply Last reply
                    5
                    • J jillyb@beehaw.org

                      When traffic infrastructure is geared toward you and your safety, it’s easy and natural to follow the rules. If the traffic infrastructure is designed to make life convenient for car drivers while neglecting cyclists’ safety, don’t expect them to respect the rules over their own judgement.

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                      auli@lemmy.ca
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #27

                      Cool and when they get hit don’t blame the car drivers like they always do.

                      J 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • I indridcold@lemmy.ca

                        As a driver, I want to know what to expect from bike riders. Having them follow the same rules on the road cars do just makes sense.

                        T This user is from outside of this forum
                        T This user is from outside of this forum
                        Triumph
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #28

                        If cyclists are allowed to run stops, it better damn well go hand in hand with a requirement that they wear a fuck ton of hi vis and lights, and that if there is an accident between a car and a cyclist when the cyclist is running a stop, the driver bears zero responsibility.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • P psx_crab@lemmy.zip

                          Just look around in this thread and you will find driver talking as if all cyclist is bad.

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                          A This user is from outside of this forum
                          auli@lemmy.ca
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #29

                          A lot of them are. Just roll through stop signs and red lights see it alot. And I’m fine but if you get hit it’s on you.

                          P 1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • A auli@lemmy.ca

                            A lot of them are. Just roll through stop signs and red lights see it alot. And I’m fine but if you get hit it’s on you.

                            P This user is from outside of this forum
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                            psx_crab@lemmy.zip
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #30

                            A lot of driver did that as well, didn’t see such language pointed toward them.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            3
                            • A auli@lemmy.ca

                              Cool and when they get hit don’t blame the car drivers like they always do.

                              J This user is from outside of this forum
                              J This user is from outside of this forum
                              jillyb@beehaw.org
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #31

                              Do you get mad if a pedestrian jay-walks across the street? A bike running a light after determining it’s clear is closer to a pedestrian jay-walking than a car running a light.

                              From my perspective, you are saying “the cyclist got hit by a car. But he didn’t act perfectly within the rules that weren’t designed with his safety in mind. Therefore, it’s his fault and not the one driving tons of metal at high speeds.”

                              This isn’t an individual problem, it’s an infrastructure problem. In Amsterdam where it’s so safe they don’t even bother with helmets, they follow the rules. In a place with unsafe cycling infrastructure, only the most risk-tolerant will ride. And they will act more recklessly while ignoring road rules that aren’t built for them. As infrastructure improved, more people will start riding that don’t want to act recklessly and people will want to act within rules that were made for them.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              5
                              • kevincox@lemmy.mlK kevincox@lemmy.ml

                                How is this faulty? The degree of damage is incredibly relevant. We don’t make everything that could ever cause damage illegal, because we have nothing left. Laws are a balancing act of pros and cons to society.

                                A car has far less visibility (they are inside a box with a few windows) will will do far more damage if they hit someone. A cyclist has dramatically better visibility (they have basically an unobstructed 180° view) and especially when going slow is very unlikely to cause significant damage (posing risk of significant harm only the the most frail and elderly).

                                If not requiring complete stops for cyclists leads to 1% more cyclists on the road (because their travel is easier) it almost certainly causes less harm overall due to how dangerous cars are and also their indirect health effects (both inactivity when driving and the pollution).

                                So no, the logic isn’t faulty at all and probably one of the most important arguments.

                                G This user is from outside of this forum
                                G This user is from outside of this forum
                                grabthar@lemmy.world
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #32

                                It’s a faulty argument because it only considers the damage caused by the bike hitting something, not the consequences of other vehicles with the right of way making emergency maneuvers to avoid smearing the idiot who ran the stop. This guy has been sitting on his tenured ass and smelling his own farts for too long.

                                G M 2 Replies Last reply
                                2
                                • G grabthar@lemmy.world

                                  It’s a faulty argument because it only considers the damage caused by the bike hitting something, not the consequences of other vehicles with the right of way making emergency maneuvers to avoid smearing the idiot who ran the stop. This guy has been sitting on his tenured ass and smelling his own farts for too long.

                                  G This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  glibg@lemmy.ca
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #33

                                  Cyclists must still yield to cars ahead of them at stop signs, as well as to pedestrians at all times, and may only enter the intersection when it is clear.

                                  It would still be illegal for a cyclist to roll through a 4 way stop if it wasn’t their turn. My understanding is that they can only treat it as a yield if they have the right of way. Which makes sense.

                                  Ideally cyclists would have their own dedicated infrastructure but until then we need to share the road.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • Otter RaftO Otter Raft

                                    The title is a bit clickbait-y. I went into this one feeling strongly opposed it. Afterwards I’m still not sure, but I get that there’s some nuance to it.

                                    Relevance:

                                    In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

                                    Author: Steve Lorteau | Long-Term Appointment Law Professor, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa

                                    Excerpts:

                                    Interactions between different users on roads are often a source of frustration, the most prominent being those between motorists and cyclists.

                                    For example, many motorists are frustrated when they see bicycles cross an intersection without coming to a complete stop, which drivers are required to do.

                                    As a professor of law at the University of Ottawa who specializes in urban law issues, I have studied various regulatory approaches that have been adopted around the world, each with different advantages and disadvantages.

                                    The uniform application of traffic rules may seem fair, but in reality, it can create a false sense of equality.

                                    On the one hand, the risks associated with different modes of transport are incommensurate. A car that runs a red light can cause serious or even fatal injuries. A cyclist, on the other hand, is unlikely to cause the same degree of damage.

                                    Furthermore, the efficiency of cycling depends on maintaining speed. Having to stop completely over and over discourages people from cycling, despite its many benefits for health, the environment and traffic flow.

                                    Treating two such different modes of transport the same way, therefore, amounts to implicitly favouring cars, something akin to imposing the same speed limit on pedestrians and trucks.

                                    Since 1982, cyclists in Idaho have been able to treat a stop sign as a yield sign and a red light as a stop sign. Several American states (such as Arkansas, Colorado, and Oregon) and countries, such as France and Belgium, have adopted similar regulations.

                                    In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

                                    It’s important to note that the goal of the Idaho stop rule is not to legalize chaos on the roads. Cyclists must still yield to cars ahead of them at stop signs, as well as to pedestrians at all times, and may only enter the intersection when it is clear.

                                    F This user is from outside of this forum
                                    F This user is from outside of this forum
                                    fourish@lemmy.world
                                    wrote on last edited by fourish@lemmy.world
                                    #34

                                    Bike how you want, but if you fail to follow the established rules for vehicles on the road and get injured, it’s totally on you.

                                    N acargitzT M 3 Replies Last reply
                                    2
                                    • Otter RaftO Otter Raft

                                      The title is a bit clickbait-y. I went into this one feeling strongly opposed it. Afterwards I’m still not sure, but I get that there’s some nuance to it.

                                      Relevance:

                                      In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

                                      Author: Steve Lorteau | Long-Term Appointment Law Professor, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa

                                      Excerpts:

                                      Interactions between different users on roads are often a source of frustration, the most prominent being those between motorists and cyclists.

                                      For example, many motorists are frustrated when they see bicycles cross an intersection without coming to a complete stop, which drivers are required to do.

                                      As a professor of law at the University of Ottawa who specializes in urban law issues, I have studied various regulatory approaches that have been adopted around the world, each with different advantages and disadvantages.

                                      The uniform application of traffic rules may seem fair, but in reality, it can create a false sense of equality.

                                      On the one hand, the risks associated with different modes of transport are incommensurate. A car that runs a red light can cause serious or even fatal injuries. A cyclist, on the other hand, is unlikely to cause the same degree of damage.

                                      Furthermore, the efficiency of cycling depends on maintaining speed. Having to stop completely over and over discourages people from cycling, despite its many benefits for health, the environment and traffic flow.

                                      Treating two such different modes of transport the same way, therefore, amounts to implicitly favouring cars, something akin to imposing the same speed limit on pedestrians and trucks.

                                      Since 1982, cyclists in Idaho have been able to treat a stop sign as a yield sign and a red light as a stop sign. Several American states (such as Arkansas, Colorado, and Oregon) and countries, such as France and Belgium, have adopted similar regulations.

                                      In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

                                      It’s important to note that the goal of the Idaho stop rule is not to legalize chaos on the roads. Cyclists must still yield to cars ahead of them at stop signs, as well as to pedestrians at all times, and may only enter the intersection when it is clear.

                                      D This user is from outside of this forum
                                      D This user is from outside of this forum
                                      dubyakay@lemmy.ca
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #35

                                      As someone that has been living in Montreal for the past four years, which locale this article brings up numerous times, and biking about 350/365 days a year, I have to highlight a couple things to readers not from Montreal, or maybe even from the other side of the pond:

                                      • Canada doesn’t know what yield signs are. Stop signs are on every corner, which are mostly handled as if they were yield signs, but maybe not even that. And this applies to all traffic, not just cyclists.
                                      • Canada also doesn’t know what “right has the right of way” is. In some European countries if you come to an intersection without a light, a yield or stop sign, you simply give way to the vehicle approaching from the right.
                                      • The individual boroughs have a lot of disconnect between each other on how traffic is handled. While they are trying to have a unified approach, there’s a lot of Balkanization.
                                      • Much of the infra is dated. A remainder of design from the 60s and 70s that had patchwork applied to make it more livable. Things like green wave, automated traffic control or elevated pedestrian crossings and bicycle lanes at intersections are unheard of. Most lights are just set to a fixed cycle and have been operating like the same way for years.
                                      • Intersections, especially with new developments, will have very sharp corners with narrow sidewalk, with greatly reduced visibility.

                                      So that said, I rarely ever see the NYC courier style red-light skips between columns of cars by cyclists. Whenever I see that happen, it’s trashy people that seem to have little regard for anything, even their own lives.
                                      I do see cyclists regularly doing Idaho stops at full stop intersections, but it’s the same as cars. I think this is a traffic design issue and not an issue with driving culture or cyclists in general. Stop signs are simply a bad design, and this has been elaborated on many times.

                                      I also see a lot of people ride on the e-bike bixi fleet recklessly. They provide far too much speed assist with minimal effort. The same goes with the electric motor bikes with a throttle that somehow pass as e-bike just because they also have the option for pedal assist. However this is not a problem with the vehicles themselves, but rather the lack of education and handling. In most western European nations children are taught how to bike in traffic and adhere to traffic rules at an early age. I can attest to this as I have grown up in Germany, and in grade 4 elementary we had to get our Fahrrad Führerschein, which was basically an attestation of having a course completed, for children.

                                      Avid AmoebaA 1 Reply Last reply
                                      9
                                      • F fourish@lemmy.world

                                        Bike how you want, but if you fail to follow the established rules for vehicles on the road and get injured, it’s totally on you.

                                        N This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        nouveau_burnswick@lemmy.world
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #36

                                        Who is it on if you completely follow the established rules of the road and get injured?

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        7
                                        • Otter RaftO Otter Raft

                                          The title is a bit clickbait-y. I went into this one feeling strongly opposed it. Afterwards I’m still not sure, but I get that there’s some nuance to it.

                                          Relevance:

                                          In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

                                          Author: Steve Lorteau | Long-Term Appointment Law Professor, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa

                                          Excerpts:

                                          Interactions between different users on roads are often a source of frustration, the most prominent being those between motorists and cyclists.

                                          For example, many motorists are frustrated when they see bicycles cross an intersection without coming to a complete stop, which drivers are required to do.

                                          As a professor of law at the University of Ottawa who specializes in urban law issues, I have studied various regulatory approaches that have been adopted around the world, each with different advantages and disadvantages.

                                          The uniform application of traffic rules may seem fair, but in reality, it can create a false sense of equality.

                                          On the one hand, the risks associated with different modes of transport are incommensurate. A car that runs a red light can cause serious or even fatal injuries. A cyclist, on the other hand, is unlikely to cause the same degree of damage.

                                          Furthermore, the efficiency of cycling depends on maintaining speed. Having to stop completely over and over discourages people from cycling, despite its many benefits for health, the environment and traffic flow.

                                          Treating two such different modes of transport the same way, therefore, amounts to implicitly favouring cars, something akin to imposing the same speed limit on pedestrians and trucks.

                                          Since 1982, cyclists in Idaho have been able to treat a stop sign as a yield sign and a red light as a stop sign. Several American states (such as Arkansas, Colorado, and Oregon) and countries, such as France and Belgium, have adopted similar regulations.

                                          In Québec and other parts of Canada, discussions are underway to adopt such regulations.

                                          It’s important to note that the goal of the Idaho stop rule is not to legalize chaos on the roads. Cyclists must still yield to cars ahead of them at stop signs, as well as to pedestrians at all times, and may only enter the intersection when it is clear.

                                          W This user is from outside of this forum
                                          W This user is from outside of this forum
                                          we_all_live_in_a_capital_i@lemmy.ca
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #37

                                          Permission to exercise discretion does not mean cyclists will blindly roll through danger. No one is more aware of the risk of cycling in traffic than cyclists. Riding defensively is a necessary state of mind. A rule change will have no effect on that.

                                          M 1 Reply Last reply
                                          13

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