• baconisaveg@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Edmonton has a ton of crosswalks across 60kph roads, with flashing lights that indicate drivers must slow down to 35kph (and obviously stop if there’s a pedestrian in the cross walk).

    The problem is a lot of cyclists don’t bother to hit the button, then just keep barreling straight on through.

    • Someone@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      They might have different laws in Ontario but in BC that’s also the way to do it.

      If they’re on the bike they’re considered a vehicle and have to cross the road in the same way a car would*.

      If they’re walking the bike they’re treated as a pedestrian and must walk across the crosswalk

      *( There are exceptions, such as multi use trails, but they are either clearly marked to both the road and trail users or they have a stop sign for cyclists)

    • anachronist@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      The problem is a lot of cyclists don’t bother to hit the button, then just keep barreling straight on through.

      So they should be expected to stop the bike, get off of it, go push a button, then go back to the bike at every single intersection? Maybe the “problem” is this horrible, cyclist-unfriendly crosswalk design.

      • baconisaveg@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        When I was a kid, we were taught to get off our bike and walk it across the street. Jesus Christ you sound like an entitled twat.

        • frostbiker@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          You know, you are right. Since pressing beg buttons is not such an inconvenience, why don’t we make car drivers press them instead and let pedestrians continue unimpeded like cars do today?

        • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I’ll take a shot at de-escalating this thread…

          What you’re remembering is reasonable because you were a kid and probably biking on a sidewalk, which is generally not what commuting cyclists use. I (and perhaps @frostbiker) are thinking of a crossover at a multi-use trail which are designed for cyclists to commute along.

          Surely if you want people to drive less (which is a good thing for all commuters, especially those who drive!) then wouldn’t it behoove municipalities to design infrastructure that’s conducive to efficiently cycling, right? To me, having to stop at every single road crossing is incredibly discouraging. Can you imagine if every light on your commute was red?

          • baconisaveg@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Surely if you want people to drive less (which is a good thing for all commuters, especially those who drive!) then wouldn’t it behoove municipalities to design infrastructure that’s conducive to efficiently cycling, right?

            And there is, except in cases where it isn’t. In cases where it isn’t, it’s in your best interests to stop and push the button (you don’t need to get off your bike, it’s on a pole).

            To me, having to stop at every single road crossing is incredibly discouraging.

            The alternative is expecting a vehicle doing 60km/s to stop on a dime. I don’t want to hit a cyclist, but jesus it’s like some of them go out of their way to avoid safety measures.

            Can you imagine if every light on your commute was red?

            Can you imagine if cars treated every red light like it was a yield?

            • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              And there is, except in cases where it isn’t.

              In my experience as a driver, pedestrian, and cyclist, is that good cycling infrastructure is the exception, not the rule. Do you really think we generally have good cycling infrastructure in Canada?

              The alternative is expecting a vehicle doing 60km/s to stop on a dime.

              That’s a false dichotomy. What if drivers were simply required to slow to a crawl (yield) at certain intersections, rather than cyclists having to completely stop to press a button, and then wait for the light to change?

              Can you imagine if cars treated every red light like it was a yield?

              Yes, I can, because that’s how most drivers treat stop signs. I don’t like generalizing drivers or cyclists, but “jesus it’s like some of them go out of their way to avoid safety measures” could apply to all types of road users. Heck, just ten minutes ago on the drive home from the gym, some idiot in a car pulled out in front of me from a drive, into a busy, snow-covered street at the bottom of an overpass and I had to brake heavily to avoid turning his passenger side door into a modern art sculpture.

              • baconisaveg@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                I don’t like generalizing drivers or cyclists, but “jesus it’s like some of them go out of their way to avoid safety measures” could apply to all types of road users.

                Neither do I, but I’m not advocating for treating red lights/stop signs as yields, nor am I complaining about how stopping at them is a major inconvenience for me.

                For reference, this is the crosswalk I’m talking about: https://maps.app.goo.gl/BfiysRy4uVC511zFA

                That’s a 60kph zone with a bend and a tree line that can make cyclists hard to see when they don’t feel like stopping. You’re perfectly entitled to feel that stopping to push the button is inconvenient, but you can’t turn around and complain about the number of cyclists hit by cars each year when they willingly avoid safety precautions.

                • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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                  1 year ago

                  Why do you present a false dichotomy again, this time between cyclists crossing a dangerous road without stopping, or coming to a complete stop? I can think of at least two or three other solutions off the top of my head:

                  1. Lower the speed limit of the road and improve visibility so that commuters can see one another.

                  2. Place a yield sign so that drivers are legally required to slow to a speed at which they could safely stop if necessary.

                  3. Build an overpass or an underpass so that the lanes don’t cross on the same plane.

                  If we can agree that the current infrastructure is suboptimal, let’s focus on improving the infrastructure rather than assigning blame. Improving the infrastructure helps all road users.

                  • baconisaveg@lemmy.ca
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                    1 year ago

                    All of your suggestions inconvenience others for your own benefit. You’re demanding the infrastructure change simply so that you don’t have to come to a stop to push a button, and yet I am not the one asking for cities without red lights, stop signs, train crossings, and traffic slowdowns.