Quote:
Originally Posted by aberdeen5698
You seem to be living in a different Vancouver than I am. In my travels it's very rare to see a cyclist actually stop at a stop sign unless there's conflicting traffic that has the right of way. Slow down - yes. Look both ways before proceeding - yes. Be able to stop if necessary - yes. But full stop even with no conflicting traffic? No.
In other words, what most cyclists are doing right now is what the new law would make legal.
Now the new law may cause some cyclists not to slow down as much, so I suppose there could be some increase in accidents. But I doubt it would be very significant and I think it's something that ought to at least be tried rather than just assuming it won't work.
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I suppose the definition of a full stop could mean different things to different people. To one person that might entail putting both feet on the ground, while another might consider keeping both feet on the pedals with no movement as a full stop. So everyone could watch a stop sign and all the cyclists and come to different conclusions on who stopped and who didn't.
And maybe this would work, as you said in your view most people just act like the new rule would allow. But is that because they are just pushing the law to the limit and slightly beyond. That if you raise that bar that they will push it even further.
Right now the speed limit for traffic on Knight street is 50km/h. Yet everyone knows the traffic normally moves at around 60-80km/h. Depending on time of day and volume. With the odd person keeping right to the speed limit. Now if they were to raise the speed limits to say 70km/h, since that is the average. Drivers wouldn't just keep their speed below 80km/h, because that is what they did before. Chances are they would then start driving between 80-100km/h. Same idea but different circumstances would apply to cyclists and a stop sign.
Yet I can't prove this would happen just as no one else can't prove it wouldn't happen. But I can say that I just don't like the idea of this new rule based on how I've seen people behave with laws in general.