• Polendri@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        It’s hard not to see this as ignorance given how easy it is to look up the great safety record of these laws (i.e. right there on the Wikipedia page).

      • Velonie@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idaho_stop

        See the section on safety. It’s safer for bicycles to yield at stop signs instead of come to a complete stop. The most dangerous part of cycling is in an intersection, and you’ll spend more time in them when coming to a complete stop every time

      • nicktron@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        Have you decided to change your opinion yet, since you’ve had plenty of time to read about and fix your own “stupid” though?

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    As a cyclist, I’ve seen more motorists blow through stop signs than other cyclists, and they are the ones who can kill someone.

    Idaho Stops need to come to Canada. Not only have they been proven to be safer, but it makes sense in a dozen different ways.

    I’ve sat at red lights (as a cyclist) and the light DOES NOT CHANGE unless a car is waiting at that same light. We’re talking 10+ minutes. Who the hell thinks it’s OK for cyclists to have to sit there indefinitely when no other cars are around, just because of some outdated laws? We need to change with the times!

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      As a Torontonian cyclist, according to what I see, we blow through stop signs way more than cars. Way more. Of course physically we can mostly just harm ourselves.

      But yes the rules of the road have to change in this regard. The status quo is clearly car-friendly. Not only it doesn’t prioritize cyclists, but it doesn’t prioritize pedestrians either.

      BTW, ebikes help negotiating the status quo a lot. They make stopping at stop signs trivial, as well as keeping a safe speed when riding where there’s no bike lanes.

      • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I’m east of the city, and we don’t have nearly the same amount of cyclists as you do, but only very few ever cautiously ride through a stop sign. I won’t lie, but I did see quite a few cyclists going through stop signs when I was in the city last weekend… not putting anyone in danger, just to save time.

        I thought I read about a protest in Toronto where cyclists were stopping at EVERY stop sign as a large group, backing up traffic in an act of malicious compliance. I’d be totally down for that if crazy motorists didn’t turn their rage onto me, rather than onto these outdated rules.

        I agree that e-bikes can level the playing field, but the general public shouldn’t need to have a powered bike to have fair rules, either.

        • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          That protest sounds amazing. Motorists can’t actively rage at a large group of cyclists. 🤭

          Yes, ebikes shouldn’t be needed by everyone to cycle safely. The rules are bad and so is the infrastructure.

          • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Found it! It was in protest to cyclist harassment by Toronto Police in High Park.

            Perhaps the cyclists in Barrie need to stage something similar :)

      • CoffeeBot@lemmy.caOP
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        1 year ago

        No way man, so many vehicles don’t come to a complete stop. I see it walking, and biking around Toronto. Think right on red - the only time cars come to a complete stop in Toronto is if they’re going to run over someone (and even then that stop them).

        And the way our police enforce it here is that they expect a complete foot down stop, on some stretches in Toronto that’s a complete stop every 200m. Or a complete stop on a bike lane with a T intersection where there’s no chance of a car being there.

        We were lazy and didn’t bother actually writing different laws for bikes and just sort of grouped them in with cars. And then we have dickheads like TPS or Barrie PD here ticketing cyclists for rolling through a stop sign.

        • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I don’t agree that they do it more, but they do it a lot. That’s my anecdata. Now let me join you in toRANting about it.

          Stop on right on red is a fucking abomination. No one stops. I have no stats but I bet this is where a huge proportion of pedestrians get maimed. People close to me were run over this way. I was once saved by a bus driver massively honking to warn me that an imbecile was turning right on red from the middle lane, at speed. At first I WTFed at the bus driver, a second later I was running to save myself from the incoming moron.

          And the way our police enforce it

          Police are enforcing anything? Yes I know this is a topic about cyclist getting ticketed in Barrie, but honestly, I think the TPS have completely abdicated from enforcing any road rules at this point. I will accept being ticketed for stop signs if they enforced those across the board, as well as most other common infractions like right on red, or … straight on red, which is now very common. Enforcement across the board will suck for some things but it will absolutely improve the status quo on the road. Things have gotten pretty bad over the last decade for all road users.

    • derelict@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No one (at least effectively) thinks it’s ok to keep cyclists waiting indefinitely - they just don’t think about the cyclist experience at all. Bad intersections are windshield bias at its peak

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      As a cyclist, I’ve seen more motorists blow through stop signs than other cyclists, and they are the ones who can kill someone.

      Cyclists always try to use this defense/whataboutism way too often, without realizing that to a pedestrian, you on your bike are just as deadly as a car. Motorists are at least expected to know the rules of the road, cyclists openly oppose any sort of education and even act offended at the idea that they too should know the rules of the road they’re on. As a pedestrian in Toronto, cyclists are my biggest danger, not motorists.

      • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        without realizing that to a pedestrian, you on your bike are just as deadly as a car.

        Statistically, that’s not true. A car at any speed can kill a pedestrian or cyclist. For a cyclist to kill a pedestrian, which is exceedingly rare, it would take a lot of speed and bad luck to result in a fatality. I don’t think I’ve ever even heard of a cyclist killing a pedestrian at a stop sign.

        But to be clear, I don’t advocate for cyclists blowing through stops when there are pedestrians around, since that’s obviously not obeying the right of way. I aim to be a defensive and respectful rider when I’m on my bike.

        But I would still like to see more enforcement of stop rules being applied to motorists (and not cyclists on empty roads), since they really are responsible for the vast majority of catastrophic injury and death for pedestrians and cyclists.

        At the same time, we can’t ignore that far too many pedestrians put themselves at risk, so everyone has some personal responsibility here.

        • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Everyone keeps talking about how bikes can’t hurt pedestrians, meanwhile my wife’s aunt has permanent brain damage cause she got hit by a cyclist.

          • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            I’m really sorry to hear that.

            Bikes CAN hurt pedestrians, but it’s statistically rare compared to injuries/death caused by cars. E-bikes increase the risk significantly, though.

            It also illustrates that proper infrastructure is needed, since an accident like that shouldn’t even happen. In some areas around here, we have split trails, which separate (by several meters and bushes) cyclists and pedestrians.

            However, there are often pedestrians strolling on the cyclist side, or cyclists on the pedestrian side, and that’s just dangerous for everyone. I honestly don’t know why simple routes are so difficult for some people to follow.

        • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Motorists are at least expected to know the rules of the road, cyclists openly oppose any sort of education and even act offended at the idea that they too should know the rules of the road they’re on. As a pedestrian in Toronto, cyclists are my biggest danger, not motorists.

          I think this is the most important part that you are ignoring here.

          Certainly, cyclists aren’t as deadly as a motor vehicle. However, cyclists who don’t respect the rules are still very much dangerous.

          As the other person said, as a pedestrian I too have been a victim of being hit by cyclists several times because they blew a red light. Several. Times. And each time I lay on the ground while the cyclist yelled and insulted me and ran away.

          This has never happened to me with a motorist because the vast motorist respect rules and signage on the road and they understand the consequences.

          I, myself, as a cyclist have been a victim of several other cyclists on the road, and in reserved bike lanes, who are not careful or respectful of other cyclists. I’ve been pushed over and ran into by other cyclists.

          Attitudes and respect of the rules of the road need to change among cyclists.

          • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            However, cyclists who don’t respect the rules are still very much dangerous.

            I do agree! I don’t want cyclists to ignore rules or ride like maniacs, but I also don’t want cyclists to be targeted for doing things that shouldn’t even be against the law.

            I too have been a victim of being hit by cyclists several times because they blew a red light.

            They were flat out breaking the law and riding dangerously, so I’m sorry that happened to you. That’s NOT what an Idaho Stop seeks to remedy.

            This has never happened to me with a motorist because the vast motorist respect rules and signage on the road and they understand the consequences.

            Statistically, it really is cars and trucks that are killing people (or even severely injuring them), and other accidents not involving motor vehicles are really quite rare.

            Not to discount your experience, because it is important to acknowledge that cyclist on pedestrian accidents still do happen, but they are **very ** rare.

            Attitudes and respect of the rules of the road need to change among cyclists.

            Agreed.

            I think that everyone should be riding respectfully, and while we can’t change asshole behaviour, we can certainly do our best to not punish good cyclists.

        • phx@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          For a cyclist to kill a pedestrian, which is exceedingly rare, it would take a lot of speed and bad luck to result in a fatality

          Oh good, pedestrians will only need to work about being seriously hurt then, but probably not dead.

          If a cop sees a car run the lights, that car will likely get a ticket. In most cases that I’ve seen it’s not that the laws are unenforced so much as there’s nobody with authority to do so witnessing the transgression.

          • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Oh good, pedestrians will only need to work about being seriously hurt then, but probably not dead.

            I don’t want pedestrians to have to worry about any type of injury!

            You have to look at things in context, because pedestrian safety has a LOT to do with pedestrian behaviour, poor infrastructure, and motor vehicles, not whether a cyclist decides to roll through a stop sign at an empty intersection.

            Cyclists and pedestrians can still get into conflicts with each other, but it doesn’t happen as often and certainly not as severely as other types of accidents.

            But here’s some food for thought: the Traffic Injury Research Foundation out of Ottawa put out a fact sheet which showed that in fatally injured pedestrians, nearly 50% had alcohol in their system (the pedestrian, not the driver); 40% had drugs in their system.

            In my experience as a driver, pedestrian, and cyclist, many pedestrians aren’t aware of their own surroundings, which puts them at risk.

            J-walking, walking before they get a “walk” signal, walking with headphones, not walking where they’re supposed to be (i.e. wrong side of a multi-use path), not wearing bright clothing at night, etc.

            Everyone has to be mindful of their own behaviour to increase the chance of being safe, but that’s not to say that poor infrastructure has no fault in this.

            But I can’t really speak to the city experience, since I don’t live in Downtown Toronto. In those cases, I do defer to what stats and studies say about cyclist/pedestrian safety.

            • phx@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              I don’t disagree, but unfortunately there’s only so much one can do to anticipate the stupidity of the average oblivious pedestrian, and while I’ve had a few encounters with people crossing against the signals/traffic with earbuds in, the gross majority also seem to be members of the growing local transient population who are often fairly inebriated or generally dismissive of societal rules.

              I’d say the best one can do is pay attention and follow rules that used to be taught in old safe-driving courses (but also apply to biking). I slow down a bit and am ready to brake at populated intersections even if I have the right-of-way, slow or move farther out when I see rambunctious/unattended kids on the sidewalk, and the same for drunks, transients, or areas where such congregate and are known to spontaneously bolt across the road.

              Assuming somebody may demonstrate a spontaneous lack of self-preservation has saved me from running somebody down on more than one occasion, both with motor-vehicles or bikes. I also tend to give more space to BMW’s, Audi’s, and lifted trucks… because reasons :-)

      • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I’m not of a fan of the whataboutism either. Many of us are all three. Objectively a pedestrian-cyclist crash is a lot less likely to leave you with a life changing injury than a pedestrian-car crash, purely due to the massive difference in energies involved. In order to get a more accurate intuition for the expected damage, you have to think about the energy involved. That’s given by the speed (squared) times the mass. A light car is about 10x heavier than a cyclist on a bike. For the same speed it has 10x the energy to impact on your bones and tissues. Therefore you should expect a lot more damage. That doesn’t mean that the large number of pedestrian-cyclist near-misses isn’t mentally impactful. They are and they do absolutely happen a lot. Getting scared regularly isn’t healthy or fun. Ironically though, cars going quietly at 30kph don’t feel as scary, yet they will easily maim pedestrians on impact, often permanently. My destroyed subtalar joint from a seemingly minor accident on a crossing can attest to that.

  • ABluManOnLemmy@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    Considering how much stop signs are overused in North America, this is unreasonable. Either replace many stop signs with yield signs where safe to do so, or allow cyclists to pass through stop signs as if it they were yield signs. Holding momentum is important for cyclists.

    • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I agree. I always make a judgement call when biking, and it doesn’t only benefit me. If I’m going to arrive at a stop sign before a car who will need to cross my path, then if I slow down and stop before continuing, I will take (ever so slightly) more time out of that driver’s day because of how much longer it takes me to speed up.

      (Which is why I usually wave drivers through if we’re both stopped, since they can get out of my way much faster than I can get out of theirs. Sharing the road is about consideration and it goes both ways.)

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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      While true, in the status quo, blowing through stop signs when other users have the right of way increases the probability of accidents. It puts the responsibility squarely in the person that has to decided whether to stop or not. The one that doesn’t have to stop is simply going their way. If there’s a monetary lapse of judgement on the cyclist’s side, they become a pancake. I’m staying this as someone who regularly “Idaho-maneuvers” in certain places.

      • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Except that data from states which permit Idaho Stops (i.e. treating a stop sign as a yield, and a stop light as a stop sign) has not shown any increase in cyclist danger. The inverse is true, which is why Idaho Stops have been expanding into other states.

        • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Do the drivers in Indaho know that cyclists are expected to be treating stop signs as yield? My guess is yes. That could be making a difference in the safety profile.

          • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Idaho, Delaware, Arkansas, Oregon, Washington, Utah, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Colorado, Washington, DC, and Minnesota :)

            I don’t know what motorists know or don’t know, but why would that make a difference?

            An Idaho stop has to do with cyclists not having to needlessly wait at stop signs or red lights, so drivers don’t really have to think about it, since they likely won’t even be at those same intersections where an Idaho Stop is used. It **decriminalizes ** inefficient, dangerous, nonsensical stops for cyclists.

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Exactly.

              The only interaction with cars is if a cyclist and car arrive at the intersection at the same time, the cyclist gets priority. That’s it. And most of the time when I stop at an intersection, the other car waves me through anyway (which is super annoying because it changes the normal flow).

              If cars are respecting stop signs, there’s literally no conflict.

              • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                From safety point of view, none of this is important for when everyone follows the rules. If everyone follows the rules people won’t get hurt both in the status quo and under a stop-as-yield regime.

                I think the interesting questions lie in the grey area when not everyone follows the rules because that’s the reality.

                What if it’s not a 4-way stop but a 2-way stop where the driver has the right of way? In the stop-is-a-stop status quo, their expectation is that they can drive at a constant speed on such a road, without having to prepare for emergency braking at every intersection. In a stop-as-yield regime the driver should have the expectation that cyclists might make a mistake and show up from some intersection. Assuming a constant rate of errors from cyclists, I’d expect to see a decrease in injuries in such cases. 🤷

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 year ago

                  Maybe?

                  Research shows that stop as yield doesn’t increase cycling incidents (see states in the US where it’s the law). The law only impacts those who follow it, and the harder/more annoying it is to follow the law (starting is hard on a bicycle), the less likely people are to follow it. For example, I see people jaywalking all the time in my area because crosswalks are rare, and jaywalking is rare downtown where there are plenty of crosswalks. So I think stop as yield has a very good chance of being a net positive.

                  At least I’m my area, drivers don’t seem to be aware of the stop as yield law despite it being the law here, so I don’t think we should expect much change in driving behavior.

          • HewlettHackard@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Realistically, I usually stop if I see a car even if I have right of way, because I’m the one who gets hurt if they roll through. Modern cars’ A-pillars are thick and I know I’m hard to see. I only exercise my right when there aren’t cars near the intersection, or I made eye contact with the driver and they waved me through.

            But why would a driver have to know I’d treat it as yield? If they arrive first, I have to stop—same as if it were a stop sign—and if I arrive first, they have to stop: same as if it were a stop sign.

            The only difference a driver will see happens if I arrive first and don’t stop, and then they’ll either know the law and appreciate me getting out of the way faster, or not know the law and think I’m one of those aloof cyclists. But they still had to stop.

      • derelict@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        That’s where “as if they were yield signs” and not “as if they weren’t there” comes into play

    • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Noooooo.

      They have those in France and it’s so dangerous! There are so many collisions that happen because of the right of way at intersections.

      I’ve driven there and it’s freaking scary.

      • ABluManOnLemmy@feddit.nl
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        1 year ago

        I think most European countries are designed this way. In my experience it just takes getting used to and is a bit uncomfortable, but it just feels so much more efficient, whether driving or on a bike. It feels unnecessary to have to stop at every block on a neighborhood street when there’s no one around.

        • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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          The right of way thing I’ve only seen in France in my travels to Europe.

          It’s so crazy. You have to assume that you don’t have the right of way, unless there’s a sign that says otherwise. (A yellow diamond with a thick white border) On any roads so you have to stop at every intersection. Not all intersections are obvious, especially in a city like Paris. And if you’re not aware of that rule or you just forget about it, which is easy if you’re foreign, then accidents can happen.

          The French are actually thinking about putting up stop signs instead to reduce the number of accidents related to these situations.

  • MajorMajormajormajor@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Cars and bicycles are two completely different things, and should have different rules governing them. A car is larger, deadlier, and takes longer to stop than a bicycle. A car going 40-50 kph is traveling with far more force, and won’t be able to stop as fast as a bicycle traveling 20 kph.

    It’s like saying cars and planes should follow the same rules. Or even better, cars and semi trucks. There are highway speed signs that state one speed for trucks and one for everyone else. Or certain roads where trucks aren’t allowed to drive on. We already have a tiered approach to motor vehicles, it should extend to bikes as well. Blanket approaches don’t work in our modern world when we have cars, bikes, ebikes, escooters, etc all sharing the same space.

    • ANGRY_MAPLE@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      A lot of cyclists also get hit by blowing stop signs. I have seen too many people who just zip through without looking.

      People driving cars should absolutely be cautious, don’t get me wrong on that. That being said, right-of-way won’t matter much if you’re dead. All it takes is one ahole not paying attention while driving and it’s game over for the cyclist. You could also use your argument for pedestrians to cross wherever and whenever they want. Pedestrians won’t kill someone like a car would either, but they are also still at risk.

      I don’t know, I’ve just never understood taking that risk over saving a short amount of time. I have genuinely seen some people who have made me wonder how they survived so long.

      I agree that the Idaho Stop should be implemented in more places, though. I’m pro-yeild, and anti-blowing stop signs for everyone.

      • MajorMajormajormajor@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Yes I agree also, blowing through stop signs is terrible regardless of method of transportation. I should have been more clear in my advocating for Idaho stops earlier.

      • inspirationdate@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        ya, all my close calls cycling were from other bikes and powered scooters blowing stop signs. we need proper respect for right of way.

    • OminousOrange@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Cars and bicycles share the same travel surface. In order to interact safely, they need to follow the same rules. Using your example, semis still need to follow nearly all the same rules as cars. There is a base ruleset for everyone who uses a roadway (including, one must come to a complete stop at a traffic control device that directs them to do so), and only specific modifications to certain rules for additional safety for vehicles in certain classes.

      Here in Saskatchewan, bicycles fall under the Traffic Safety Act if they are on public roadways. That means they can be ticketed for exceeding speed limits or disobeying traffic control devices.

      If different modes interact on the same travelway, they must share the same set of rules. If they don’t, you get conflicts, which means collision between vehicles, pedestrians, bicycles, and other wheeled modes of travel.

      • MajorMajormajormajor@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        In my example the more dangerous vehicle (semi) has more restrictive rules. Should the less dangerous vehicle (bicycle) not have less restrictive rules? I’m not talking about no rules at all, but treating stop signs as a yield sign for a bike makes sense considering the shorter stopping time, slower speeds, and wider perspective (no parts of the car to potentially block vision) on bikes.

        The point of stop signs is so that 1000+ kg vehicle doesn’t interact with traffic, usually from a side street onto a main street, without looking first. Or to ensure there is a known pattern at a 3 or 4 way stop. You need this when the average stopping distance for a car traveling 50 kph is 35 m in dry conditions. You don’t need the same safety measures with bikes because of the physics involved with a smaller, slower, faster stopping, etc bike.

        Also, all of this is irrelevant to the point if we had proper bike infrastructure in cities there wouldn’t be a shared road space, or not nearly as much. The infrastructure is designed with cars and truck in mind, as are the rules. If we had more separation between the two methods of travel you would have fewer issues.

        • OminousOrange@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I agree, proper bike infrastructure would solve much of this issue. With that, many drivers treat stop signs as yield anyway.

          I noticed when driving on a trip in Europe (Norway and Scotland) that many of the intersections where there would typically be a stop sign in North America had only a yield sign. It’s quite simple; give way to oncoming traffic and proceed when safe. Unfortunately, many North Americans think yield means ‘assume I’m going to proceed into this intersection and only brake if I have to while I’m rolling through the crosswalk’.

          It mainly comes down to what other members of the travelway expect you to do. If you are predictable, your chances of conflicting with others is diminished. Unfortunately, unless you can convince lawmakers to make the change, a stop sign is going to mean come to a complete stop, which is also what others are expecting you to do.

        • I_Miss_Daniel@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Seems OK to me. The only issue would be if a cyclist not following the road rules causes a car or truck to take evasive action and this causes an accident with another vehicle.

      • snoons@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Defos. Doesn’t matter what you’re driving, be predictable and you won’t get hurt.

      • Sethayy@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Semi’s cause almost all fatal road accidents. I think a bigger blanket would only cause more issues

        • OminousOrange@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Do you have a source for that? The NHTSA 2019 data claims only 11% of fatal crashes involved large trucks, whereas 62% involved passenger vehicles.

    • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Amish buggies must follow the same laws, so do motorcycles, mopeds, golf carts, side by sides, pedal pubs etc. Bikes, especially now with E bikes making them faster, should follow the same rule set unless they are using their own bike path separate from the road.

      Just stop for the signs guys, no big deal.

      • MajorMajormajormajor@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        You’re comparing apples to oranges with the vehicles though. Besides the Amish buggies, which are fairly rare, everything on that list is powered by a motor/engine of some variety except the bicycle. Look at the speed of bikes compared to any of those other vehicles, they’re not anywhere nearly as fast. The only exception is ebikes, but again, this is an argument for a tiered system where there are different rules for different vehicles as they all interact differently. Ebikes are still supposed to be restricted to 32 kph and 500 W motor max in Canada, which is far slower than any car can do. If people are modifying them to go faster then that’s a different issue to be addressed.

        The road infrastructure and road rules are designed around cars. Instead of applying old laws not designed for them, we need different rules for bikes as the times are changing. More and more people are using bikes as a method of transportation, they’re no longer leisure use only.

      • Galluf@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        E bikes are quicker to accelerate, but they’re not any faster. They cutoff the assistance before you get faster than 95% of people can get in their own.

  • zeeps@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    If you’re gonna ride your bicycle on the road, you better stop at a stop sign. Don’t be an idiot.

    • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I mean, I always yield at stop signs, but I am not likely to come to a complete stop on a bike if there is nobody to yield to. Many car drivers don’t either, as any road user is already aware.

      • Szymon@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        “Oh they’re doing it so I can do it to,” said the pile of bones and guts spread out along the intersection.

        Cars have a little more protection than a bicyclist for the occupants of the vehicle.

        • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          If anything, the fact that cars are more likely to injure another road user than their occupants, is even more reason that they should come to a complete stop, moreso than any other road user.

          • Szymon@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            The rules and laws around using roads are designed without consideration for the type of vehicle using it. Everyone needs to stop at stop signs and red lights.

            • ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              The rules and laws around using roads are designed without consideration for the type of vehicle using it.

              That’s demonstrably false. Bikes are treated differently from cars in many regards. See: bike lanes, green “bike boxes” at intersections, rules for passing, highway access, etc. Why not the “Idaho stop”?

    • Polendri@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      The “Idaho stop” (red as stop, stop as yield for cyclists) is a thing in several jurisdictions, and research shows it is as safe or safer that way.

      Still ought to follow the laws, but there’s reason to want those laws to be different.

  • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Folks, I think with this wholesome standard-fare cars vs bikes who-dun-it rant fest, we’ve really arrived on Lemmy. I feel home. Thank you. ♥️

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      To be fair, they break rules cars are supposed to follow as well. I’ve seen plenty roll through stop signs, right turns at stop lights, fail to signal lane changes, etc, all without their lights on.

      We need to have a better way to keep law enforcement accountable.

    • Szymon@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Nobody should run them. Contact your municipality to increase enforcement until the community gets the message.

  • Djangofett@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    This coming from a city which made being homeless illegal, doesn’t surprise me.

    And yes, cyclists SHOULD be respectful.

  • Falken@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    The thing is if you’re going to be sharing the road with other vehicles, you need to ride predictably and communicate with other drivers/riders or you’re just more likely to get yourself killed. Deciding to ignore a Stop sign is not predictable behaviour.

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    1 year ago

    This is inherently the problem with (most) cyclists, and why motorists in general don’t like them.

    They want it both ways. They want to be a pedestrian when it suits them, when they want to blow stop signs, jump up onto the sidewalk, expect cars to stop for them at crosswalks, and weave through traffic at will. But they ALSO want to be a vehicle when it suits them, when they are sharing a road that doesn’t have a bike lane, for example.

    And they seem to think that the motorist should just KNOW when they are being one or the other.

    It’s frustrating and annoying. They are a vehicle. They are governed as a vehicle. Suck it up, cyclists.

    • Polendri@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I find it so tiresome hearing about how cyclists are supposedly more entitled than motorists (or the other way around, since cyclists say the same things about drivers).

      Drivers routinely roll through stops, jockey for position, move erratically or dangerously, block crosswalks or bike lanes, distract themselves on their phones, get upset when mildly inconvenienced by having to underspeed behind a cyclist taking the lane for safety, etc.

      1. Being entitled and breaking the law to get places faster is universal; I think uou’re just acclimated to drivers doing it.

      2. The infrastructure is so car-oriented and bike-hostile that following the law often disadvantages cyclists or puts them at risk. That doesn’t justify, say, biking fast across a crosswalk, but sidewalk-riding on a 4-lane road without bike lanes? IMO it does.

      3. There’s bias here in treating the worst cyclist behaviour as being something condoned by cyclists at large. Kind of like if someone said “drivers just want to drag race around town”.

    • limelight79@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      No, motorists don’t like them because they are different. That’s it. It’s someone they can place their road rage on.

      • thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        If that were true, you’d expect car drivers to feel the same way about, for example, motorcycles, rollerbladers, and longboarders… Yet people don’t have the same feelings as they do with cyclists.

        Also since when do car drivers have any problem whatsoever applying their road rage to other car drivers? Lol.

        • limelight79@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Nah, drivers rarely go on the internet to rage about other drivers blowing stop signs, speeding, tailgating, running red lights, or other idiotic things. Cyclists bring out waaaay more emotions in people than other drivers. Just read any cycling thread…like this one.

    • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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      It goes the other way too, when a cyclist is considering stop sign as a yield then motorist complains that cyclist should behave the same way as cars.

      When cyclist behave are riding in the middle of the road because it’s safer for them then motorist complains that they are not supposed to be there.

  • Ballistic86@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Everyone stops at a stop sign. Cars, buses, pedestrians, motorized wheelchairs, and bikes. This is not an issue that needs separate rules for cyclists. Perhaps they can re-evaluate that intersection, does it need a sign? If cyclists can easily coast through the intersection, the need for a stop sign is up for discussion. Perhaps a Yield sign.

    My area has lights for intersections with more than 2 lanes per direction of travel, roundabouts for smaller busy roads, and most of the residential intersections don’t have signage. Stop signs are, mostly, used to slow traffic down.

    • FairlyTall@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I disagree. The Idaho stop is a very real law and it’s been proven safe. There absolutely should be a different rule for cyclists and we already have decades of proof that it not only works but increases safety.

      Also, pedestrians don’t stop at stop signs currently. It’s perfectly legal for them to continue without any kind of stop and I’m not aware of any place on earth that requires pedestrians to stop or has ever given a ticket for the them failing to stop.

      • HikingVet@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        Eh, there have been people who have gotten a jaywalking ticket in an intersection after they were hit by a car.

        Not common and my city is apparently hostile to anything not on four wheels.

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    1 year ago

    I understand the need to obey traffic laws on a bicycle, but treating them the same as a 2+ ton projectile that can turn humans into meat paste or cause tens of thousands of dollars in damage to a structure in seconds by effortlessly adjusting your right ankle by 25° is absurd.

    Fines should be proportional to the potential damage of the Infraction.

    • minnow@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s not about if the cyclist hit something, it’s about the possibility of something hitting the bicyclist.

      If a car, following the law, took its right of way through the intersection and hit a cyclist who wasn’t following the law… Well it’s fine to say the cyclist was at fault, but he’s still been hit by a car.

      Traffic laws are there to protect everyone from each other.

      • RagingNerdoholic@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Except, as others have pointed out in this discussion, it’s actually safer to let cyclists use stop signs as yield signs.