the_conestoga_guy
New Member
If the "standard transit signals" you're referring to include horizontal bar for red (such as the ones on the Waterloo LRT), instead of a red circle, then they are specifically prohibited in HTA Regulation 626.
Red bar in Waterloo
View attachment 552591
It's literally rule number one in the traffic signal regulations:
The Waterloo signals don't need to conform to the HTA since they're only used by rail vehicles (so they can arguably be controlled under the street railways act rather than the highway traffic act). The King Street signals cannot be exempt because they also need to accommodate buses.
White vertical bars for "green" are allowed in the HTA - in addition to a literal green light per reg.626(1) - but in Toronto a white vertical bar has been defined to mean "left turn and right turn only, no through movement", which is exactly the opposite of what you need for streetcars travelling straight along King Street.
I have already explained this several times in this thread. Here is a post where I linked to several other posts where I explained the HTA and City issues with bar-style transit signals.
This is not true. As long as you enter the intersection legally (meaning that you crossed the stop line during green or yellow) you retain the legal right to take whatever time you need to clear the intersection, and all other traffic must yield to you until you have finished clearing. That's also what the red clearance interval is for, which I illustrated at 1:49 in this video:
We do have cameras that ticket drivers who violate the red light by entering the intersection after the light has turned red. That's what the City of Toronto's red light cameras do.
Some extra perspective from Waterloo Region, there are other intersections that have bus priority signals like here at King & Victoria. In this case, there's a dedicated bus queue jump lane in the far right lane (to the right of the Google Maps car in this case). The light will remain red in all directions, but the top of this signal has a vertical white stripe that illuminates to permit the bus to advance first and make a protected left turn from the right lane.
I don't doubt your HTA knowledge, but there's clearly precedent for exceptions if you know where to look. Maybe King St could use something similar?
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