turbanplanner
Senior Member
Aren't certain cars allowed to use the lanes at night?I'm guessing we'll have transit signals turn green while the regular light is a constant red aside from only the advance right turn activated.
Aren't certain cars allowed to use the lanes at night?I'm guessing we'll have transit signals turn green while the regular light is a constant red aside from only the advance right turn activated.
TaxisAren't certain cars allowed to use the lanes at night?
Yeah so the "forward" light is still neededTaxis
Unless they stop making life (and the signage) so complicated, why allow cabs at 10pm???Yeah so the "forward" light is still needed
I don't see a reason not to allow them?Unless they stop making life (and the signage) so complicated, why allow cabs at 10pm???
I think it just makes rules simpler if there are no exceptions. Also, if you see a car rolling down the street at 10PM, you may believe that you can do the same any time of day - thus normalizing rule infractions later.I don't see a reason not to allow them?
While I agree that a level crossing here would have made more sense, in light of the fact I want to slightly elevate the section south of Grenadier, I'm not opposed to this staying grade-separated, I just would prefer open bridge/viaduct to embankment; and a much wider opening under Queensway and under the railway and the Gardiner.
(Nostalgiac digression to the joy of going airborne over the big bump on the Gardiner at the Humber while riding the back seat of a school bus, back in the day)
I think it just makes rules simpler if there are no exceptions. Also, if you see a car rolling down the street at 10PM, you may believe that you can do the same any time of day - thus normalizing rule infractions later.
I don't get this, we're going to make something objectively worse to a large group of people in the hopes that MAYBE it'll be better hypothetically. We don't ban left turns 24/7 because we assume people won't read the signs in the core.It's the same with the fact that they allow through traffic at Bay St. Why? It just creates confusion and misunderstanding.
Isn't that what we do at Yonge and Dundas?. We don't ban left turns 24/7 because we assume people won't read the signs in the core.
I think that when one talk of traffic (or parking) signage one needs t remember that these signs are often being read by people who are driving. KISS is important! (Keep It Safe / Simple Stupid!)I don't get this, we're going to make something objectively worse to a large group of people in the hopes that MAYBE it'll be better hypothetically. We don't ban left turns 24/7 because we assume people won't read the signs in the core.
Just ban all turning so that everyone in a car ends up leaving Toronto.