TransitBart
Senior Member
P
Poor streetcar...ah baby...4008 we’ll miss ya...
Poor streetcar...ah baby...4008 we’ll miss ya...
If I had to guess, the car probably change their mind and decided not to turn left, and instead tried to out-accelerate the Streetcar and use the left lane.
Many thanks for the details on that. Every time I saw the pic featured in the news, I'd go searching for details, none showed.The auto went to turn left at the intersection on a red light, didn't realize that there was a streetcar behind, and got pushed into the traffic island/divider. The streetcar was travelling at a decent clip at the time, which is how the auto managed to get so wedged.
A friend of mine who was involved in the clean-up remarked that the police had a field day with cell-phone use by passing drivers - they had 4 people pulled over at one point, with something like 13 tickets issued in total.
Dan
Toronto, Ont.
It's absolutely rampant. I'm not usually a 'Law and Order' kinda guy, but I'd certainly be supportive of paying for more traffic cops on the street (or a dedicated traffic enforcement agency) cracking down on some of the ridiculous driving practices we're witness to in Toronto especially right now.the police had a field day with cell-phone use by passing drivers - they had 4 people pulled over at one point, with something like 13 tickets issued in total.
I imagine that streetcar signals do not use red, yellow and green so as to not confuse motorist.The auto went to turn left at the intersection on a red light, didn't realize that there was a streetcar behind, and got pushed into the traffic island/divider. The streetcar was travelling at a decent clip at the time, which is how the auto managed to get so wedged.
A friend of mine who was involved in the clean-up remarked that the police had a field day with cell-phone use by passing drivers - they had 4 people pulled over at one point, with something like 13 tickets issued in total.
Dan
Toronto, Ont.
This is tongue in cheek, right?I imagine that streetcar signals do not use red, yellow and green so as to not confuse motorist.
If streetcar signals are indeed green, its easy to see the motorist mistaking it for a signal for left turns.
I deferred from posting same, as if Burl is right, we're all in deep, deep shid. I'm almost tempted to visit the site just to see if there's any possibility of there being a case as Burl states. It's like the QQ tunnel, and as much as QQ is an incredibly poorly thought out layout, how anyone could possibly mistake the tunnel for the road boggles me. I do see they've carved a 'moat' across the tracks now....just in case.This is tongue in cheek, right?
Fully agree.Based on what we've seen from Leary for the past few months, let's hope he's not the one selected. So far it's seem like the same status-quo -prior to Byford-with him around (ie: lack of transparency/communication).
That's up to the Highway Traffic Act, they only allow one symbol. The Pilot section does allow for (gist) "anything anywhere anyhow anytime" (actually for six years IIRC) not to mention that you miss the point.Which is easier to confuse? Why do cars need to understand transit signals? Are transit drivers not smart enough to memorize a new set of signals?
Because the dashboards of the streetcars and buses don't display them. Why do cars need them displayed? Riddle me this...I bring this up roughly annually. Why do the transit signals have to be anywhere else besides the dashboard of the transit vehicle? If other drivers can't see them, they won't mistakenly follow them.
Because the dashboards of the streetcars and buses don't display them. Why do cars need them displayed? Riddle me this...
You might as well be talking about going to the Moon.???. I'm talking new functionality, A different way of doing things. Take the transit lights off the street poles. The only audience for that information the transit driver. Have a "intelligent device" on the bus/streetcar that communicates with the traffic lights and tells the operator when they can go.