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Buses blocking the road
Dave Arquati wrote:
Nick H (UK) wrote: Dave Arquati wrote: Nick H (UK) wrote: Piccadilly Pilot wrote: Philip Mason wrote: I can confirm I have been on the wrong side of a bus when the driver decided that he would just pull out. it was on a wide road in London, where I would have had enough space to overtake a "normal" road vehicle which would have been pulling out from the same spot. However, the bus decided it would indicate and, simultaneously, pull out right into the side of my car. Luckily only minor scratches were obtained, but it could easily have been much worse if, as you state, My car were a bicycle or motorbike! Current government policy is to stop Londoners from enjoying the roads as we should, and instead they are forcing everybody to travel on the HIGHLY inadequate public transport. I am sure it will not be long before TfL is taken to the EU Court of Human Rights by someone who feels they have the right to choose comfort over bus Since when has there been the right to drive a car? Since when has there been a right to pay vast amounts of money in road tax and duty on fuel? No-one is completely obligated to pay those sums of money. Since when has there been a right to run buses on the road? Since the authorities pay for roads, it's quite reasonable for them to run buses on them - especially when it is not just motorists who pay for roads, it's people who need/want public transport too. Where do you think these authorities get their money from? Have you ever paid any taxes? Of course I've paid taxes. Since the authorities pay for roads out of taxes (and aren't local roads are mostly paid for out of local taxes?), and taxes come from everyone, then provision should be for everyone. Obviously that includes motorists, but motorists also inflict the most wear on the roads, cause the most accidents and injuries to other road users such as cyclists and pedestrians, and require provision of parking with all that entails. Therefore motorists should (and do) pay extra to cover this. Sounds like we are agreeing! Of course we all pay for roads, but motorists most of all. For the reasons I just stated. Do you think drivers never travel by public transport? What does that have to do with the "right" to drive a car? There is room for all. It wasn't car drivers that started the US and THEM mentality. It was the politicians whose dogma is suited by demonising car drivers. Isn't the problem precisely that there *isn't* room for all? Faced with This is where we disagree. I'm not saying that it would be easy or cheap to provide road space for everyone who wants it in London and still keep things moving. I /am/ saying that the political spin that it is /all/ the motorist's fault. So much congestion is caused by road engineering, narrowing, traffic light timings etc etc. ever-rising levels of traffic and therefore congestion and pollution, what options are open to politicians? Facilitating car use just leads to a spiral whereby traffic gets forever worse, planners devise schemes based around car-users, and non-motorists are socially marginalised. It may be that attempts to restrain the growth of car use have started an "us and them" mentality, but that's just a product of many motorists' inability to realise that constantly accommodating their current needs will never satisfy their future ones. I don't ask for mo I just ask please stop taking away what we have already! -- Nick H (UK) |
Buses blocking the road
Boltar wrote:
"Nick H (UK)" wrote in message ... Of course we all pay for roads, but motorists most of all. I wish that were true but I suspect none of the road fund license ever goes directly to road improvements. It goes into the treasury tax coffers and they dish money out on an as-and-when basis to all forms of public spending. True, of course. But it is what we pay it for, isn't it? What they /spend/ it on is another matter. It's all my fault really: I voted for Ken Livingston. At least the first time around; not the second or ever again. Ken my not be perfect , but you really have preferred that lying philanderer Norris with his many business interests that would have been in direct conflict with the role of mayor? God help us if that man ever gets in. At least ken is generally so ineffectual he can't do much harm. He's done more than enough:-( B2003 -- Nick H (UK) |
Buses blocking the road
Anonymouse wrote:
Nick H (UK) wrote: Anonymouse wrote: SNIPPED From personal experience, I would put it as punish-the-few-for-the-sins-of-the-majority. There is something quite scary about the way normally rational people behave when behind the wheel of a car. And let's not forget the six million bus passengers every day in London who are currently inconvenienced by inconsiderate drivers. Well well, six million people ehh? every day? Would that be a rational reasonable statistic? have they been counted? smells like spin to me. Six million people per day - well six million journeys. This is the way transport statistics are usually given, for cars as well as public transport. I did mean to give my reference: http://www.tfl.gov.uk/buses/press-re...ess-1018.shtml http://www.tfl ...does one have to read any further? Actually, I think you have got it wrong. That page says... "On Friday 23 April, six million passengers rode on London’s buses;" I guess they should know that, from ticket sales (but I still don't trust tfl ;-) Surely it would be a pretty remarkable day on which *all* of them were inconvenienced by car drivers! It sounds reasonable to me. Please give your references or calculations if you still want to claim that it isn't. But: When a bus driver can't pull in because the stop is full of cars, or obstructed by cars then it is not down to the bus. If traffic wardens spent their time targeting behaviour that actually obstructs traffic everyone would be better off. Such as illegal parking. However, I agree that traffic wardens should be more proactive in targetting selfish and dangerous behaviour. My pet hates a - Drivers who ignore rule 146 section two of the highway code. This states: "Take extra care at junctions. You should: ... watch out for pedestrians crossing a road into which you are turning. If they have started to cross they have priority, so give way" (see http://www.highcode.gov.uk/16.shtml) I have yet to meet a driver who knows this rule. Me! Me!! Me!!! I've yet to meet /another/ driver who knows this rule. And, as a pedestrian it ****es me off too. Especially the real *******s who not only ignore the rule but even sound their horn at the pedestrian! - People who ignore box junctions. Just what is wrong with them? Me too. However, when it was suggested that traffic wardens should be able to fine drivers for this type of offence, the pro-car lobby were up in arms, which shows just how moronic most of them are. But I'd *Love* to see more prosecutions for yellow box and red light offences. I think most drivers would. (old hobby-horse rears head: that would have to include bus drivers). These are just the things that cause real danger and real delay. I think the problem was the 'traffic warden' (sorry: parking attendant, assistant or whatever they are now called) bit. It's tghe perception that they are not known for discretion, but rather more interested in meeting their revenue-raising targets that is the problem. This is not the case with the Police (who seem to have lost interest in road traffic) or even the police-run wardens-that-were. What is your solution to the problem? I have already written why I think delaying car drivers for a short while is OK. Before, buses were unable to pull out in traffic. Now, they can. If the solution inconveniences those who are considerate, maybe they will increase peer pressure on those who are not, and change their behaviour. There are lots of dreadful drivers in London, behind the wheels of all kinds of vehicles, public service included. That's true, but I'm afraid it is just human nature. I'm not sure people are really suitable to be drivers. Never Give Up on human nature! For the record, I nearly always let buses and taxis pull out ahead of me, providing they indicate their intention sufficiently in advance that I can slow down slightly without needing to brake, creating a gap into which they can pull. I sometimes get hooted from vehicles behind and once a bicycle decided to overtake me on the left, narrowly escaping being sandwiched between the bus and my nearside front wing - some people just cannot read the road ahead of them! It's amazing, isn't it. If only all drivers were as good as those who post to newsgroups! (Actually, why not brake to let buses pull out? I don't understand that point.) Why not indeed? When a bus is stopped on a busy road it isn't going to get out (just as a car is not going to get out of a side road) unless people use speed and lane discipline to facilitate each other. And a lot of the time we do, or there would be vehicles full of skeletons all over the roads. I really am all for a higher standard of driving. How about the professionals setting a good example? A -- Nick H (UK) |
Buses blocking the road
Solar Penguin wrote:
--- Nick H (UK) said: Anonymouse wrote: Why not move cars on to minor roads? Cars use minor roads /anyway/. Put the buses there too and leave the main roads free to get as much traffic flowing as possible. Odd... The real trouble is that they *ARE* putting more buses on minor roads, even though these roads are too minor for large vehicles. A while back I was in a 410 bus, which goes down almost every narrow back street and cul-de-sac between Crystal Palace and Croydon. On one of these narrow streets, it met a dustcart coming the other way. There was no room for the two large vehicles to pass, so they sat there for about five minutes, each waiting for the other to move out of the way. Now, the bus had right of way, and the dustcart should have moved. But its driver was in no hurry. Maybe he even wanted to get delayed so he could claim overtime. In the end, the bus driver was forced to back up and allow the dustcart through. And, before anyone asks, no I didn't take the dustcart's number and report it to the council. After all, the real fault was with whichever idiot decided to send a bus route down such a minor road in the first place. This was a delay just waiting to happen from as soon as the route was first planned. Why not ban cars from roads where they cannot pass buses? Ahh, so you've swallowed the Bus is King line. Surely there's room for everyone with correct planning, rather than crazy dogma. Because, for the long-term benefit of the environment, we need to drastically reduce emissions to around 128ppm (a cut of around two-thirds from the current 379ppm). And the *ONLY* way that's going to ever be practical is if there are fewer motorists making fewer journeys in fewer cars. Now the best possible solution is if these ex-motorists (and everyone else) choose to stay at home instead of travelling. Taking the bus, or any form of public transport, is the next least worst option. But, then again, "Bus is One of the Next Least Worst Options" isn't quite as catchy a slogan as "Bus is King", is it? Still, why let facts get in the way of your rant, eh? Too Right!-) -- Nick H (UK) |
Buses blocking the road
Anonymouse wrote:
Nick H (UK) wrote: Anonymouse wrote: Nick H (UK) wrote: SNIPPED Why not ban cars from roads where they cannot pass buses? Ahh, so you've swallowed the Bus is King line. Surely there's room for everyone with correct planning, rather than crazy dogma. If by swallowed, you mean agree with, then yes. I see you have swallowed the "bus isn't king" line. True! Unfortunately, there isn't room. See below. Why should bus drivers have the right to delay *everybody* --- which includes all the other buses, before anyone replies with the specious 'because they carry more people' argument. A bus blocking the road may have a dozen people on board: it may be delaying hundreds. Why not move bus routes to minor roads? Why not move cars on to minor roads? Cars use minor roads /anyway/. Put the buses there too and leave the main roads free to get as much traffic flowing as possible. Perhaps people want to travel along main roads. Main roads seem to have plenty of traffic on them. In any case, getting a double decker down a narrow London minor road doesn't seem like a very sensible option. Well, no perhaps not, but as an idea I think it could be developed. Essentially, separate public and private treansport, to their mutual benefit. Ahhh! I've got it: Trains!!! This is London, not the highlands of Scotland. There simply isn't enough road space for everyone to travel by car. Actually I don't believe that. Huge amounts of road space have been lost to cars through pavement widening, bus lanes, cycle lanes (which many cyclists do not consider safe or want). Result: congestion. The we have the spin that it is all down to cars. I believe that it is largely down to engineering. It's all spin. How many lanes have been lost? Everywhere there is a bus lane at least one lane has been lost. Everywhere islands have been put in the middle of roads that prevent slow-moving traffic forming two lanes of its own accord. Really, I do think it is a huge proportion. Lanes generally make a difference, not total road space. And surely pavement widening is a good thing (not that I've seen much evidence of it in London). Cities are for people to live in. I come from a city that was mostly demolished in the sixties are rebuilt for cars, rather than people. It is now a dangerous concrete jungle few would venture out in after dark (or before, for that matter). Getting people (not in cars) out on the streets is good for everyone - it reduces congestion and makes them safer for everyone. Remember, before the congestion charge something like 14% of journeys in central London were made by car, and we had near gridlock. had? On the main road near to me (not in the congestion zone)it is often gridlock. Why? Oh, sheer weight of traffic, many would cry. But how many times do have the experience of taking half an hour to approach and pass through one set of traffic lights, after which the road is clear. An engineered jam! Non-anecdotal evidence, please. A118 passing through Manor Park. it is often clear by the time reachin Ilford. A3 where it meets the road to Battersea. North circular at the A1 Junction. Barking road at East Ham Town Hall. ....just a few of my regular favourites. And the king of them all: Southall. Actually, there just might be /some/ excuse for Southall, because traffic converges from sveral directions. Stop-start congested traffic: good for the environment? No. Nice for residents? No. Nice for pedestrians, No. Who wins? the local politicians and the council-tax (our money) spending staff and their crazy schemes. Certainly stop-start congested traffic is bad for everyone. That is why we need fewer cars on the road! Cars can only be used by a small minority in large city - it's difficult to see why they should be given much priority. And why can't other drivers actually *use* bus lanes when available? No; scrap that one because then I wouldn't be able to sail down the available bus lane while everyone else waits in the single lane;-) I can't see how delaying cars can be a bad thing on the whole. Making driving in London really unpleasant seems like a good way to get people out of their cars to me. After all, a similar policy was in place against pedestrians for many years - look at most British towns. OK - it's a shame for the small number of drivers who have to travel by car, and emergency access needs to be considered. In the long run, though, fewer unnecessary cars on the road would be to everyone's benefit. The cause of the filling in of bus stops is that car drivers don't let buses pull out. Every bus delaying the traffic is delaying other buses as well. Why can't anyone take in this simple fact? Traffic moving is traffic moving: better for everyone. Of course it is delaying other buses. But the total bus delay may well be lower than if they also have to wait to pull out every time that they stop. What is your SOLUTION to the problem? But they all also have to wait for every bus that hasn't pulled in and is blocking them. If car drivers acquired some basic consideration for other people If bus drivers (who used to be professionals, not road-hogging, junction blocking idiots) acquired some basic consideration for other people... I do accept that the standard of bus driving in London is often not good. (which it's questionable whether you can have if you choose to drive in London anyway), this wouldn't be necessary. A Anyway, I've had enough. I'm emigrating. That'll be one less car on London's roads. Where to? India, where the traffic.... Oh! Never mind, can't have everything:-) But it does make London's traffic more bearable, knowing that I won't have to put up with it for much longer. -- Nick H (UK) |
Buses blocking the road
Annabel Smyth wrote:
Nick H (UK) wrote to uk.transport.london on Mon, 11 Oct 2004: Annabel Smyth wrote: Nick H (UK) wrote to uk.transport.london on Sun, 10 Oct 2004: And why can't other drivers actually *use* bus lanes when available? Because at those hours, the bus lane is invariably blocked by parked cars. Which is fine, if parking is allowed at those hours. Which, at the hours when we tend to be driving, it normally is. However, I often find that the bus lane is clear and empty. Would I therefore be correct in assuming that you often drive between 10.00 am and 4.00 pm on a weekday, when many bus-lanes are available for other drivers to use? You would. This however, also encourages overtaking in the left, which is fundamentally dangerous. Swings and roundabouts! Now there's a novel road design idea:-) -- Nick H (UK) |
Buses blocking the road
In message , "Nick H (UK)"
writes lying philanderer Norris Is on the board of Jarvis, the group that cant even maintain railway tracks. -- Clive. |
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