Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 88 total)
  • £60 fines and CCTV crackdown on drivers who stop in bike boxes at lights
  • eyerideit
    Free Member

    On my ride it this morning every bike box had at least 2 vehicles (taxis, vans and buses) partially of fully inside them.

    Hopefully the money generated will go to improving cycling in London I’m all for it.

    The other main problem with road makings in heavy traffic is they get painted on the actual road

    Most people driving who do this drive for a/as part of their living, they know they’re there but choose to ignore them. So they deserve a fine as far as I’m concerned.

    Amber light means accelerate.

    True, they only stop when the other side’s on green.

    trickride
    Free Member

    This is total rubbish, I don’t see how they can bring this in without altering the traffic lights. Amber lights are timed so from a certain distance you have enough time to stop before you go through the lights. Unless they change the timings or move the lights this will just encourage more dangerous acceleration through amber, since the stopping distance will be so much shorter.

    If they do make suitable changes, fair enough. But I cycle in London from time to time and the boxes are the least of my worries. It’s less about catching bad drivers and more about catching innocent mistakes these days. Everybody makes them, except now we have to pay.

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    Advanced stop lines. Some signal-controlled junctions have advanced stop lines to allow cycles to be positioned ahead of other traffic. Motorists, including motorcyclists, MUST stop at the first white line reached if the lights are amber or red and should avoid blocking the way or encroaching on the marked area at other times, e.g. if the junction ahead is blocked. If your vehicle has proceeded over the first white line at the time that the signal goes red, you MUST stop at the second white line, even if your vehicle is in the marked area. Allow cyclists time and space to move off when the green signal shows.

    https://www.gov.uk/using-the-road-159-to-203/road-junctions-170-to-183

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    What about the situation where stopping for the first stop line would be an emergency stop and dangerous, but stopping for the second one would be safe?

    well as driving instructor what would you say to student who failed to stop in time for a red light re their driving speed?
    Would you advise them to just floor it as stopping was dangerous?
    If you cannot stop in time then that is down to your bad driving tbh.
    PS Why would the emergency stop be dangerous but shooting the lights safe?
    You are either trolling or you need to get the highway code re written trolling.

    Amber light means accelerate.

    It clearly means stop and what you suggest is dangerous – though I suspect it is what many do. Me I slow down for lights as they may well change and I need to be able to stop. If you want to RLJ jump by flooring feel free but you are breaking the law.

    bails
    Full Member

    Well quoted Glupton.

    I don’t know what hora’s whinging about here:

    if you are in fairly heavy traffic and any part of your car is left in the box you are now fined?

    because that’s blatantly not true. If the light is already red and you ignore the stop line and drive into the bike box you might get a fine. If you’re ‘caught’ in the box when the lights turn red because you’re in nose-to-tail traffic then you’ve done nothing wrong so no fine.

    What’s the problem?

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    See above.

    bails
    Full Member

    And also, please remember that if (while the light is red) you enter the ASL on a bike without using the filter lane, or you enter one like this: http://goo.gl/maps/HRjty that doesn’t have a filter lane then you’re breaking the law. (Crossing the solid white line, even on a bike, is illegal while the light is red)

    I don’t know if there are any like that in London but will other councils be able to rake in fines from cyclists, who use the ‘not legal’ infrastructure that the council has built?

    Edit: Mind you, the same council also came up with this bit of crystal clear bike signage, so they’re not exactly a beacon of good design. http://goo.gl/maps/kkoVb

    Aidy
    Free Member

    I’m all in favour of this – it’s a red light jump, it should be discouraged.

    And for those asking what motorcyclists should do – they should not filter to the front unless it’s safe to do so. After several close calls with motorcyclists either cutting into ASL’s without looking, or trying to turn left after pulling into the right side of the ASL (or vice versa), they’re absolutely a danger to cyclists.

    D0NK
    Full Member

    If you’re ‘caught’ in the box when the lights turn red because you’re in nose-to-tail traffic then you’ve done nothing wrong so no fine.

    got sauce? Didn’t see any mention of that in the article.

    The fact is that the MET are already supposed to be doing this.

    thought I’d read that by and large they weren’t enforcing it as encroaching on ASL was technically the same as running the red completely which many thought was unfair so very few enforcements/prosecutions/fines/whatever. could be misremembering tho.

    https://www.gov.uk/using-the-road-159-to-203/road-junctions-170-to-183
    highway code, crystal clear as ever.

    gwaelod
    Free Member

    Junkyard…sorry mate… I was being ironic….I know what amber means, but my experience at traffic lights suggests that many others take it as a cue to accelerate.

    Rscott
    Free Member

    I agree that in some places this is essential but accidents do happen, why not clear things right up and make it a yellow hatched box.

    However the cyclist v’s motorist debate is getting boring now,not all car/van/truck drivers are out to get us, and accidents do happen. IF we want to enforce the highway code to the word we need to start setting an example too.

    I was out with a group the other day and very few signaled in traffic, even less gave time for manovours and i saw a few cars cut up then the cyclists get arsey with the motorist. and the unwillingness of a lot of cyclist especially on Yorkshire’s b roads to unbuch creating room is ridiculous.

    I wont be riding with that group again.

    bails
    Full Member

    got sauce? Didn’t see any mention of that in the article

    Glupton has already quoted the highway code.

    Advanced stop lines. Some signal-controlled junctions have advanced stop lines to allow cycles to be positioned ahead of other traffic. Motorists, including motorcyclists, MUST stop at the first white line reached if the lights are amber or red and should avoid blocking the way or encroaching on the marked area at other times, e.g. if the junction ahead is blocked. If your vehicle has proceeded over the first white line at the time that the signal goes red, you MUST stop at the second white line, even if your vehicle is in the marked area. Allow cyclists time and space to move off when the green signal shows.

    And if you want to look for the law itself

    Laws RTA 1988 sect 36 & TSRGD regs 10, 36(1) & 43(2)

    It’s not in the article because there’s not really any need, it’s not against the law, never has been, so no fine.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Junkyard…sorry mate… I was being ironic.

    😳
    Ah bollocks I fell for it as well

    Glumpton you have moved the goalposts

    What about the situation where stopping for the first stop line would be an emergency stop and dangerous, but stopping for the second one would be safe? Do they just batter on through?

    Motorists, including motorcyclists, MUST stop at the first white line reached if the lights are amber or red

    Would you like to discuss the initial scenario you were or stay smug about a different one?

    I would assume the situation above [ you are excited about]relates to slow moving in traffic jams as I fail to see how you could stop between the first and the second box given they are about 5 feet apart

    I am giving you the benefit of the doubt that you are actually being serious

    D0NK
    Full Member

    fair enough bails, the article mentioned something about changing the legalities of it wasn’t sure whether they were going to change that bit aswell.

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    I would assume the situation above [ you are excited about]relates to slow moving in traffic jams as I fail to see how you could stop between the first and the second box given they are about 5 feet apart

    That’s not something I would assume. In fact it’s the opposite to what I’d do. If traffic is moving slowly I’d stay behind the first stop line until the junction was clear.

    br
    Free Member

    Read the highway code, you can enter them as long as your exit is clear, otherwise they’d have to say no right turns (or stop oncoming trafic).

    READ THE HIGHWAY CODE you say? Maybe you ought to first before quoting incorrect information.

    AFAIK You can drive onto a box junction and stop, as long as either your exit is clear or you are the first vehicle.

    Hmm, looks like its not only the first vehicle, but I’m pretty sure that use to be the rule.

    Rule 174 of The Highway code states the following:

    “Box junctions. These have criss-cross yellow lines painted on the road (see ‘Road markings’). You MUST NOT enter the box until your exit road or lane is clear. However, you may enter the box and wait when you want to turn right, and are only stopped from doing so by oncoming traffic, or by other vehicles waiting to turn right.

    ir_bandito
    Free Member

    SO how does it work?

    This:

    MUST stop at the first white line reached if the lights are amber or red

    Makes sense.

    But to get into this situation:

    If your vehicle has proceeded over the first white line at the time that the signal goes red, you MUST stop at the second white line, even if your vehicle is in the marked area

    You’ve surely broken the first law.

    piedidiformaggio
    Free Member

    ASLs in London are a joke. I probably find them with only cyclists in them 1 time out of 100. I hope they do this and do it soon.

    Motorbikes seem to think the ASL is their own zone and usually push through cyclists to get to the front – thanks your exhaust tastes lovely 🙄

    Buses are pretty much always in them and often over the other stop line as well. Delivery vans will normally be fully parked in them. Taxis are variable – some obey, some do not. Private hires always stop in them. I have heard some choice comments mentioned to drivers in them. A favourite was a courier telling an Addison Lee driver that he shouldn’t be there, but the next time he sees a picture of a ‘fat ****’ painted on the raod, he could park on that

    bails
    Full Member

    Bandito: not if the traffic is moving very slowly.

    So the light is green and you cross the first line and put your car completely within the box and stop, because the car in front of you is stopped.

    Then the light goes amber->red. You’re in the box but you didn’t cross the first line while it was red so it’s okay.

    b r: No idea what you’re talking about tbh, you tell someone they’re quoting ‘incorrect information’, then repeat what they’ve said in a verbatim copy from the Highway Code 😕

    klumpy
    Free Member

    And for those asking what motorcyclists should do – they should not filter to the front unless it’s safe to do so.

    So filter and stop between the cars, no big deal for them, they can get free and clear. And if you followed them on a bicycle and got stuck between two queues of traffic, well that was a situation you should have seen coming.

    You probably couldn’t legally enter the ASL from that point anyway without crossing a solid white.

    If the law is the law and no moaning, then they should target the most flagrant ASL rule breakers of them all first – cyslists!! Everyday I see dozens enter each ASL straight through the solid white line.

    br
    Free Member

    bails

    It says you can stop in a boxed junction as long as you are turning right and your exit is blocked. Its quite clear, and has pretty much been so as long as I can remember (been driving over 30 years).

    Motorbikes seem to think the ASL is their own zone and usually push through cyclists to get to the front – thanks your exhaust tastes lovely

    But we are there for the same reason as you, safety and an ability to accelerate out of the way.

    So filter and stop between the cars, no big deal for them, they can get free and clear

    So we can get squashed? You’ve never ridden a m/c I take it?

    bails
    Full Member

    bails

    It says you can stop in a boxed junction as long as you are turning right and your exit is blocked. Its quite clear, and has pretty much been so as long as I can remember (been driving over 30 years).

    Right…I know.

    But when thisisnotaspoon said that, you told him he was wrong. Hence my ‘confused’ face.

    Read the highway code, you can enter them as long as your exit is clear, otherwise they’d have to say no right turns (or stop oncoming trafic).

    READ THE HIGHWAY CODE you say? Maybe you ought to first before quoting incorrect information.

    EDIT: Maybe I misunderstood what he was saying about the right turns. We agree, anyway!

    piedidiformaggio
    Free Member

    But we are there for the same reason as you, safety and an ability to accelerate out of the way.

    So sit at the back of it then, not infront of the cyclists

    klumpy
    Free Member

    So filter and stop between the cars, no big deal for them, they can get free and clear

    [quote]So we can get squashed? You’ve never ridden a m/c I take it?[/quote]

    Commute on one every day, ridden for over twenty years. I was trying to make the point that in a lot of circumstances a motorcycle refusing to enter an ASL is worse for cyclists than the biker, as they end up stuck behind him.

    But we are there for the same reason as you, safety and an ability to accelerate out of the way.

    [quote]So sit at the back of it then, not infront of the cyclists[/quote]

    So you’d rather we accelerated past/between you once you’d started wobbling along, not eased through while you’re stationary?

    glupton1976
    Free Member

    Right – here’s the deal in words that you can all understand.

    Some rules of the road:
    You don’t drive like a muppet,
    Emergency stops are for emergencies only (lights changing to amber when you are less than you are less than a safe stopping distance away from the line is not an emergency),
    You drive safely,
    You don’t do anything that would cause a crash,
    You pay attention to the road and everything around you.

    Those are absolute givens – You cant stick to those then you shouldn’t be on the road. We all in agreement? Good.

    You are on a journey which takes in three sets of traffic lights, two have an ASL and the other does not, later on in the journey there are two other junctions with yellow boxes. You are approaching the first set of traffic lights – one with no ASL – you are less than a safe stopping distance from the line when the lights change – you keep on going because it’s not an emergency and to stop would see you pass the stop line. You are now approaching the second set of traffic lights – again you are less than a safe stopping distance from the lights when they change – you do not stop at the first line because it would be dangerous and it’s not an emergency – you do stop at the second line though because that is far enough away to allow you to stop safely. You are on your way again and are approaching the third set of traffic lights which has an ASL where you are wanting to turn right – there is a yellow box junction and a queue of traffic also waiting to turn right – there is no filter and you are 2nd in the queue. The lights turn to green – the first car goes into the yellow box because all that is preventing them from clearing the yellow box is the oncoming traffic – you stay where you are behind the first stop line because you are not allowed to enter the yellow box and to proceed beyond the first stop line would leave you open to blocking the area reserved for cyclists between the two stop lines. When the car in front clears the yellow box you can take their position if the lights allow. Eventually you clear the junction – you are now faced with another yellow box – this time you want to go straight ahead – there are no traffic lights, but traffic is queuing anyway. The yellow box clears, but there is not enough room to fit your car on the other side of the yellow box – you stay where you are until there is enough room to proceed without stopping with any part of your vehicle in the yellow box. You continue on the rest of your journey safe in the knowledge that you haven’t broken any laws.

    piedidiformaggio
    Free Member

    So you’d rather we accelerated past/between you once you’d started wobbling along, not eased through while you’re stationary?

    I’d prefer you weren’t in the ASL at all in the first place, but if you insist, then I don’t to sit there sucking up your exhaust fumes.

    As for once the lights have changed, then I’d want you to perform a safe overtake when possible. I certainly don’t want you riding like a prize tit and accelerating between cyclists 🙄

    simons_nicolai-uk
    Free Member

    personally I dunno about motorbikes in bus lanes/asls, seems reasonable for them to use them i guess, but no idea what the arguments against are.

    I’m pretty sure about it. They shouldn’t be there. It’s no fun at all being buzzed by m-bikes travelling at speed when you’re cycling in a bus lane. Likewise getting to an ASL and not being able to enter because it’s full of m-bikes.

    Amber lights are timed so from a certain distance you have enough time to stop before you go through the lights. Unless they change the timings or move the lights this will just encourage more dangerous acceleration through amber, since the stopping distance will be so much shorter.

    There’s so much wrong with this statement I’m not even going to comment. It’s actually rare to NOT see someone pass the lights on red in London. Sometimes some seconds after the light has changed. MOST of the ASL infringement I see is avoidable and you can be damn sure if people think they’ll be fined they’ll be a lot more careful.

    the ‘only enter an ASL through the dotted line’ bit is just a red herring. Many ASL’s aren’t even painted with a dotted line and where there is it’s in the gutter on the inside of a potentially left turning traffic lane (remind me how the majority of cyclist deaths occur again?). However, filter down the right of traffic and currently you regularly find yourself stuck on outside since the ASL is blocked (cars or m-bikes).

    Ultimately ASLs are a joke anyway. They’ll be better if they’re enforced but they’re a minor intervention at best and they can’t cope with any volume of cyclists. In the Netherlands they’ve pretty much disappeared by all accounts – they don’t install them now and remove them when junctions are updated.

    br
    Free Member

    I’m pretty sure about it. They shouldn’t be there. It’s no fun at all being buzzed by m-bikes travelling at speed when you’re cycling in a bus lane

    You’d just prefer buses and taxis sat on your ar5e then?

    I think that having m/c’s in bus lanes at least makes other drivers (and pedestrians) take a second look before pulling across them. They don’t particularly care about a cyclist, they can’t do any damage – but a 250kg m/c is another matter.

    simons_nicolai-uk
    Free Member

    the ‘only enter an ASL through the dotted line’ bit is just a red herring

    and I believe that’s in the process of being rescinded anyway.

    You’d just prefer buses and taxis sat on your ar5e then?

    I’d rather have a properly segregated lane without any of them.

    Failing that I’d rather just have the buses – easily visible and no chance of them trying to squeeze past when there isn’t really enough space. Worst of all are the motorbikes – fast moving, more difficult to see (especially when moving through a line of stationary traffic to get to the bus lane). Take the lane to stop cabs pushing past and they’re passing without a lot of space. Rarely seem to obey the speed limit.

    Allowing motorbikes to use bus lanes made cycling in them more unpleasant. I’ve not noticed any positive side benefits.

    I certainly don’t want you riding like a prize tit and accelerating between cyclists

    This +1. If there are m-bikes who wait at the back of the ASL I try to wave them past before the far side of the junction.

    simmy
    Free Member

    I’ve had people fail tests because they have gone into the ” bike box ” as I call it, but only when they simply have not braked hard enough and gone over the first line.

    The speed on approach was fine but simply going in it ” coz me mum does ” is not a valid excuse 🙄

    ( sometimes no matter what you teach them, on test mum knows best ” coz I’m on me test “)

    Away from work, it really get on my ( well 😉 ) when a vehicle stops in a bike box. It’s either they simply do not care, are daft, or don’t realise but, majority of times, follow the offending vehicle, and you will see speeding, bad positioning, squeezing through gaps etc so anything they brings these kind of motorists to book is good in my opinion.

    On the bike, I went to the side of a people carrier that had stopped in a bike box and deliberately went close to the drivers window. Think I shocked the woman but I said ” funny looking bike love ” at which point I got told to …… Off so sums it up althougher. OK I was a bit cheeky, but that reaction was unneeded.

    br
    Free Member

    Allowing motorbikes to use bus lanes made cycling in them more unpleasant. I’ve not noticed any positive side benefits.

    If you rode a m/c you would. Or the opposite, when they take it away (A4127 between A40 and M40).

    Anyway, the clue is in the name, Bus Lane. So neither of us has a right to be there, but for both of us been allowed in makes the journey both quicker and safer.

    Should us m/c-ists petition TfL to get you cyclists out?

    simons_nicolai-uk
    Free Member

    Bus lanes are there for public transport – which is a social good – as it reduces pollution and congestion for a given volume of people. Cycles are allowed in for the same reason.

    I can see the advantage of motorbikes for the individual but not for society. Most are excessively noisy, ridden too fast and have pretty poor emissions. I don’t deny that there are big advantages for motorcyclists in being allowed to use bus lanes but I think it was a mistake.

    The research I saw also seemed to point that the reverse of what you claim is true – made it more dangerous for everyone

    CTC position here

    slowoldgit
    Free Member

    I was under the impression that if someone drove into my boot, that’s their problem: inattention, inadequate gap or whatever.

    Has it changed? Is it ok to tailgate now in that there London?

    brakes
    Free Member

    I can see the advantage of motorbikes for the individual but not for society

    I don’t mind them too much – little L-plate scooters are good for dragging behind. 20mph limits in bus lanes would help – might slow the Streethawk-wannabes down a bit.

    simons_nicolai-uk
    Free Member

    I was under the impression that if someone drove into my boot, that’s their problem: inattention, inadequate gap or whatever.

    That’s not a lot of help if you’re a cyclist. I’ve had people give me a blast of horn for not jumping a light that was amber (that in my view I’d have crossed at red) and more than once had people in cars undertake me to jump a red light after I’ve stopped. Shit, I’ve seen people undertake other cars to jump red lights on a good number of occasions.

    klumpy
    Free Member

    Bus lanes are there for public transport – which is a social good – as it reduces pollution and congestion for a given volume of people. Cycles are allowed in for the same reason.

    As are motorcycles. If you’re in traffic, you are traffic – by the same token if you’re happily whisking past traffic then you are not traffic. Motorcyles are often a superior solution to cycles, they take up a similarly small amount of space and have the same jam busting powers in town with far more useful range and speed outside of it.

    Weird figures in the linked article:
    New research published by Transport for London today found that the collision rate for cyclists using bus lanes increased 273 per cent.

    Figures also show that, over a 10-month comparison period, the rate of motorbikers being in a collision in a bus lane increased 133 per cent.

    But bizarrely the collisions were not between pedal cyclists and bikers – but between vehicles and bikers, and vehicles and cyclists.

    So the motorcycles are making cyclists crash into cars? I doubt there’s a causal link. Something like (for an example) introducing more (or even just one more) cycle lanes that run up the left hand side of traffic at busy junctions during that period could account for the increase in cyclist collisions. And the sample sizes these figures are taken from are too small for real statistics, cyclist collisions rose from 7 to 21, for example. That could be a single critical mass ride meeting one white van.

    The only negative effect on cyclists from bikers sharing bus lanes is a diminished sense of privilege.

    brakes
    Free Member

    they also have an annoying habit of blocking the gaps they can’t squeeze their wing mirrors/ bars through that I can on a bike.

    D0NK
    Full Member

    Motorcyles are often a superior solution to cycles,

    again only for the individual, motorbikes are still belching out CO2 and other stuff, pretty high co2 for a single person too iirc (yes I accept the vast majority of cars are single occupancy too) and presumably* motorcycle accidents cause more harm than cycle ones, and of course motorbikes don’t have the added benefit of getting people to be more active.

    Altho we seem to be ignoring the taxis which I reckon have even less claim to be using bus lanes, IMO

    *having difficulty finding the stats.

    simons_nicolai-uk
    Free Member

    Motorcyles are often a superior solution to cycles, they take up a similarly small amount of space and have the same jam busting powers in town with far more useful range and speed outside of it.

    but are noisy and polluting.

    The only negative effect on cyclists from bikers sharing bus lanes is a diminished sense of privilege.

    That’s just bollocks. This is actually a cycling forum isn’t it? I have to remind myself sometimes. Putting bikes in bus lanes and calling it a cycle facility (Barcrap supershitways) is a bad enough joke to start with. Nowhere else considers that a useful intevention. Privilege? FFS

    Even if there is no change in actual safety (which I dispute) there is a definite decrease in perceived safety. I’m an experienced, confidant, cyclist and I dislike intensely being close passed by a fast moving motorbike in a bus lane. It will absolutely have a negative effect on take up of cycling and completely fails the ‘would you let an unaccompanied 10 year old’ test

    Aidy
    Free Member

    It’s pretty obvious that some people here haven’t actually tried riding bicycles on the road for any length of time.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 88 total)

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