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The length of the yellow light is proportionate to the speed limit. I just do not get this whole thing. If you saw a squad car at the intersection you would NEVER accelerate into the intersection on yellow. Why complain about a method of law enforcement that does it's job without prejudice?
heather said:I thought the point of the 3-second yellow was that if you are traveling at or below the speed limit, you should be able to either make it through the light, or safely slow down and stop. If you're speeding, you don't have time to stop OR to get through the light before it changes to red.
David Lieb said:I will say that several years ago I got a ticket for a red light infraction on Elston.
This was before there were any red light cameras in Chicagoland. The cop specifically mentioned the yellow as being a 3-second yellow. It isn't something they changed for the sake of the red light cameras, it is something put in place long since to trip up the non-locals ;-)
Official response from Active Trans: Red light cameras only record those that break the law. They do not record everyone who enters an intersection -- just those who enter them illegally.
Joe,
the implication being that all Chicago yellows are inappropriately short. Surely they're all different lengths for different situations and locations.
So, the camera doesn't show when cars are turning?The problem is the camera is a still camera and there is no way to differentiate between rolling the light and a legal right turn on red.
If you're following so closely that you can't see traffic signals, you're breaking the law. If you're driving too fast for the conditions, you're breaking the law. The "three second rule" may be fine in good weather, but not when it's snowing.I got dinged for one when I got caught behind a large panel truck that I couldn't see beyond. It was snowing, and he was going about 20 mph before accelerating at the intersection (Western and Irving Park). I was following at a 3 second distance, and only after he got out ahead of me could I see the stale yellow. I felt that I would have lost control of my car had I tried to panic stop at that time, so I made eye contact with the driver in opposing left hand turn lane and went through.
Okay, so you had your due process and it didn't go your way. If you really did get a bum rap, then I feel bad for you. But that anecdote doesn't convince me that the entire traffic regulation and enforcement system should be thrown out. Am I surprised that the judge dismissed your argument that the problem was that the traffic signal was "insufficient" for you to be able to stop? No. More to the point, if you had been issued a ticket by a cop, would you have fared any better in court?I went in for a hearing and argued for the conditions, and for the insufficient (3 second) yellow length per national traffic engineering guidelines for that intersection. My appeal was denied.
Yeah, and you know what else I can see clearly? Almost every time a light turns red, at least two drivers gun it and blatantly run the light when they could have easily stopped. And most of the time, those drivers were already speeding. How do you propose we change this behavior?This is demonstrably false. The video cameras are rolling well before the light turns red, and you can see vehicles driving through the intersection in a fully legal fashion. The video snippet I was forwarded for my infraction showed this clearly.
No, you'll still have those same cars running the "orange" lights.Make all the yellows 4.5 seconds and keep your cameras and I'll shut up.
No, you'll still have those same cars running the "orange" lights.Make all the yellows 4.5 seconds and keep your cameras and I'll shut up.
See, while I feel bad for anyone who's gotten a bum rap for running a red light, I feel much worse for people who are killed because drivers are treating this like a f***ing game. One pedestrian is killed by a car every single week in the City of Chicago, on average. If I have to choose whether to err on the side of letting a few people get traffic tickets or letting more people die, it's no contest. If you want to think of it as an extra little driving tax, that's okay by me; whatever it takes to get drivers to slow down and stop driving recklessly and killing so many people.
It's not about being punitive, it's about saving lives. And we obviously disagree about whether it's unfair.I get the impression some people here feel justified in supporting unfair policies out of some kind of punitive impulse toward motorists.
Anything can be taken to a ridiculous extreme. You could say that by the same logic of extending yellow times to 4.5 seconds, we should extend them even further. How about seven seconds, or ten? Wouldn't drivers just eventually ignore the yellow because they think they can still get through before the red? And how is that much different than what happens now?This is the only reason to articulate the argument that a 4.5 second yellow is bad because people would still run it and that ticketing even drivers who WOULD stop if the light was a REASONABLE length is preferable to giving them a fair shake. By that logic, a 1 second yellow is even a better option because people would have to drive very slowly to stop in time, and if some people doing the speed limit are tagged because a 1 second yellow is completely impossible to stop for, then so be it. A "tax" is collected. Of course, that's a ridiculous proposal.
Really? So if the yellow was longer, those same two cars wouldn't gun it? And they wouldn't try to race ahead when the light turned green? And they wouldn't speed? I think you're putting way too much faith in the idea of simply adjusting yellow light timings to encourage safer driving. It's the drivers who "push it no matter what" who need to be dissuaded from that behavior, and the most effective way to do that is to enforce the laws vigorously. And while nobody seems to thinks they're the bad driver, I would argue that a majority of drivers are in that group.Yes, some people will push it no matter what. But those who intend to obey the law deserve a law that's reasonable. These folks would be less likely to run "orange" lights if they felt safe stopping.
I don't know whether "the city" is being sincere or not. I do believe that ActiveTrans is, though. And I think I'm being sincere in stating that this is a safety issue. Yes, there are a few studies which show a temporary uptick in crashes when cameras are installed, but almost every reputable study shows a long-term decline.If you want a "tax," fine, I have no problem. The city stickers, for example - a revenue booster - but at least the city isn't insincerely pushing it as a safety issue. This situation is - cue the chorus - WRONG AND UNJUST
See, when you talk about what people can "live with," you're being allegorical. When I talk about what people can live with, I'm being literal. Actual human lives are at stake here.Here's my argument AGAIN - If you don't want people running red lights, you got to give them a yellow that can live with.
Again, I can't speak to what the city wants. What I want is safer streets. If the revenue generated from more robust enforcement also happens to reduce the disparity between what drivers pay and the costs they incur on the rest of us, that's all the better, but that's not the main goal, at least not for me.But that's not what the city wants. The city wants your money. The estimate I read in the trib is $75 million a year grossed by those cams. I bet they'd make the yellows even shorter if they thought they could get away with it.
If the driver was following at the appropriate distance and speed and paying attention the driver would have had time to stop safely. That is the whole point of appropriate distance and speed and paying attention.And where do you get the idea that he wasn't?
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