Ignoring that my country doesn’t allow Idaho Stops, or that my Provincial Government wants to actively kill cyclists by removing safe cycling infrastructure, I’ve always wondered if there’s a reason why cyclists aren’t allowed to simply ride through an intersection like the one in the photo.

I’m talking about the right side, where the bike lane could extend through the intersection without interfering with other vehicles, including those that are turning left.

This would not only keep those stops safer (clears the cyclist out of the intersection), but would just make sense from a transportation efficiency standpoint.

Is there something I’m missing, or do cyclists have to stop only because motorists would take a tantrum if they weren’t required to?

4 points

Are cars allowed to park in the intersection there? A bicycle could get hit on the rare occasion someone coming from the other road swung out to park there.

I can’t think of any other reason. And this one sucks, too.

permalink
report
reply
3 points

Are cars allowed to park in the intersection there?

Generally speaking, cars are usually not allowed to park within a certain distance of any intersection. Do they abide by those laws, designed to keep other road users safe? Of course not.

I’ve come across so many of these three-ways where it really doesn’t make sense for cyclists to have to stop. Even more so when you are forced to stop at a light (that will never change due to no cars being around you), and simply permitting cyclists to ride through in the bike lane just seems like a no-brainer.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

Ontario law? 9m, 15m if it has lights.

In practice? LOL

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

I’m floored by how many Ontario drivers I witness parking under stop signs, or at the edge of an intersection turn. Then again, “NO PARKING” and “NO STOPPING” signs are usually treated as suggestions.

Like, what cereal box did they get their license from?

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points

I’d be riding through this like it didn’t exist pretty regularly

permalink
report
reply
1 point
*

I’d ride through it if nobody is around.

I’m not taking chances that someone won’t swing too wide and smash into me if there’s traffic though.

Exception is oncoming traffic, because they won’t be closer than 20ft to me unless they’re aiming

People are dumb. Expect them to do dumb things and you’ll live longer.

permalink
report
parent
reply
13 points

I can imagine any reasonably size truck, semi etc turning left may need to use the bike lane to avoid clipping the front of a vehicle in the lane coming through from the other way. That portion (the passenger side of the semi) of the road would be in a massive blind spot for the driver, so they’d probably be relying on bikes to have stopped according to the standard rules of the road.

Probably a pretty rare scenario, and easy enough for a cyclist to see and avoid, but rules are built around worst case scenarios, not most frequent scenarios.

permalink
report
reply
-1 points

I can imagine any reasonably size truck, semi etc turning left may need to use the bike lane to avoid clipping the front of a vehicle in the lane coming through from the other way.

That’s a reasonable concern. In areas where large trucks are expected to turn, you’d see traffic lights (not stop signs). At least, that’s what I’ve noticed, since the intersections themselves need to be large enough to accommodate large trucks like that.

But three ways in areas where you’d only expect small vehicles are very common around here, and stopping doesn’t make sense.

Really, we just need to permit the Idaho Stop so a question like this one becomes irrelevant. 😂

permalink
report
parent
reply
0 points
*

Idaho Stop is permitted at every location lacking a police officer. I see perhaps 2 in 10 not Idahoeing in my part of TO. The TO maneuver is, look for cars, look for police, if neither is present, proceed through the stop sign. I stop these days because I’m riding electric assist and starting from a stop isn’t that big of a deal and I don’t have to pay as much attention this way.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

I’ll be honest, I use an Idaho Stop at some very specific intersections (with red lights) near me. I’ve been stranded at some of these lights for 10+ minutes, simply because they don’t change for cyclists. Even when they signal yellow, and you expect your light to turn green, it’ll continue as red when it detects that no cars are there.

It’s a form of subtle discrimination against anyone who isn’t in a car, and if the way is clear, I’m going through it.

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points

Probably because a lot of people have poor driving skills and will “swing wide” when making the turn.

permalink
report
reply
3 points

My guess is because it’s a crosswalk.

permalink
report
reply
-5 points
Removed by mod
permalink
report
parent
reply
4 points

Friend, I’ll stop at pedestrian crossings while riding my bike, only to have cars blow by me while a pedestrian is already crossing.

Cyclists may annoy pedestrians, but cars kill them.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

it’s a futile endeavour… A few guys have gone around doing street interviews now, and pedestrians generally seem to think cyclists kill more people than cars, and spout the most bizarre mental gymnastics to make car caused deaths an accident but cyclists have to pay dearly for their nearly nonexistent death doll, even though, as far as I could find while sifting through shitty AI slop articles, in most bike crashes with a death its only the cyclist dying regardless of who is at fault.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

In that example, you’re right. Not that it would make a difference, since there are crosswalks in places that permit Idaho Stops. But in other 3-ways, especially in residential areas, crosswalks are absent (so are sidewalks on the right side), so stopping feels… off.

Take this example:

Ignore that the bike lane “'continues” through the stop, as this stop sign is pretty new and the lines were already painted.

There’s no sidewalk on the right side, and no crosswalk at those stops (only on the left side). This particular area is part of our waterfront trail, an extremely popular bike route. It would make sense for cars to stop there (they speed down this road on a regular basis), but bikes?

permalink
report
parent
reply

Bicycling

!bicycling@lemmy.world

Create post

A community for those who enjoy bicycling for any reason— utility, recreation, sport, or whatever!

Post your questions, experiences, knowledge, pictures, news, links, and (civil) rants.

Rules (to be added on an as-needed basis)

  1. Comments and posts should be respectful and productive.
  2. No ads or commercial spam, including linking to your own monetized content.
  3. Linked content should be as unburdened by ads and trackers as possible.

Welcome!

Community stats

  • 505

    Monthly active users

  • 166

    Posts

  • 1.1K

    Comments

Community moderators