Paul Schrimpf wrote:This entire area has not grown up with the crosswalk apart from the traffic light, and if we want drivers to take them seriously we need to reeducate them through enforcement, starting with warnings. There's no crosswalk culture here. If you have the will it can be done, i.e., the movement to get people to slow down in construction zones with doubled fines and tighter enforcement. I'd love to see it.
Paul
EDUCATE, such a key word. The other night I was talking with another Observer who I had the pleasure of meeting for
the first time, and we were talking about sharrows. He is an avid biker and not a fan. To be honest EDUCATE is the key
again, and instead of painting this on roads that fade, we should be telling people, "YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO HIT
ANYTHING IN A CAR, not a walker, a car, a bike, a building, or a dog."
All crosswalks, are treated the same in a court of law. Yellow, lights, red lights, signs or no signs. You hit a human in a cross
walk you are guilty. You also have to give them clear safe distance, with more lead if they are walking to you or away from you.
Bill, I believe this method was a cost savings. Funny how we have money for a lot of
things but not safety in front of the library, or "The Kill Zone" the intersection between
the Westerly, Bob Evans, and Giant Eagle!
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