Oregon,
Arkansas pursue
left-lane use limits
left-lane use limits
By Keith
Goble, Land Line state legislative editor
State lawmakers in
multiple states are considering bills to keep most drivers out of the fast
lane.
An Oregon bill would make the left lane off limits for everything except passing.
Truckers already are prohibited from using the far left lane but Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, thinks that limits should be in place for all vehicles that may impede traffic.
“We need to give the Oregon State Police more enforcement authority to make sure that traffic flows smoothly and safely,” Burdick testified to the Senate Business and Transportation Committee . . . .
Full story: Landlinemag
An Oregon bill would make the left lane off limits for everything except passing.
Truckers already are prohibited from using the far left lane but Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, thinks that limits should be in place for all vehicles that may impede traffic.
“We need to give the Oregon State Police more enforcement authority to make sure that traffic flows smoothly and safely,” Burdick testified to the Senate Business and Transportation Committee . . . .
Full story: Landlinemag
Peter’s
Piece
Sometimes tinkering with driving rules that are as old as motoring
itself will only make the problem worse, and sometimes it is better to throw
out everything that has gone before and make a completely new start.
Peter's truck in 40 American states |
Current lane driving rules have not changed since it was discovered
that the world is not flat.
These rules are suitable only for roads that have no more than a single
lane in each direction. In most countries the rule is keep right and overtake
on the left of traffic moving in the same direction. When the first multi-lane
road opened a new set of rules should have been enacted.
There is an increasing trend among drivers on multi-lane roads to drive
in the far-left lane. They feel safe there because it is less crowded and there
is less interference from traffic joining or leaving at interchanges. The
far-left lane is becoming a cruising lane and other lanes are becoming maneuvering
lanes for joining, leaving and overtaking.
Anyone who thinks about that for a moment will realize that those
drivers are doing what aircraft and ships have always done; cruising at high
altitude, or far out from the coast, while the maneuvering is done close to the
ground or the coast. It’s safer that way.
It is just as safe to overtake on one side as the other and if we
substitute ‘fast lane’ for ‘cruising lane’ and ‘slow lane’ for ‘maneuvering
lane’ the traffic will flow more freely and more safely with less lane changing
near on and off ramps.
This is already happening by default and if legislators try to outlaw
the trend they will be going against the flow and legislating for more chaos.
It just requires some bold, new thinking.
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