johnsher wrote:
Twister wrote:
can, and do, get used to penalise people for driving in totally deserted bus lanes, whereas being caught on a bus-mounted camera means there WAS a bus trying to use the bus lane at the time...
round here all the bus lanes are full of cyclists. Will we need to wear cameras as well?
Nope, because a cyclist ought to have little/no difficulty in passing a slow/stationary vehicle in the bus lane, unlike the buses which the lanes are primarily intended to serve. If the bus lanes in your area really are that well used by cyclists, maybe the bus companies should turn the cameras on them instead...
...and I'm only half-joking here. The
primary purpose of a bus lane is to provide buses with a clear route, and anything which hinders that progress on a routine basis ought to be prohibited during the operating hours of the lane. If motorists can be penalised by the local authority for entering (even briefly and with only a part of their vehicle) a bus lane without a cast-iron justification for doing so, regardless of whether or not any buses were actually affected, then should the same LA simply turn a blind eye to the genuine delays caused by buses having to find a safe spot to pass even a single cyclist in the bus lane, let alone entire flocks of them?
And yes, despite all the crap bus drivers who don't seem to give a damn about any other road users or their passengers, there are plenty of other drivers who have no intention of risking their livelihood by causing an accident trying to squeeze by a cyclist when the alternative is to simply lift off and go slow for a bit - if it's their last run of the day then they might even make a bit of overtime out of it... I'm married to a bus driver, I personally know several more, and as a daily bus user I'm familiar with the driving styles of most of the ones based at my local depot. In my experience, and from what my wife has said, most of them just want a nice simple easy life. Filling out incident occurrence forms isn't something they enjoy doing, even if it's for something they had no control over (e.g. having a window smashed by stone-throwing yobs), so they tend not to drive in a way which increases the likelihood of them having to fill one out for something they could have avoided AND which may also lead to prosecution.