Zamzara wrote:
If there is one car in front, and space for thirty cars after the yellow box, it would be absolutely stupid to stop before the box until the other car has cleared it. Yet with a camera, this exactly what is required, just in case the car in front makes an emergency stop.
Not that I'm a fan of automated or semi-automated traffic law enforcement, but in this instance is it just the camera that's the problem, or is the wording of the law also at fault?
As stated in the Highway Code:
Quote:
You MUST NOT enter the box until your exit road or lane is clear.
Aside from the exemption for right-turners, there's nothing to suggest the law allows for people entering the box in free-flowing traffic with the realistic expectation that by the time they reach the far side of the box the exit lane will be clear - as far as it's stated in the HC, the offence is committed the moment you enter the box without knowing that your exit is
already clear...
...mind you, as worded this means you could never enter the box, because you can never be certain that by the time you reach the other side the exit will STILL be clear - a pedestrian could trip whilst walking along the pavement and collapse into the road, a large branch could fall from a tree, some idiot could jump the lights and occupy the space you had noted before entering the box - can the law itself really be that badly worded, or is it just the way it's stated in the HC
