Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Motorcycles in Bus Lanes, TfL report.


The main thing is it was successful, and the fear cyclists had of being in jeopardy were unfounded.

However, there were a few more accidents involving motorcyclists being hit by vehicles turning left across the bus lanes, without looking before turning to see if there was anything coming.


We all need to take more responsibility and look out for one another. And do a First Aid course!

Being a cyclist as well as a motor cyclist I'm all for all two-wheeled road users being able to access all the bus lanes (not just the TfL ones as is the case at the moment) and I never considered that motorcyclists would present any significant danger. I could never understand why taxis are allowed to use them but motorcyclists were not. If it were up to me taxis would be banned from bus lanes during the morning and afternoon rush hours. They invariably contain only one passenger - why do they get special treatment?

To the comment above the one above, many boroughs and towns in England allow bikers in all bus lanes.

Richmond does, too, as well as Westminster itself allows us in some of them.

There must be a motorcyclist on the council in Newham as we are also allowed at the front of the traffic with the cyclists on the green bit; something we do anyway everywhere else! (Well I do, anyway.)

I'm a little dubious about the no impact on cyclist finding. Seems counterintuitive. But then I've never had a run in with a motrcylist yet in a bus lane, so perhaps it's right. One alternative I'd wonderd about was whether motorcylclists might be restricted to the outer half of the lane only.

Real problem is that allowing motorcyclists only in red-route bus lanes is confusing. I've already been done once for being in a bus lane that wasn't a red route (approaching waterloo bridge) when I understandably thought it was red route. Roads leadin up to it are....


If it's fine for red routes why not everywhere else.

Wellthat's what we all want to know, and to change, nutty. All bus lanes have signs at the beginning of their stretch that show icons of what can and can't ride in them. And then you turn left say, and the bus lane sign has a motorcycle on it so you can, then you turn another corner and all of a sudden you can not. It's utterly ridiculous, and it's only constant pressure by such groups as Motorcycle Action Group who managed to persuade the mayor of the sense in allowing us in TfL lanes. Each borough has their own rules. All London should have two rules only: 1) Drive on the left and 2) (thanks to James May) Don't be a prat! So join MAG if you are not already a member.

PeckhamRose Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Newham as we are also allowed at the front of the

> traffic with the cyclists on the green bit;

> something we do anyway everywhere else! (Well I

> do, anyway.)


I wish you wouldn't, it's not for you.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Excellent service! We had one of Paul Edgley’ s team come to fit some new lights in our living room. They were able to come at reasonably short notice, arrived on time, were friendly and professional, and did a great job. Everything was left clean and tidy afterwards, and the lights look fantastic. Highly recommend! Paul’s contact details are 07802 627967  
    • For Plusnet, I pay £31.99 for Full Fibre 500.  (the number is the line speed you have paid for) I have recently recontracted.  Always phone them up, and ask what deal they can do for me.  Usually get a decent reduction.  Sue, I would suggest you call them, especially if you are close to contract renewal.  Sometimes they will change deals mid-contract, as I have found in the past.      
    • The drivers generally have the same set area to cover every day, so they're fairly easy to follow - quite often on bike. They organise their drops to maximise how many they can do within a given time - there's actually software at the depot to do this before they set off - so they tend to follow the same route. Certain addresses are delivery hotspots, some have two or three drops a day from the various couriers. It all adds up doorstep deliveries being incredibly easy to target. I suspect Vladi's neighbour hasn't had their fake parcel nicked, not because of their security, but because the thief simply wouldn't have seen the driver stop there, so there's nothing to steal. The losses are factored in, driving prices up for everyone, and the drivers are treated abysmally. It's a dreadful business. It needs regulating.   Sorry, cross post with Angelina and Alec1
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...