As our eyes age, they have a tougher and tougher time adjusting to rapid changes in lighting, and we need to be aware of this.
I can't see a problem with imposing fines on drivers who violate traffic safety laws. The speed limit is the speed limit. A red light means stop. These things haven't changed since people got their driver's licenses.
Nobody likes paying tolls. It's difficult to explain the concept of dynamic tolling, where the price varies to maintain the flow of traffic. And it's difficult to explain why highway widenings don't wind up helping commuters in the long run.
If you think your job requires you to endanger people, get another job.
Automate the headlights so drivers can't forget to turn them on in low visibility.
Seems like people could behave themselves without making a calculation regarding how likely or unlikely they are to kill other people.
Metro, built in the late 20th century, is the most escalator-dependent system in the world.
Some people make a separate argument about the red light cameras. They say it just changes the type of crash that's most likely to occur at an intersection.
Tolling plan is a wonderful opportunity for political pandering, and some candidates are taking full advantage of it.
I don't see traffic fines as a substitute for a commuter tax.
Motors that are vulnerable to shorting out because of snow ingestion should have snow filters installed over air intakes, and spare motors should be ready to replace any failed motors.
Metro shows no signs of being able to make its trains run on time. This occurs during single-tracking and it occurs during normal rush hour service.
If you're driving more than 50 mph through a neighborhood where the speed limit is 25 mph, I question whether you should keep your driver's license. You're a menace to society.
I don't believe any sort of traveler does a better job than any other sort of traveler at obeying traffic safety laws. It's difficult to foresee a camera program that can be used with bikers and walkers.
That's the original problem from which the escalator mess stems. There's just too many of them.
I think that maps showing platform details would be useful to visitors, especially to chaperones of school groups, etc. Also useful would be either a compass rose or an arrow pointing North at every metro exit. Emerging from underground is disorienting, especially at night.
Over the decades, you got various companies involved in making escalators and you've got Metro varying between internal repair crews and contractors. They're dealing with old equipment, which of course is prone to break down, and the repair crews don't even know what's busted or who made the busted parts till they tear the things open. Then sometimes they have to go back to the shop and manufacture parts, because the original maker has gone out of business.
SafeTrack - I keep saying this - is not going to fix Metro. It's a speeded up track work program, compressing three years of already planned work on the track bed into about a year.
I'm surprised when I see someone doing the logical, commonsense thing: Walk facing the oncoming traffic.
Many police officers watch for vehicles without headlights because it's a telltale of a drunk driver.
I don't know of any source for online maps showing the platform, stairs, escalators, elevators, mezzanines and other station details.
When different generations of cars are combined into one train, it messes with the loudspeaker system.
Drivers tend to look for other drivers, rather than for pedestrians or cyclists.
When I look at the faces of turning drivers, I mostly see them looking in the direction of oncoming motorists rather than at the people they're about to turn into.
I wish the dashboard indicators for lights were standardized throughout the auto industry.