Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:*not residential
It doesn't matter if its residential. If a school bus stops and the stop sign swing arm comes out (yellow lights on top turn to red), you must stop. Full and complete on both sides of the road unless there is a permanent divider.
Clearly NO ONE sees the bus sign or lights as NO ONE stopped. Even another school bus drove on by.
Aren’t MCPS and MoCo concerned? If I saw 10 tickets every time a bus stopped on a non-residential street I’d do a lot more than send $250 tickets.
Get a fog horn on the bus. Put a squad car and megaphone out there. This could be dangerous. The retirement home kid may need a popsical from the gas stations on the other side and use the bus stop sign instead of the cross walk by the light…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was there a divider? I'm honestly surprised that 7 lanes wouldn't have a divider. And if it doesn't, I don't think a school bus should be stopping on such a busy road.
River Road there is crazy busy, and residential except for that tall retirement home thing.
Thx for the Public Service Announcement that they’re issuing pricey school bus camera tickets.
Ironic that the video link they typically include on auto-camera tickets shows no cars stopping, not even their own bus going the other way. Seems like a money bus stop for sure, maybe double check any kid actually got out even!
Ironic that no one stops for a school bus? On a particularly busy road, drivers should be particularly careful, don’t you think?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:*not residential
It doesn't matter if it’s residential. If a school bus stops and the stop sign swing arm comes out (yellow lights on top turn to red), you must stop. Full and complete on both sides of the road unless there is a permanent divider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:*not residential
It doesn't matter if its residential. If a school bus stops and the stop sign swing arm comes out (yellow lights on top turn to red), you must stop. Full and complete on both sides of the road unless there is a permanent divider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was there a divider? I'm honestly surprised that 7 lanes wouldn't have a divider. And if it doesn't, I don't think a school bus should be stopping on such a busy road.
River Road there is crazy busy, and residential except for that tall retirement home thing.
Thx for the Public Service Announcement that they’re issuing pricey school bus camera tickets.
Ironic that the video link they typically include on auto-camera tickets shows no cars stopping, not even their own bus going the other way. Seems like a money bus stop for sure, maybe double check any kid actually got out even!
Anonymous wrote:Was there a divider? I'm honestly surprised that 7 lanes wouldn't have a divider. And if it doesn't, I don't think a school bus should be stopping on such a busy road.
Anonymous wrote:Is there a concrete median? If so contest the ticket. If not sitter should have stopped.
Anonymous wrote:*not residential
Anonymous wrote:*not residential
Anonymous wrote:Was there a divider? I'm honestly surprised that 7 lanes wouldn't have a divider. And if it doesn't, I don't think a school bus should be stopping on such a busy road.
Anonymous wrote:Was there a divider? I'm honestly surprised that 7 lanes wouldn't have a divider. And if it doesn't, I don't think a school bus should be stopping on such a busy road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I disagree with your unhinged and intolerant screed against foreigners and people from out of state.
There is an assumption under the law that if you hold a valid driver's license from another jurisdiction, you may exchange it for a MD driver's license. The people who cause car accidents are statistically young adults and the elderly - regardless of where they come from. Which means the majority of accidents on River Rd will be caused by Montgomery County drivers.
- European whose driving test in Paris was much harder than the incredibly easy one given here in MD. MOST wealthy countries have harder driving tests than the ones given in the USA, actually.
Don't care.
Do care that drivers here know right of way rules, merging rules, school bus stop rules, passing rules, signage meaning, ambulance/ police siren rules, etc. in USA.
Again, only Maryland does not require a refresher or proof of at least road rules knowledge.
Look at its accident rate, hit rate, ticketing rate, insurance rate. High, high, high, high. Breaks the record for the country in many metrics. So many accidents they don't keep car accident stats, but look around, it's not (nationally?) young adults and the elderly. Most teens here don't get their license on time, ie age 16.
Most states, you'd sit for a short test after your vision test. Yes the test can be in any of 20+ languages.