Anonymous wrote:I hear the posters who are saying they drive more slowly and/or stop in this example, but it can be a danger to other cars (which likely have children in them as well) on your side of the road if you are stopping when the rule is that you are not supposed to stop under the circumstances. OP's example is on a neighborhood street where likely no one is going over 20 mph anyway, but this same set of facts is applicable on the stretch of Bradley Blvd in Bethesda near Arlington Road, and it becomes a dangerous situation when cars abruptly stop (after previously cruising at speeds more like 35-40 mph) for school buses on the other side of the median, especially when the cars which stop are in the lane closest to the median. It's like people who stop at busy intersections when it is only a 2 way stop, not a 4 way - if you are not on the side with a stop sign, you can cause an accident by stopping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are on the other side of the median then you DON'T stop. I'd be honking at you too b/c there are laws and we are supposed to follow them. If you are making up your own "laws" then you deserve to be honked at.
The reason for the median law is that they will NOT have kids cross a road that is big enough to have a median. So, if the bus is on the other side of the median, there aren't any kids coming across your side of the road. GET MOVING!
Op here, in our neighborhood the kids cross the median to get to the development across the street. That is why I stop to not hit any that dart across.
Anonymous wrote:If you are on the other side of the median then you DON'T stop. I'd be honking at you too b/c there are laws and we are supposed to follow them. If you are making up your own "laws" then you deserve to be honked at.
The reason for the median law is that they will NOT have kids cross a road that is big enough to have a median. So, if the bus is on the other side of the median, there aren't any kids coming across your side of the road. GET MOVING!
Anonymous wrote:If you are on the other side of the median then you DON'T stop. I'd be honking at you too b/c there are laws and we are supposed to follow them. If you are making up your own "laws" then you deserve to be honked at.
The reason for the median law is that they will NOT have kids cross a road that is big enough to have a median. So, if the bus is on the other side of the median, there aren't any kids coming across your side of the road. GET MOVING!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is scary to me that their are people driving around who don't know the answer to this question!
The median confuses things. Also, if you're routinely getting chastised (honked at) for doing something that you know is right, you begin to lose certainty after a bit. You start to wonder. Or at least, I do. But then, I'm aware of the people around me. SOME people (ahem) just barrel through the world with ironclad certainty that their way is the right way, at all times and in all cases.
The law is actually unambiguous: When approaching a school bus that is on the other side of a median in the road, the legal thing to do is to proceed within the posted speed limit (as pps have pointed out). People behind you are honking because you are not supposed to stop dead in the roadway. You could be ticketed.