Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain again why sidewalks keep kids safe? I've honestly never thought about them like that before. I thought it's so people could push strollers etc. Someone said if they don't have sidewalks then kids will always walk on the actual road instead to get to school. Is that right? Why don't they walk across the grass?
The obvious? Kids hop off the bus into the street where if they were on a raised sidewalk, its a clear separation from pedestrians and vehicles.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of places don't have sidewalks. Why should Bethesda be different?
Anonymous wrote:If it is a huge issue to you, why did you buy a house in a neighborhood without them? You can't expect the county to just come in and change that for you..the county is way in debt!
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain again why sidewalks keep kids safe? I've honestly never thought about them like that before. I thought it's so people could push strollers etc. Someone said if they don't have sidewalks then kids will always walk on the actual road instead to get to school. Is that right? Why don't they walk across the grass?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a dedicated thread to the topic in title for all of those
who feel the gravity of the issue and for lack of better palatiform started
posting in the sympathy forum. Please post all the relevant thoughts here
instead. Thank you.
Do you go around self-categorizing other threads, too?
No. Do you go around and impose your attitude on people in mourning for lack of better things to do?
Suggestion: create a space for your purpose, rather than declaring an existing space to be for a purpose that it was not originally designated. Otherwise, it is a Karen move. Like declaring “This part of the park is now for yoga. Go play frisbee with your dog over there.”
Anonymous wrote:If it is a huge issue to you, why did you buy a house in a neighborhood without them? You can't expect the county to just come in and change that for you..the county is way in debt!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain again why sidewalks keep kids safe? I've honestly never thought about them like that before. I thought it's so people could push strollers etc. Someone said if they don't have sidewalks then kids will always walk on the actual road instead to get to school. Is that right? Why don't they walk across the grass?
I live in a neighborhood with no sidewalks. We always walk on the side of the road. It’s impossible to walk consistently on the grass. For one, I would feel like I am trespassing. More important, the grass can be soggy, muddy, there are obstacles like occasional fences, decor, etc in yards, driveways with cars, and different elevations / slopes. It’s really not that feasible.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain again why sidewalks keep kids safe? I've honestly never thought about them like that before. I thought it's so people could push strollers etc. Someone said if they don't have sidewalks then kids will always walk on the actual road instead to get to school. Is that right? Why don't they walk across the grass?
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain again why sidewalks keep kids safe? I've honestly never thought about them like that before. I thought it's so people could push strollers etc. Someone said if they don't have sidewalks then kids will always walk on the actual road instead to get to school. Is that right? Why don't they walk across the grass?
Anonymous wrote:How do we even know sidewalks had anything to do with this? It sounds from the Bethesda Beat article like the bus hit her while it was turning right. Unless the driver was steering the bus into someone's yard, there wouldn't be sidewalks in the intersection anyway, right? I would guess she ended up in the bus's blind spot.