Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's legal many places, but I don't know about around here. Where I'm from you have to be going from a one-way street to a one-way street.
"You may also turn left after you stop at a red light, if you are in the left lane and are turning left from a one-way street onto another one-way street, unless a sign tells you not to turn. You must first stop and yield to pedestrians and other traffic."
This is what I was taught.
Anonymous wrote:Can you do that as long as the street you're turning on to is a one-way?
Anonymous wrote:No...Never make a left turn on a red light.
No exceptions to this rule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. You can never turn left on red.
There are flashing red arrows, however, near the green lights. You can turn then if it's clear.
Alexandria is crazy, making up new, duplicative, unintuitive lights.
Anonymous wrote:I had no idea it wasn't legal some places from a one way to a one way! Wow. That doesn't make any sense. It's the same as a right on red (which I guess also aren't legal some places).
Anonymous wrote:No cop, no stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. You can never turn left on red.
There are flashing red arrows, however, near the green lights. You can turn then if it's clear.
Anonymous wrote:No...Never make a left turn on a red light.
No exceptions to this rule.
Anonymous wrote:No. You can never turn left on red.
Anonymous wrote:Google found me this:
It's illegal in South Dakota, Connecticut, Maine, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Carolina, the District of Columbia, Guam and New York City.
Every other state, it's legal to do it from a one-way onto a one-way.
If you are in Idaho, Michigan, Oregon and Washington, you can turn left on red even from a two-way onto a one-way.
Anonymous wrote:No...Never make a left turn on a red light.
No exceptions to this rule.