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ION - Waterloo Region's Light Rail Transit
In this case, as the offending vehicle (cement truck) surely belongs to a private enterprise, I imagine the bill will go to their insurance.
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I'd trade the money we spend on cops for a subway.
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(07-21-2022, 06:29 AM)clasher Wrote: I'd trade the money we spend on cops for a subway.

I wouldn't. I'm all for defunding the police, but there are far better uses of the money than a subway.

And if we're making magical choices that aren't realistic that would make the city better, I'd defund the police, dump that money into social services. Then I'd have built the LRT mostly at grade as it is now, but I'd have closed King to cars end to end and run the LRT all the way up it, and given it automatic priority at every intersection.

Now I have almost all the advantages of a subway at a lower cost than we spent on the LRT. Yes, it's still possible for someone to hit the train.

For a city of our density, building a fully grade separated system is just a subsidy for cars.
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(07-20-2022, 09:46 AM)danbrotherston Wrote:
(07-20-2022, 09:14 AM)ijmorlan Wrote: Right, it’s not hard, just expensive (in particular, dealing with water).

Even building the Gotthard Base Tunnel wasn’t really hard per se, just a stupendous amount of work.


The slow travel is due to safety paranoia, not due to cost cutting. It could run faster if we would just decide to do so.

To be fair, I don’t know if it’s local safety paranoia that could be fixed by changing personnel at Grandlinq, or if it’s imposed by regulators. But I find it unbelievable that, for example, the slow speeds southbound approaching Erb St. or when running parallel to Courtland are really justified by any realistic safety concerns.

If anybody actually knows anything about the slowdowns, I’m all ears — but I will be asking probing questions about the information and won’t quietly accept any bafflegab.


You do know where Laurel Creek runs through Uptown? You might actually be able to convince me that a grade separation at Agnes St. is not totally unrealistic (my biggest concern would , but threading a rail tunnel around the creek definitely moves it into the expensive megaproject category (relative to the size of our city).

I think the thing that this has really revealed to me is just how invalid the "cyclists run red lights" rhetoric really is.

I knew drivers ran red lights sometimes, but given how wide the tolerances for the LRT are, it's clear to me that drivers run red lights CONSTANTLY...and not like...just red...LONG red.

As for speed...good luck finding answers...I've been asking for a while and got nothing. But there is no justification for this, for the LRV to be surrounded by cars doing 20 over the limit while it's forced to do 10, 20, 30 under the limit in some places.

Everyone here is on board with slow = safer, but I guarantee you, STOPPED LRVs would get crashed into. At a certain point, the problem is cars.

And I'm so tired of tunnels being painted as the magical solution...Toronto has a streetcar tunnel...it is not car free..

So true! If a cyclist runs a red where nobody is around, I really don’t care at all — they have excellent visibility and can see when it’s safe. And if they mess up, it’s their life on the line, almost certainly nobody else’s.

And as you say, if it’s OK for cars in the road to whip by pedestrians on the sidewalk going 50km/h faster than the pedestrians (at least), then it’s OK for the LRT to go 20km/h faster than the cars in the adjacent lane. That would have the LRT going 80km/h on King, which would be awesome! I think the limiting factor would be acceleration into and out of stations. If the LRT has to be limited to 60km/h (or whatever) for some reason, I’d be OK with using technological measures to prevent adjacent motor vehicles from exceeding 40km/h (or 20km/h less than the LRT speed).

I’m just going to post this again:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImU1mG7QC4I

Although one has to ask, at what point is the problem with individual drivers, and not with the system? This guy ignored both traffic control signs and that handy device hanging off the side of the cab known as a side mirror.
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(07-21-2022, 11:06 AM)ijmorlan Wrote:
(07-20-2022, 09:46 AM)danbrotherston Wrote: I think the thing that this has really revealed to me is just how invalid the "cyclists run red lights" rhetoric really is.

I knew drivers ran red lights sometimes, but given how wide the tolerances for the LRT are, it's clear to me that drivers run red lights CONSTANTLY...and not like...just red...LONG red.

As for speed...good luck finding answers...I've been asking for a while and got nothing. But there is no justification for this, for the LRV to be surrounded by cars doing 20 over the limit while it's forced to do 10, 20, 30 under the limit in some places.

Everyone here is on board with slow = safer, but I guarantee you, STOPPED LRVs would get crashed into. At a certain point, the problem is cars.

And I'm so tired of tunnels being painted as the magical solution...Toronto has a streetcar tunnel...it is not car free..

So true! If a cyclist runs a red where nobody is around, I really don’t care at all — they have excellent visibility and can see when it’s safe. And if they mess up, it’s their life on the line, almost certainly nobody else’s.

And as you say, if it’s OK for cars in the road to whip by pedestrians on the sidewalk going 50km/h faster than the pedestrians (at least), then it’s OK for the LRT to go 20km/h faster than the cars in the adjacent lane. That would have the LRT going 80km/h on King, which would be awesome! I think the limiting factor would be acceleration into and out of stations. If the LRT has to be limited to 60km/h (or whatever) for some reason, I’d be OK with using technological measures to prevent adjacent motor vehicles from exceeding 40km/h (or 20km/h less than the LRT speed).

I’m just going to post this again:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImU1mG7QC4I

Although one has to ask, at what point is the problem with individual drivers, and not with the system? This guy ignored both traffic control signs and that handy device hanging off the side of the cab known as a side mirror.

Indeed, motor vehicle operators are part of the system. The problem with our 'road safety' campaigns that "ignore human factors" isn't that they shouldn't attempt to change people...it's that asking people to do better isn't a real solution.

You can change the environment, you can also change people, but changing people requires more than asking, training, testing, restricting are options which actually change human behaviour.

Commercial operators have restrictions on time and requirements for rest. Airline pilots have extensive training. There's also no tolerance of bad behaviour. One of the reasons people text and drive (or run red lights) is because they (rightfully) think there are no consequences.
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Part of the problem is that anything involving human factors can have very subtle effects that make it less obvious that an intervention improves safety or increases risk. Lots of cars have additional safety features now, such as lane-assist, blind-spot detection, and so forth. On the face of it, these should make vehicle operations safer, but if the driver learns to rely on those features, can they be relied on to be a full substitute for an attentive driver? Will the blind-spot sensor detect the cyclist over-taking on the right in the bike lane?

This goes into factors like street-design as well, where a safer street according to engineering guidelines is almost always very unsafe when you actually examine statistics. The discrepancy is largely due to human factors - people will drive the speed they feel is safe, not the posted the limit, as an obvious example.

In that sense, "asking people to do better" is precisely the solution we need. Or more precisely, forcing people to do better is the solution we need. Make it so they have no choice but to slow down and be attentive, and they will slow down and be attentive.
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(07-21-2022, 12:48 PM)jamincan Wrote: Part of the problem is that anything involving human factors can have very subtle effects that make it less obvious that an intervention improves safety or increases risk. Lots of cars have additional safety features now, such as lane-assist, blind-spot detection, and so forth. On the face of it, these should make vehicle operations safer, but if the driver learns to rely on those features, can they be relied on to be a full substitute for an attentive driver? Will the blind-spot sensor detect the cyclist over-taking on the right in the bike lane?

This is a good point. 

Quote:This goes into factors like street-design as well, where a safer street according to engineering guidelines is almost always very unsafe when you actually examine statistics. The discrepancy is largely due to human factors - people will drive the speed they feel is safe, not the posted the limit, as an obvious example.

In that sense, "asking people to do better" is precisely the solution we need. Or more precisely, forcing people to do better is the solution we need. Make it so they have no choice but to slow down and be attentive, and they will slow down and be attentive.

When I say that humans can be adapted, I don't mean "asking people to do better", I mean specifically using interventions against people that actually change behaviour.

The reason that environment changes are often preferred is because a) they are politically easier -- shocking I know and b) they scale better.

But things like ASE are a form of human behaviour modification that is effective. It solves some of the scale issue with automation, but it's obviously politically difficult.
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I first spotted it a couple of weeks ago, but in the space of 24 hours I saw two LRT vehicles with doors out of service. While I didn't catch their numbers, I know that they were different vehicles but it was two different sets of doors out of service. Granted, they were the only two LRT vehicles I saw in that 24 hour period, but I thought that the statistical odds were weird enough to warrant mention. I declined to buy a lottery ticket.
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I think it's something in the central open/close control or the buttons on the doors. We boarded with a stroller in one of those trains a couple weekends ago not realizing the opposing side was out and the driver was able to come back and open it with the control panel at the door.

And then happened to board the same train or this second broken one on the way back too... but were wisened to board at the other accessible area that time.
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We've got like 5 spares on any given day when a 10 minute schedule is being run. Why the heck would they have 2 trams out with this issue during a 15 minute schedule day when even more spars are available? If that happens after the start of that tram's service day, the next time it rolls past the OMSF it should be heading inside instead with another tram heading out so there is no schedule gap.
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(07-27-2022, 11:05 AM)cherrypark Wrote: I think it's something in the central open/close control or the buttons on the doors. We boarded with a stroller in one of those trains a couple weekends ago not realizing the opposing side was out and the driver was able to come back and open it with the control panel at the door.

And then happened to board the same train or this second broken one on the way back too... but were wisened to board at the other accessible area that time.

Transit doors have long caused problems. We need Steve Wozniak to design a door mechanism:

https://paleotronic.com/2018/05/19/steve...alks-disk/

(long-winded, but the point is he designed his own that used way fewer chips than existing designs)
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Crrrrrrrrrrassssshhh...! https://www.reddit.com/r/waterloo/commen...h_counter/
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Lovely...illegal left turn in front of massive train.

Can we just start taking these people's licenses away?

Honestly! This shouldn't be remotely controversial...this isn't an error...or if it is...it's evidence of such a low skill level as to also be disqualifying.

Something that does bug me about our road laws is they don't make a distinction between intentional and unintentional acts. If I intentionally break the HTA my punishment should be different than if I simply misjudge a turn.
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(09-06-2022, 02:23 PM)ac3r Wrote: Crrrrrrrrrrassssshhh...! https://www.reddit.com/r/waterloo/commen...h_counter/

Roads reopen after crash involving LRT
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(09-06-2022, 02:41 PM)danbrotherston Wrote: Lovely...illegal left turn in front of massive train.

Can we just start taking these people's licenses away?

Honestly! This shouldn't be remotely controversial...this isn't an error...or if it is...it's evidence of such a low skill level as to also be disqualifying.

Something that does bug me about our road laws is they don't make a distinction between intentional and unintentional acts. If I intentionally break the HTA my punishment should be different than if I simply misjudge a turn.

Same basic error as the last collision (concrete truck at King and Agnes), if I’m not mistaken. If the motorists had checked their side mirror OR read and obeyed the no-left-turn signs they would have been fine.
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