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Thread: Left lane not always passing lane...

  1. #1

    Default Left lane not always passing lane...

    State by state laws. I thought all states had the same law...I guess that would explain the way some people drive - really just depends what state you learned to drive in as to what driving laws "stick" with you. If it's not a law, I consider it a common courtesy not to hover in the left lane.

    Also learned that the yellow speed limit signs are not enforceable unless you cause an accident, then you can be cited for traveling too fast. Contradicting signs have gone up on the DNT as discussed in a DMN article.

    New law says left lane for passing only

    09:07 PM CDT on Sunday, October 25, 2009
    Scott Satchfield / Eyewitness News

    NEW ORLEANS, La - Staying in the left lane for extended periods of time is a driving habit that leads to frustration for many people.
    "When I'm on my way traveling, I want to be able to travel,” said Bobbie Brent-Cornish of New Orleans. “I do not want to be inhibited."
    After lawmakers passed the measure earlier this year and its enforcement by state troopers on Oct. 1, left-lane driving is now against the law on Louisiana highways.

    "You cannot travel slower than what the traffic is,” said LSP Troop B Trooper Joe Piglia. “You cannot impede traffic by traveling in the left hand lane, nor stay in the left hand lane just for travel alone. You have to move back to the right."

    It may seem like an easy violation to avoid, but Piglia said the law has already caused confusion and controversy.

    Officials want to clear up the new rules.

    You're in the clear if you use the left lane to pass another vehicle, to make a left turn at an intersection, if emergency vehicles are parked on or near the right shoulder, or if the right lane is simply backed up with traffic.

    Police say it's pretty simple with those exceptions aside.
    "This is something that's blatant, that somebody is traveling in that left hand lane, is impeding traffic, or is on the interstate and just refuses to get over. I know all motorists have seen that," said Piglia.
    Drivers welcome the change.

    "On occasion people tend to stay in that lane and unfortunately create a traffic hazard, really for everyone, and so I think the intent of the law is good," said William Grieggs of Laplace.

    Officials have also said they won't focus enforcement efforts on stretches of highway running through cities.

    "When you get outside the metropolitan area where traffic is not an issue, to keep traffic flowing, to have people going to that right lane to keep the traffic flowing, and not to have somebody that's driving at a slower speed in that left hand lane," said Piglia.

  2. #2

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    ...and across the line.

    1996 Mazda Miata - R-Package (Eve-L)
    2012 Mazda CX-9 - Grand Touring (Dory)




  3. #3
    Driver Nails's Avatar
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    A state trooper named Piglia!

  4. #4
    MME Goodwill Ambassador onething's Avatar
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    There used to be an autocrosser who had a sign on the back of his car that said:

    Forget Tibet . . . Free the Left Lane

    Growing up in Texas, I'd been driving for 20 years before I ever heard of doing such even as a courtesy.

    and before someone says it, YES we had multilane roads back then.
    Bidden or not bidden, God is present
    "Up until the moment of impact, I was still having fun." Bob J. Hall San Francisco Region



  5. #5

    Talking

    Onething did you have paved roads back then?


  6. #6

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    Heading west to east on 30, there are signs that prevent trucks in the left lane starting west of downtown FW, and I'm pretty sure that it applies until the truck gets east of Dallas. Same principle.

    Left lane is for safely going around people, not for cruising the speed limit right beside some other joker in the middle lane going the same speed, and blocking everyone behind them.

    Jeeze, how are the sports car drivers in the 4 door dually pickups going to get anywhere going less than 90 MPH? IDU.

  7. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by onething View Post
    There used to be an autocrosser who had a sign on the back of his car that said:

    Forget Tibet . . . Free the Left Lane
    I guess his back problem was the end of his racing. I have not seem him in a few years.

  8. #8

    Default

    Would be nice if this was enforced in TX.

    Chris
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  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by Miatamaniac92 View Post
    Would be nice if this was enforced in TX.

    Chris
    When the wife and I head toward her parent's house north of Houston, we have to drive I-45. It is the only time I get to drive my wife's CX-7. It happens to me everytime that I get the CX-7 to a really comfortable cruising speed (I will not mention for fear of incriminating myself) that some person will hold up the left lane!!! They act like they are some type of civilian rolling speed control. Oh well. Maybe the DPS will start at least giving warnings....

  10. #10

    Default Why lane courtesy is important...

    Most people may see this and think it is obvious - but if it is so obvious, why is it so overlooked/ignored??

    Thinking about that statement - makes me wonder if the top 3 reasons people fail to move over that are privy to this courtesy are:

    1) They think they are doing a service by controling other drivers' speed.

    2) They enjoy aggravating other drivers; or

    3) They are so full of cheese that they are oblivious to what is going on around them.



    "Lane courtesy is the simple act of moving to the right to allow faster traffic to pass. This act of courtesy will significantly improve highway safety. By not obstructing other drivers, we are allowing traffic to flow more smoothly. When traffic flows smoothly, there is less tailgating, less weaving in-and-out of traffic, and therefore fewer accidents.

    When drivers exercise lane courtesy, they defuse the situations that cause road rage. Ask almost any motorist ((almost any motorist? What about the ones doing the damage? They are motorists too)) what irritates them the most and the majority will answer, "left lane hogs." It is the failure of slower traffic to keep right or yield to the right, when faster traffic approaches, that makes driving a frustrating burden. The courteous act of moving to the right can eliminate driver stress and conflict, and make fellow travelers happy to share the road."

    I think everyone is a left lane hog sometime or another, knowingly or unknowlingly....

  11. #11

    Default

    I have noticed that my windshield always seems to need a good cleaning right after I pass a left lane hogger.

  12. #12

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by onething View Post
    Growing up in Texas, I'd been driving for 20 years before I ever heard of doing such even as a courtesy.

    and before someone says it, YES we had multilane roads back then.
    I've been driving in DFW for 16yrs, and was taught to never stay in the left lane. If you look to your right, and there isn't a car, you move to the right. That is what I was taught in Driver's Ed.

    Quote Originally Posted by Miatamaniac92 View Post
    Would be nice if this was enforced in TX.

    Chris
    It is enforced. Sometimes the police need your help in finding them, just like drunk drivers. I have called the police on 2 of them personally. I watched the first guy get pulled over, and the 2d one I was called back by the officer thanking me for calling her in.
    Wealth, power, and experience are apparently not enough to save us from social influences. Groupthink, as described by I.L.Janis, is the tendency for group members to reach a consensus opinion, even if that decision is downright stupid (Janis 1982).

  13. #13

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    Quote Originally Posted by ray_sir_6 View Post
    I've been driving in DFW for 16yrs, and was taught to never stay in the left lane. If you look to your right, and there isn't a car, you move to the right. That is what I was taught in Driver's Ed.
    +1

    I won't disclose how many decades I've been driving in Texas, but my parents are from different states and my dad said that the left lane was for passing. Then, when I took Driver's Ed. - I was taught that was the thing to do. With so many signs posted (left lane for passing) on highways (like 45) that are outside major city limits it's hard to understand that so many don't know this.

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