joe123 wrote: » If this ringroad gets the go ahead? Does it have any impact on the current N84/Curraghline? I heard a rumour that this road would then be built into a dual carriage way. Sounds too good to be true. That road however badly needs an upgrade for the amount of traffic.
Ashleigh1986 wrote: » Your the one that's misunderstanding .... By the law ... That's how I operate ....I'm entitled to use the bus lanes .
cooperguy wrote: » That is fine. You can hide behind the current definitions defined in law. it does not mean it will always be that way (or should be that way)
Ashleigh1986 wrote: » The future regarding traffic management in galway city will be... Only buses AND TAXIS allowed use certain city center routes .... So not only will we allowed to use bus lanes ... We will also have our own roads ðŸ‘ðŸ‘ðŸ‘ðŸ‘
Discodog wrote: » This will be the new law from our "non single use" greater public
Discodog wrote: » No you will be forced to obey our new traffic dictators. Eventually your passengers will be made to pay €10 per minute to be in pedal taxi in the pouring rain. Meanwhile you will sit in solid traffic with a vast, empty bus lane next to you. This will be the new law from our cycling overlords.
Deleted User wrote: » High frequency bus routes with reliable timetables are the future of mass transit in Galway for the next 30 years. That can't be achieved without some sacrifices.
Deleted User wrote: » Initially taxis were excluded from the bus lanes by design. It was only a compromise to allow them in. That worked fine until they became part of the problem. It's time to review the situation and reverse that compromise. - Bus lanes for buses - Segregated cycle lanes for cyclists - Footpaths for pedestrians - everything else can be lumped together as they are simply the least efficient
Ashleigh1986 wrote: » For some people it can be a long walk from their house to a bus stop ... So in an ideal galway you would have car parks and buses running from those parks . One on east side and one on west side of galway . People will get out of their cars if you could get from knocknacarra to Boston sientific / parkmore in 20 mins by bus at a low cost .
ChewyLouie wrote: » "completion date 2027" Why does everything take forever in this country! The public transport system could be transformed in a week if the will was there!
Mrs OBumble wrote: » Sure you could. Provided no one got on or off along the way. Catch a bus sometime, and you'll realise that most of the delay is due to stopping for passengers.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I think bus lanes need to be fully restricted to buses only. Bikes get a separate, properly Segregated lane and taxis join the rest of the cars. No reason why taxis should be in those lanes
pure.conya wrote: » this and the fact that people waiting at the bus stop some how get caught off guard when they have to board the bus and pay, why do so many only start fidgeting for change while they're holding other passengers up?
Wombatman wrote: » How is the cycling going for everyone this week? Too wet and windy for me. Took the train from Oran the last few days. Glad I have that option as I work in the City centre.
[Deleted User] wrote: » You are misunderstanding the purpose of that licence, allow me to clarify. It's the taxi sign that let's you drive in that lane, not the licence and only while in the course of collecting or transporting someone i.e. If you took the taxi signage off the car you wouldn't be allowed to drive in that lane. Open to correction on that but the law seems pretty clear The issue at hand is the prioritisation of the most efficient mode of transport in terms of throughput. Taxis are in the same league as regular cars with regards to the inefficient use of road space and do not deserve any special treatment as a result of that inefficiency
what_traffic wrote: » Its not a claim, this is actually part of the Galway Transportation strategy. .... They project by 2037, Cycling will decrease from 6% to 2.8% modal share after the Ring Road is built. They are calculating in "induced demand" of the Ring Road itself.
xckjoo wrote: » You OK??
Don Juan II wrote: » @what_traffic - do you have a source for these figures? I'm very interested in them
Discodog wrote: » Would be an interesting read as it goes against any logic.
Jazmin Harsh Gold wrote: » It's easy for people unaffected by the "sacrifices" to call for them. They are unacceptable sacrifices for the vast vast majority of people. Without the ring road any attempt at curtailing car movements in town will be met with massive resistance and just will not be allowed to happen and I am 100% behind this.
Deleted User wrote: » For such a straight road it's a ****ing horror to drive on at night, can't see a thing with the headlights of other cars coming at you not to mention the clowns with their fog lights on.
cooperguy wrote: » Ya, without the ring road the plans for the centre would be madness. Ironically, when a council traffic plan displays a bit of vision and joined up thinking people go mad at individual elements of the plan saying "the ring road does nothing for public transport". No wonder its so hard to progress any plan in any way complicated in this country.
Jazmin Harsh Gold wrote: » It's easy for people unaffected by the "sacrifices" to call for them. They are unacceptable sacrifices for the vast vast majority of people. Without the ring road any attempt at curtailing car movements in town will be met with massive resistance and just will not be allowed to happen and I am 100% behind this. Many of the suggestions here would be an absolute and utter disaster, such as reducing the QB to a single lane for cars each way. It would make things massively worse doing something like that I can't even believe its being seriously suggested and shows that the anti-car brigade really don't understand anything about traffic.
?Cee?view wrote: » How are taxis in Galway in bus lanes a problem?
Deleted User wrote: » They are as efficient a use of road space as other cars so should be treated as such
Zzippy wrote: » If you're living in Knocknacarra, working in Parkmore, and your commute becomes worse by lane removal, you'll be pretty fed up. If you're spending hours sitting in traffic while watching bus after bus whizz past in their dedicated lane, it won't take long for the penny to drop. "If you can't beat 'em, join 'em".