The new law permits pedestrians to cross a roadway at any point, including outside of a crosswalk. It also allows for crossing against traffic signals and specifically states that doing so is no longer a violation of the city’s administrative code. But the new law also warns that pedestrians crossing outside of a crosswalk do not have the right of way and that they should yield to other traffic that has the right of way.

  • @frank@sopuli.xyz
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    124 hours ago

    Good, especially since the law just targets POC.

    If car traffic became 50% worse to make walking traffic 5% better, that’s a win for humans in the city. It’ll help convince more people to use non-car methods of transportation and that helps spark people to vote for and invest in more non-car infrastructure.

    Ditching cars in populated cities isn’t a magic law or anything, it’s a slow incremental burn; legalizing pedestrians walking strictly helps that

      • @frank@sopuli.xyz
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        53 hours ago

        Agree, but it’s certainly easier to do in NYC than rural places in the US, so I advocate for starting there

      • merde alorsOP
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        -12 hours ago

        do you really expect people in rural areas to ditch cars?

        will they go back to carts and horses?

        • 佐藤カズマ
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          120 minutes ago

          Honestly? Buses would be a good short-term solution that can be implemented immediately with the right political will, and enough force.

        • @AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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          22 hours ago

          The US used to have a comprehensive rail network. Every single town had a train station. We already had the solution to this problem.

          • @Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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            21 hour ago

            I live in a rail hub in the us. The city is nicknamed after it and train tracks literally run through the city center.

            It would take me 6 hours to walk there.

          • merde alorsOP
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            01 hour ago

            and what do you use to get to the train station?

            how do you carry goods to that station? Does your train have a stop in every farm?

            • @AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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              21 hour ago

              Wow you’re right there is a use case for a vehicle therefore it’s literally impossible to have public transit in rural areas, despite the fact that it already existed /s

              • merde alorsOP
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                142 minutes ago

                it’s not like i don’t hate cars, i do. But i really can’t see how you’re going to convince “rurals” with that argument

                good luck to you