Where did the Old Coot cross the street?
By Merlin Lessler
Most mornings I leave the coffee group I hang out with,
walk a quarter of a mile through a parking lot at a shopping plaza and then half
way across a busy four-lane street to a small island space between the two
lanes going north and the two lanes going south. I wait there, and when no cars
are coming, I hustle the rest of the way across. I use the word hustle loosely,
because my stride is anything but.
Anyhow, from there, I walk back toward the intersection that
I avoided by crossing in the middle of the block, take a left down the sidewalk
to the beach and then onward, either north or south for a half-mile or more,
depending on what the tide is doing. When it’s low tide, the beach is wide and
flat; at high tide it’s narrow and on a slant, not a good way to walk for an
old coot. That’s what dictates how far I will go.
I cross paths with an old guy on my walk; one day I found
him crossing the road in the same spot I do. (He’s 90, so I can call him an old
guy.) We’d nod and say good morning most times, but that day, I said, “Jack, I
see you cross in the same spot I do.” He smiled, and said “Oh yeah; if you
cross at the traffic light, even with a green pedestrian arrow, you can get run
over by a car turning right on red.” Drivers only look to the left to make sure
no cars are coming, and then bolt to the right and into the crosswalk.
Us old guys know how to cross. Everyone is taught to never cross
in the middle of the block, always at the corner. Jack and I figured out it is outdated
advice, and wrong. Downright dangerous! It’s a safety rule that hasn’t been brought
up to date; it doesn’t take the “right-on-red” rule into consideration. A lot
of people have been hit, hurt, even killed, crossing at the corner. My friend.
Daren got dumped off his bike by a right-on-red turner; he was just sitting
there with the front wheel in the crosswalk, waiting for a chance to go. I’ve
had a few close calls myself. But not anymore.
The problem is even
worse, now that pedestrian crossing lights have been installed at hundreds of
thousands of intersections across the country. Part of a federal pedestrian
safety effort. People push the button, wait for the “go” signal, and think it’s
safe to cross. It is, until a right-on-red driver is sitting at the stop light
and in a hurry. The rule that a pedestrian has the right of way, is no longer
in play. It’s been replaced with, “Walker beware!”
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