Q: In your last article about the right-of-way for turning drivers, you failed to point out that the drivers also need to yield to pedestrians. A: I’m glad you brought
Q: In your last article about the right-of-way for turning drivers, you failed to point out that the drivers also need to yield to pedestrians. A: I’m glad you brought
Q: Here’s the scenario: There are two cars going in opposite directions on the same roadway. One driver makes a left onto a road with two lanes of travel in
Q: Could you define this exception to the “Keep right” law: “Upon a roadway divided into three marked lanes and providing for two-way movement traffic?” There’s a road I drive
In this episode, can you drive faster than the useful range of your headlights? For sure. How fast is that? Probably slower than you think.
Q: Many places where hiking trails cross a road are marked as a crosswalk. Are those crossings which aren’t marked considered implied crosswalks in which pedestrians have the right-of-way? In