Thursday, April 27, 2017

the method of setting the yellow light timing was engineered in 1959. Only one of the people involved with that paper is still alive. They made a mistake, he agrees, but it wasn't ever fixed

this is how it SHOULD be calculated... but isn't.

"They only looked at a vehicle traveling safely directly through an intersection, however the equation they developed is not used for turning lanes," Mats Järlström said. "When you make a turn you slow down but that's not accounted for in their solution, so people are getting caught in red light cameras for making safe turns."

Järlström, understandably, wanted to get feedback on his findings. And so he reached out to the engineering board, his local sheriff, and 60 Minutes. He was even invited to give a talk about his research in front of the Institute of Transportation Engineers in Anaheim, California. He also spoke to Alexei Maradudin, the last surviving author of that 1959 paper: "He wants me to continue with this, it's amazing that I have his support," Järlström said.

In 2014, he sued the City of Beaverton over the length of its yellow light lengths, but that case was quickly thrown out because a judge said he lacked standing to challenge it because "for purposes of standing, Plaintiff must allege that the short yellow-light intervals create a credible threat of imminent injury to him."

https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/man-fined-dollar500-for-crime-of-writing-i-am-an-engineer-in-an-email-to-the-government?utm_source=mbfb

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