Los Angeles Times

Berkeley could ban right turns on red

City Council passes an initial proposal aimed at improving pedestrian safety.

- By Noah Goldberg

In an effort to protect pedestrian­s and bicyclists, drivers in Berkeley could soon be prohibited from turning right at a red light.

The City Council voted last week to approve an initial proposal that would ban the practice, putting up signs at every intersecti­on with a light in the small city informing drivers of the rule. The vote was first reported by the Berkeleysi­de news site.

“Policies like eliminatin­g Right on Red are smart and easy ways to begin the process of deprioriti­zing car use in Berkeley and placing lives [above] driver convenienc­e,” Councilmem­bers Terry Taplin and Susan Wengraf wrote in the proposal.

They proposed putting up four signs at each intersecti­on as part of the ban to comply with state law.

Council members passed the proposal as a “budget referral,” meaning they would still need to vote to approve funding in their next annual budget.

It would cost the government about $135,000 to install the signs at all 135 intersecti­ons that have lights, Taplin and Wengraf predicted.

“I expect pushback but I am 100% devoted to making our roads safer and our cities more climate resilient,” Taplin said in a statement.

For many years, right on red was called the “California rule,” but the rule expanded to other states during the 1970s gas crisis and the federal government legalized the practice in 1976.

“The repercussi­ons for pedestrian­s and cyclists occurred almost immediatel­y. In the 1980’s, allowing Right on Red was found to cause an increase in pedestrian crashes by 60% and an increase in bicycle crashes by 100%,” the two council members wrote.

Some municipali­ties have carved out their own rules for right on red. It is illegal in New York City to turn right on red unless a sign permits it. Washington, D.C., plans to ban the practice by 2025.

In San Francisco, it is illegal to turn right on red at 50 intersecti­ons in the Tenderloin district.

“Berkeley can join these cities in taking a new approach to achieving its Vision Zero goals,” the council members wrote, referring to a global initiative aimed at eliminatin­g traffic deaths.

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