Defensive Driving

Defensive Driving Tip #53: Beware of Traffic Gaps!

Some of my defensive driving rules focus on preventing trouble in specific danger spots. Especially when they’re in tight, congested areas where it is difficult to maneuver, drivers sometimes get impatient. In situations like trying to get into traffic from a parking lot or making a left turn across heavy traffic, drivers often take advantage of any opening to “get moving.” We think, with a certain justification, that if we don’t seize “opportunities” to “fill a hole” or take advantage of a gap in traffic, we will languish away into old age, still waiting beside the street! Especially in congested areas, we tend to think that it doesn’t pay to be too timid. This leads to traffic conflicts and increased potential for collisions.

You’ve learned by experience to watch for gaps in traffic — because you KNOW that someone is very likely to barge through them and suddenly materialize in front of your vehicle. I was driving my MG-A down a busy boulevard in Chicago years ago, approaching an intersection where I needed to make a right turn. I was decelerating in the right lane. Both lanes to the left of me were backed up with stopped vehicles all the way to the intersection (perhaps 1 or 2 city blocks). I was carrying on a conversation with my daughter, who was in the passenger seat beside me.

A vehicle coming from the opposite direction stopped in the center left-turn lane, and the traffic in the two lanes immediately to my left created room for him to make the left turn in front of them, and therefore also in front of me. But I was talking to my daughter, instead of seeing the impending danger! When the left-turning vehicle “suddenly” appeared in front of me, there was no room to stop and no place to go. I was as much a surprise to him as he was to me. The resulting collision wiped out my MG right back to the windshield. The person making the left turn was cited (and properly so) for failing to yield while making a blind left turn.

The judge dismissed that citation, stating that “sometimes these things are simply accidents.” Nothing could have been further from the truth. It wasn’t an “accident;” it was entirely predictable. The driver making the left turn erred in making a left turn without being able to see ALL oncoming lanes and a height-challenged sports car that was approaching in the lane he couldn’t see. And the driver of that MG-A also could have prevented the crash — by paying attention and recognizing the extremely likely chance that someone would USE a gap in congested traffic to make a left turn. This was a situation where my daughter and I could easily have been seriously injured, but we were lucky that day — and we were wearing seat belts. The lesson I learned was to be wary of gaps in the traffic — “traffic gaps” — and approach them with caution. Since that day, I have witnessed at least two additional collisions that occurred in precisely the same way, one of them involving a pedestrian. So watch out for “traffic gaps!” If you get a ticket take our defensive driving course  2passdd.com