Australia is putting traffic lights in the ground!
Why is Australia
putting traffic lights in the ground? Well, for the average person it is
immensely hard to look up from Instagram or Facebook when you need to, for
example, cross a busy four-lane highway!
That's why the New South Wales state
government is looking to trial ground level traffic lights at key crossings in
Sydney, Australia from December.
Fed up with pedestrians who can't take
their eyes off the screen, the government is obliged nevertheless to try and
save their lives. It will implement a six month trial of the traffic lights at
a cost of A$250,000.
"Pedestrians are less protected in a
road crash, and are therefore more likely to be seriously injured or killed.
This is why we need to create a road system that keeps them safe, and this
includes situations when they may not be paying attention," Centre for Road Safety Executive Director Bernard Carlon says.
The sites for the new under-foot traffic
lights haven't yet been announced, but it's expected they will be installed in
five places in Sydney's central business district.
The initiative was announced as part of
the Towards Zero advertising campaign, which aims to highlight the human
impact of crashes and road fatalities.
In 2015, 61 pedestrians were killed on NSW
roads — a 49 percent increase from 2014.
"The lights are aimed at pedestrians
using mobile phones who are not looking where they are walking," Carlon
said. "They will serve as another layer of warning on top of existing
lights and signals."
A similar initiative rolled out in
Augsburg, Germany in April. The main goal there is to stop phone zombies
from walking on train tracks.
Whatever it takes to help people walk while
Tweeting and not die.
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