I live on the outskirts of a city. I have 2 dangerous areas of my commute, which is mainly down to poor road planning.
The first is in my residential street - they've recently put bollard-barriers on alternating sides of the road (with priority and give way directions) to slow down traffic. So traffic must weave left and right. Not got a problem with this. My only concern is the location of the bollards seems to have just been left to chance -- they're on the most dangerous corners as the road curves round the houses (meaning drivers have to go onto the other side of the road at really bad
blind spots and there's a couple only a few feet either side of a T-junction).
The second problem I have is that in the city centre there are 2 lanes of traffic which aren't marked with directions. There is the ability to turn right, the ability to go straight on. With logic, the right-lane should be turning right, the left lane should go straight on. Since there are no lane markings, the people sitting in the right-hand lane often just drift into the left-stright-on lane halfway through the junction.
I wasn't going to bother actually complaining about any of these things to my local council, and have bit my tongue since December when I was almost wiped out at Problem Spot #1 by a double decker bus supposed to be giving way yet failing to see me on my scooter due to aforementioned blind spots, yet yesterday I was almost hit by a taxi at Problem Spot #2 who had been in the right-hand lane but wanting to go straight ahead.
Questions:
1) Problem #1 has had millions spent "improving" the roads around my house, and the project has been going on for months, so they're unlikely to change the bollards now, right?
2) Problem #2 has been like this for years, and I don't know if there's even been any accidents there. So maybe I'm the only one with concerns.
Is it worth me complaining to the council about these concerns? If I wrote a letter to my council expressing concern at those two traffic spots, does this sort of thing get put "on file" so that they might eventually fix it/realise they've had warning from the public WHEN (not IF) a bad accident happens?
Am I going to waste my time this afternoon typing up a letter which might just get binned, when I should be working anyway?
Sarah.