Rafael wrote:
Rather, DE, I think that is my point. It's largely judgement vs. the ability to formulate an exact answer. The discussion of gross misconduct or abuse of EV's is a bit more trivial, as these instances are probably extremely rare.
Yes, it is judgement.
Quote:
The other is the matter that you said a system to freeze the transit path the EV must traverse is not worth the cost (in terms of time and disruption) for what is gained (a marginal increase in safety for both the emergecy vehicle, and those it must navigate around). Thus, such a scenario establishes that there is a threshold where emergency vehicles do not have absolute priority.
No it doesn't. Those two things having nothing to do with each other. The fact that emergency vehicles have absolute priority does not in any way mean that we ignore cost-effectiveness in deciding how to grant it.
Quote:
I think this is something rather obvious, but several posters have made absolute declarations oversimplying this subtle detail. Implicit (but only to them) are their own definitions of "reasonable" in such situations, to establish what is a reasonable exception to such a rule.
There is no exception to such a rule. You're confusing the absolute priority of the emergency vehicle with the responsibility of the vehicle driver to operate safely and thereby fulfill his purpose in driving it.
For example, emergency vehicles generally slow down before entering intersections while using lights and sirens. This is not a requirement, nor an indication that their priority is less than absolute. It's simply a recognition that not everyone pays attention or obeys the law all the time, and that if they get in an accident, regardless of where fault may eventually lie, that does neither them or their passanger/crime victim/fire victim any good.
The fact that they must still operate in a safe manner is a limitation on what the driver may do, but it has nothing to do with
priority. As in the above example, the fact that the ambulance slows down in no way relieves one iota of duty from anyone else to stop.