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Got the answer .Thank you all.
#31
Hope,
you should leave your original post for people to see before criticizing the response and rewriting what it was. It really is not good netiquette to remove the original post in such a way that it makes the replies look bad. I quoted some of your post in my post above.

Your logic is faulty here and I'm sorry to see that you won't rethink it. When the right shoulder is OPEN it is a functioning lane and safe to use, and everyone is aware of the situation. When the shoulder is NOT OPEN it is not expected to be used and so it is a hazard to use it. On the west side, there is now a big wide shoulder/bike lane along Queen Ka'ahumanu Highway. It is still completely illegal to pass on the right. People do not check for vehicles passing on the right because it is ILLEGAL. When the shoulder is open, slow traffic is supposed to get over so that faster traffic can pass on the LEFT.

We live on an island where many oldtimers are in a rural mindset, and where we have visitors who want to dawdle, and where some people have cars that barely go. You ask about it taking a long time to drive to work ... YES, you have to share the road as it is and with the existing drivers, not as you wish it would be with everyone going to work and focused on getting there. You live in an area of very high unemployment where a lot of people don't even know what it's like to have to get to work.

In California, when people commute to work, everyone in the pack knows the drill. It is also common for people to take any advantage they can to make a little progress. HERE, you cannot! It is not cool. It is not safe.

I'm sorry you object to the idea of "signing on." But please. You knew there was no County water, and you would have catchment. That's what I mean by signing on. Things a person should know about the place in advance that factor in when making the decision. Anyone buying in Seaview should know that there are two lane roads, and if you try driving the two lane roads here, you soon learn that the slow drivers can significantly increase transit time. Anywhere you consider moving where you may need to commute to work, you should drive that commute before you commit, numerous times to get a good sampling, and see if you can take it. If you do not, then you didn't do your due diligence and you "signed on" by default, because now you have to accept it. The traffic from Seaview will probably get worse before it gets better, as Puna's population increases, and I know I saw the distance from Hilo as a drawback when I looked at homes down there. I knew if I lived there that I would have a different lifestyle and not go to Hilo so much.

Something else to think about - for many people in both lower Puna and Volcano, people who move here from the mainland and choose to live in the more remote communities while working in town, bringing the "bedroom community" lifestyle to a rural area centered around smaller villages - are seen as a problem spoiling their lifestyle. A lot of people have bad feelings towards people who do what you're doing. This is not California where people make long commutes a lifestyle. People don't appreciate that the once quiet roads are now bumper to bumper at certain times of day.

Your lifestyle is part of the problem for your new community, and here you are blaming the people who drive in the traditional fashion for not getting out of your way, and asking approval of a method of making better time by flagrantly breaking the Hawai'i traffic laws.

As for the HPP analogy, YES people who move to HPP should be aware they are taking on a risk of burglary, but there's something they can do about it - participate in Neighborhood Watch and take other security measures. Traffic is a much more intransigent condition. It will take a lot of people agreeing to widen the road before anything much changes, and it may not happen, and the funds may not be there, and the road work will make it worse before it gets better. That's the reality. People are not assuming the worst; they are giving you a reality check that you seem to need in this area,
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#32
For anyone else just reading this;

Post that I and most people here replyed to.



All along 130 there are signs "Pass with care"..

Good luck with that if you have the opposite direction busy!

If you are not going to work you can just enjoy the scenic drive.

Or you can spend 1.5 hours one way to Hilo (3 both ways).

After several successful attempts to stay alive I am passing on the right shoulder (during the wrong time).

2 questions:
1)-How often people get tickets for that?

2)- Were there any attempts to legalize the bypass on the right shoulder for a short distance?
(I do understand the necessity of having the right shoulder clear)







--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Edited by - StillHope on 01/01/2010 16:18:36
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#33
I took defensive driving classes.

You should avoid approaching another vehicle on the driver's blind side. They could drift into you not expecting you to be there.

When you turn left onto a driveway across the double yellow you should start to signal 100 yards before the turn and slow down SLOWLY.

I almost rear ended a bad driver a week ago because he came to a sudden stop on the hwy to make a left.
One Thing I can always be sure of is that things will never go as expected.
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#34
quote:
Originally posted by mdd7000

Passing on the right (shoulder) even for a stopped/turning vehicle is illegal in Hawaii.




false imho according to the "HRS" seems like passing on the right is the exact conditions for the "Highway" in discussion.

http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/histatutes/1.../V/291C-44

(a) The driver of a vehicle may overtake and pass upon the right of another vehicle only under the following conditions:
(1) When the vehicle overtaken is making or about to make a left turn;

(2) Upon a street or highway with unobstructed pavement not occupied by parked vehicles of sufficient width for and with lanes marked for two or more lines of moving vehicles in each direction;

(3) Upon a one-way street, or upon any roadway on which traffic is restricted to one direction of movement, where the roadway is free from obstructions and of sufficient width for two or more lines of moving vehicles.

(b) The driver of a vehicle may overtake and pass another vehicle upon the right only under conditions permitting such movement in safety. In no event shall such movement be made by driving off the pavement or main-traveled portion of the roadway. [L 1971, c 150, pt of §1]

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#35
ALSO the only definition of "No passing" in the "HRS" is for passing on the left. Right hand passing is automatically always permitted in the conditions specified in the earlier post.

I think some people are confusing other jurisdictions rules.

Also notice the county has NO jurisdiction over right hand passing, only left hand passing.


http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/histatutes/1.../V/291C-47
(a) The director of transportation is authorized to and the counties by ordinance with respect to highways under their respective jurisdictions may establish no-passing zones where overtaking and passing or driving to the left of the roadway would be especially hazardous and shall by appropriate signs or markings on the highway establish or indicate the beginning and the end of a no-passing zone and may place intermediate signs establishing or indicating the continued existence of a no-passing zone. Signs or markings placed by the director of transportation establishing the zone and signs or markings indicating the zone established by ordinance shall be clearly visible to an ordinarily observant person and every driver of a vehicle shall obey the directions thereof.
(b) Where signs or markings are in place to define a no-passing zone as set forth in subsection (a) no driver shall at any time drive on the left side of the roadway within such no-passing zone or on the left side of any pavement striping designed to mark such no-passing zone throughout its length.

© This section does not apply under the conditions described in section 291C-41(a)(2), nor to the driver of a vehicle turning left into or from an alley, private road, or driveway. [L 1971, c 150, pt of §1; am L 1974, c 133, §2]

[quote]Originally posted by 808blogger

[quote]Originally posted by mdd7000

Passing on the right (shoulder) even for a stopped/turning vehicle is illegal in Hawaii.

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#36
ok look maybe i am confused, I just reread this thread, are you guys talking about burning past a MOVING vehicle on the RIGHT HAND SIDE? if you are talking about doing that you are an idiot and should not drive a car. I am referring to going around a person stopped turning left across the highway, not speeding past a slow poke on the right side. LOL you guys are crazy!
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#37
The conditions you cited above under 1, 2, 3 are not met. 1) No left turn in the situation outlined; 2) there are not two or more lanes marked for moving vehicles in EACH direction. 3) It is not a one way street, so the "sufficient width" clause does not come into play. Therefore it is not legal as I read the statute. How do you read that code as fitting Highway 130?

I do understand that passing on the right is legal on a four lane highway, and it certainly is done in designated passing lanes even if the approaching traffic only has one lane, but that's not what Hope is talking about. She's talking about passing on the shoulder on a two lane highway with two directions of traffic. Please point out to me the wording that allows that.
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#38
Oh, I just saw your last post. Yes, that's exactly what Hope was asking about, and we are telling her NO. SHE said she thought it was safer than passing going into the opposing lane of traffic.

WE are not crazy. No one has told her it is OK. Au contraire. I told her if she can't pass safely on the left then she needs to chill out and put up with the slow poke.
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#39
quote:
Originally posted by kimo wires
I took defensive driving classes.
I used to race cars in Europe (rallye) and I also am a graduate of the BSR Special Security and Anti-Terrorist Driving School. I think driver education in the US is a joke and most people have no clue how to drive. I hope I meet you on the road instead of the one passing on the right! [Big Grin][Big Grin][Big Grin]

Aloha,
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#40
808blogger - we are talking about passing on the right - on the shoulder - not in a legal lane.
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