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Distance: passed and forgotten

This action leaves less (sometimes much less) than optimum following distance between you and the driver who passed you.
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Many drivers do not leave enough space when passing.

The topic of choice in the DriveSmartBC e-mail box this past week has been about drivers who pass you in the left lane of a multiple lane highway and then immediately change lanes back in front of you.

This action leaves less (sometimes much less) than optimum following distance between you and the driver who passed you. It’s as if once passed, you are completely forgotten by the other driver.

Since the driver who changed lanes doesn’t seem to care, suggested one correspondent, she had to keep dropping back to re-establish a reasonable following distance. Of course, once she did that another driver would fill it in again. Travelling this way on lower mainland highways almost became an exercise in going backwards.

I’ve written about this once before in an article titled “Forced tailgating”.

The Inland Island Highway is often relatively quiet, yet a driver often passes me in this manner when there were literally kilometres of empty highway in front of both of us, forcing me into a tailgating situation.

Out of sight, out of mind I guess.

It should not be this way though. Have you ever used the mantra mirror, signal, shoulder check, change? If you can’t see the entire front of the vehicle behind you in your centre rearview mirror, you are not far enough ahead to change lanes yet. Having trouble fitting in? Perhaps an adequate signal of your intention will result in the other driver politely making room.

Tim Schewe is a retired constable with many years of traffic law enforcement experience. To comment or learn more, please visit drivesmartbc.ca