At Least It Isn't Construction

By Eric Richardson
Published: Tuesday, August 16, 2005, at 10:12AM

Preempting Traffic Eric Richardson

I was reading a book yesterday and it had this to say: “It doesn’t matter much what we say we believe or what we want others to think we believe. When the rubber meets the road, we act out our actual beliefs most of the time. That is why behavior is such a good indicator of a person’s beliefs.” Oddly, that struck me this morning as very applicable to the traffic I saw outside on my street.

No matter what the city does about banning construction during rush hour or putting limits on curb-side parking, I will never believe that they care about traffic until action is taken to limit shoots that block off lanes during peak hours.

Update (3pm): Of course now they’re gone, even though the notification said 7am - 10pm. My point still remains, and 4th Street has it even worse today.

Diverting the Contraflow Lane Outside my building right now is a shoot for Outback Steakhouse. The filming notification says they'll be there 7am - 10pm both today and tomorrow. They're filming at 650 S. Spring, and so they have the curb lane in front of the building blocked off for them to set equipment in and random people to stand in. To their credit, this shoot didn't just close the contraflow lane like others have done before. Bus traffic is routed a lane in, and a lane is taken away from southbound traffic.

None of that's a huge deal.

But what's ridiculous is that they allow the shoot to stop off all traffic (as seen in the top photo) to get their shots. This throws off normal traffic, and disrupts bus service on what may be the heaviest bus corridor in Downtown.

How can you say that you're fighting to improve traffic and yet issue permits that make it perfectly legal and acceptable for this sort of thing to occur? I'm not anti-filming by any means, but these sort of things must be done responsibly. Shots that cause traffic disruption must not be permitted to occur during either the AM or PM peak periods. Otherwise all that talk about fixing traffic is just that.




Comments

1
Brad writes:

You're right. It's ridiculous behaviour. Besides having my car towed to another lot from the lot that I had to move my car to during a shoot here on Spring, I'll never forger the time I took the 6th St exit off the 110, only to be stopped at Figueroa (before the exit ramp really even ends) by a shoot at 5:30 PM! I hope the city is at least charging them more for shooting at these busy times of day. But that might require too much intelligence on their part.

# on Aug.17.2005 AT 09:31 AM

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