r/Roadcam 6d ago

[USA][GA][Stockbridge] Hazards On, Brain Off

So I was driving on Hwy 138, just cruising, when this car suddenly decides to stop dead in the middle of the intersection. She flips on her hazards like that somehow grants immunity from bad driving. I had no clue what she was doing, so I honked.

A few seconds later, an ambulance shows up, lights flashing, sirens wailing, making a left onto our street. Now, according to Georgia Code § 40-6-74, every driver is supposed to yield, pull to the right, clear the intersection, and stop until the emergency vehicle passes. That’s the law—it keeps everything safe and fluid.

I understand why she put on her hazards. The idea was to warn others—including me—so the ambulance could move through easier and prevent accidents. That’s noble in theory. But here’s the problem: not clearing the intersection causes more harm than good. Sitting there frozen in the middle just makes the road tighter and forces the ambulance to navigate around her instead of giving them the space they need.

So instead of helping, she basically turned herself into a traffic cone with flashing lights—well-intentioned maybe, but still completely in the way.

63 Upvotes

80 comments sorted by

View all comments

1

u/Error_404_403 6d ago

There was no place for the car to pull to the right--it was caught in the middle of the intersection, and pulling to the right would have created more hazard than just staying in place. What this car did. And the OP behaved like an ass thinking he owns the road, inconsiderate to circumstances of others.

1

u/ApartStrain7989 5d ago

The place for them to end up was through the intersection before the ambulance.

Instead they illegally stopped mid intersection, 20 seconds before the emergency vehicle enters the frame, in direct contradiction to the code they were unsafely attempting to follow. You don't stop in the intersection, you clear out of it like code dictates.

Your take on this is uninformed and wrong. Stop finding justifications for uneducated unsafe driving