I am in California. It stands to reason that less vehicles leads to lees congestion. And it 20 years we'll be like Asia where everyone rides scooters.
but your argument is to allow lane splitting where it does not currently exist--not to mandate everyone drive bikes or scooters. You support lane splitting because you think it reduces congestion.
In CA, where the current number of motorcycles and cars exist and where there is lane splitting--do you think that there is a tolerable/reduced level of congestion? Is it less than anywhere else, per capita, where the same car/bike ratio would exist and where a new lane splitting law would change things?
I'm challenging the notion that lane splitting actually reduces congestion, as it seems that the pubic data from the NTSB seems to suggest that it doesn't. I think it's easy enough to see that a simple lane splitting law, in CA, agrees with those numbers.
Personally, I don't really mind when bikes or scooters split lanes in stopped traffic. I honestly think that is great and one of those unique benefits that they should enjoy--well, assuming they are driving some 70 mpg vehicle and not some pointless hawg. I don't like lane splitting at full speed on the expressway or in the city...which I think is illegal everywhere, right?