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Bike Lanes at Intersections Slow down, look for and yield to any bicyclists in the bike lane. Signal your turn prior to crossing through the bike lane at the dashed striping. Yield to any bicyclist. Complete the turn from the designated right turn lane. If there is no right turn lane, after first checking to make sure that no bicyclists are present, you may merge into the bike lane at approaches to the intersection or driveway (all of the above)
Since the bike lane is assigned to the bicyclist, they always have the right of way in their lane. If you need to move to the right to make a right turn, you must yield to any bikes in the bike lane.
Merge into the nearest left lane when it is safe to do so.
The lane that goes straight through without changing is the main lane. If you merge into that lane, you have to yield to the flow of traffic. That means if your lane ends, it is you that should yeild.
There will be fewer lanes ahead. Traffic must merge left. Drivers in the left lane should allow others to merge smoothly. Right lane ends.
A bike lane is another term for a bicycle lane or cycle lane - a part of a roadway designed for use by cyclists.
When two lanes merge into one, the vehicle in the lane that is ending typically yields to the vehicle in the continuing lane.
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A lot of times, merging into a turn lane may require you to cross over a bike line, or the turn lane may be jointly a turn lane and bike lane.
you are not allowed to drive in the bike lane at all
Use your indicator signal to advise vehicles on the expressway that you intend to merge. Match your speed with the vehicles in the slow lane, find a gap in the traffic and enter the slow lane.