When approaching a pedestrian crossing without a raised traffic island, what must you do?
Continue driving unless the pedestrian is crossing your lane
Give way to pedestrians on any part of the crossing
Honk your horn at the pedestrian
If there is no central raised traffic island at the pedestrian crossing, you must stop when pedestrians are waiting to cross the road on your side, are crossing on your side, or are walking towards you on the pedestrian crossing on the other side (this is guidance for driving instructors and examiners, as can be seen in images provided by the New Zealand Transport Agency). However, the law states: "When a driver approaches a pedestrian crossing, they must give way to pedestrians, scooter users, or mobility device users (i) on the crossing; or (ii) clearly waiting to cross (and not behind a school patrol sign)." The question does not specify the direction of the pedestrians, therefore option B is the correct answer, although this may not be what you would do in actual driving situations.