I used to walk to school every day for a couple of years. The street I used (Market St in Tacoma, WA) was entirely timed, alongside most of the intersections in the area. Most of the time, I jaywalked. I had no more of an interest in waiting for a walk signal than the car next to me waiting for their green. Market, alongside every other road in the area, was not timed for pedestrians, obviously. Ergo, there was no “WALK” band afforded to me. Actuated signals with push buttons would’ve save me lots of time, as I was usually waiting for no one, and I could have changed the signal within a few seconds of arriving.
I have only one issue with pedestrian push buttons: if you arrive too late, you have to wait a whole cycle before getting a walk sign again. This happens for very obvious reasons: if one direction gets a green while someone is already waiting at the cross street, they have the next priority. The controller has already designated them for the next phase, and the current through phase will end as soon as vehicles stop arriving or it times out. There really needs to be a good four to six seconds at the beginning of a through phase to allow pedestrians to hit the button before it stops them from receiving a WALK sign.
Now, this is where automatic WALK is actually very important. Corridors with so much traffic that it’s effectively a guarantee that the through phase will last at least as long as the WALK sign…those movements should have automatic WALK.
Pedestrian detection methods are a whole other issue. As are, I assume, bike detection, as there is already robust methods that don’t require any button pressing.