Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

MP calls for fresh trial of M1 slowdown

- PAUL WESTON paul.weston@news.com.au

THE state government is being urged not to permanentl­y drop speed limits on the M1 because of concerns a traffic scare campaign during the Commonweal­th Games ruined a trial.

Broadwater MP David Crisafulli in state parliament has urged the government to have a rethink, after he was contacted by residents concerned about the review.

The government is expected to decide by the end of the month whether to reduce the speed limit on the M1 permanentl­y from 110km/h to 100km/h from the Logan Motorway Interchang­e to Gaven and 100km/h to 90km/h between Eight Mile Plains and the Logan Motorway.

The speed limits were reduced for the Games and heavy trucks were limited to the left hand lanes.

“Why I would like to urgently put this on the record is that I do not want to see us rush into a decision to make this a permanent move because I do not believe it has been adequately trialled,” Mr Crisafulli told parliament.

“I have a group of about 100 residents whom I met while doorknocki­ng during the election. I asked them their view of the reduction in these speed limits. Some of them are vehemently opposed. Some of them believe it is a good solution.

“But there is one common theme amongst almost all of them and that is we do not really know if it was effective because it was trialled during a period when the volume of traffic was not what it normally was.”

A regular M1 commuter responding to a survey by Mr Crisafulli said the speed reduction on the motorway made it worse.

“The great traffic that we experience­d on the M1 during the Commowealt­h Games was a combinatio­n of the school holidays and locals going away or staying off the roads during this period,” the commuter wrote.

The long-term solution lay in fixing bottleneck­s at Robina and Loganholme by adding extra lanes, the commuter said.

Another regular M1 driver said the reduced speed limit had made the trip less stressful.

Transport Minister Mark Bailey said temporary speed reductions on the M1 during the Gold Coast 2018 Commonweal­th Games had returned to normal on April 17.

“The review will be complete at the end of May, with a full 12-month analysis of the TULL (Trucks Use Left Lane) initiative due for completion in July.

“Any decisions regarding the implementa­tion of these initiative­s will be made once the review is concluded,” he said.

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