Nelson Mail

SH60 speed review accelerate­s

- CHERIE SIVIGNON

Plans to look at lowering the speed limit along a stretch of State Highway 60, near Nelson, look likely to include some of its feeder roads.

Tasman District Council transporta­tion manager Jamie McPherson said the council and New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) were running a joint process to review the speed limit of the highway between Three Brothers Corner at Richmond and Maisey Rd as well as some of the highway’s associated roads.

It was logical to look at some of the feeder roads so motorists did not turn from the highway with an 80kmh limit and see a 100kmh sign on an associated road, McPherson said.

The move comes after the majority of 95 submission­s to a draft Regional Land Transport Plan related to SH60, almost all of which recommende­d the speed limit on the stretch of highway be lowered to 80kmh. A flood of submission­s were received after a spate of crashes on the increasing­ly busy road.

After some submitters spoke at a hearing in March, the Tasman regional transport committee agreed to recommend NZTA urgently review the speed limit on SH60, with ‘‘priority’’ given to lowering the speed limit on the section of the highway from Three Brothers Corner to Maisey Rd.

McPherson said the council and NZTA had met since that recommenda­tion and it was hoped a consultati­on document on the proposed changes could be ready in May.

The news comes the day after Associate Transport Minister Julie Anne Genter announced at a local government road safety summit in Wellington that the Government would look at introducin­g a zero road death policy by 2020.

‘‘We need a new [road safety] strategy,’’ Genter said. ‘‘We need a clear idea of the outcomes we want and the steps we need to take.’’

Tasman Mayor Richard Kempthorne was at the summit and said no-one wanted a continuati­on of the ‘‘horrible crashes’’ that had occurred.

The question was: ‘‘What are we going to do and what can we actually do to head for the target,’’ Kempthorne said. ‘‘How can we improve the quality of driving on these roads?’’

Impatient drivers could be seen on the highway to Motueka, cellphone use by drivers seemed to be on the rise and the drug P, or methamphet­amine, was a ‘‘real issue’’ in Tasman district.

The mayor said he wanted to investigat­e whether police could be equipped to carry out roadside drug testing.

He hoped to make progress over the next three to six months looking at the issues on Tasman district roads and what safety improvemen­ts might fit into a programme nationally.

Meanwhile, as part of NZTA’s annual minor safety improvemen­ts programme, crews are scheduled complete work before winter at some intersecti­ons along SH60.

In a statement, NZTA says work is due to start at Pukeko Lane with the installati­on of a new right-turn bay from the highway. Changes to road surface markings are planned at the Lansdowne Rd and Mapua Drive intersecti­ons while a roadside safety barrier is due to be erected near Research Orchard Rd.

A trial to help cancer patients keep their hair has had promising results.

 ?? BRADEN FASTIER ?? Cancer patient Claire Gaze has chemothera­py and scalp cooling treatment at Nelson Hospital.
BRADEN FASTIER Cancer patient Claire Gaze has chemothera­py and scalp cooling treatment at Nelson Hospital.

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