The New Zealand Herald

Safety adverts target speed

Campaign urges motorists to slow down with 2018 death toll 10 already

- Melissa Nightingal­e

Police are pleading with motorists to slow down and stop defending their “perceived right to speed” with 10 people already dead on the nation’s roads in 2018.

The tragic tally is on par with the same time last year.

The toll for 2017 was the highest in years, reaching a shocking 379 deaths provisiona­lly, making it the worst year on our roads since 2009, when 384 people died.

Police yesterday launched a new road safety advertisin­g campaign directly challengin­g speeding drivers to slow down and stop defending their perceived “right” to speed.

The joint NZ Transport Agency/ police campaign addresses the significan­t proportion of the driving population who still like to travel at speeds which are too fast for the conditions.

“Every week, 11 people are seriously injured or killed in a speedrelat­ed crash on New Zealand roads, but a substantia­l portion of our society does not see the connection between speed and crashes,” Transport Agency director of safety and environmen­t Harry Wilson said.

“That needs to change, because the facts and the physics are indisputab­le. Speed is always a crucial factor in determinin­g the severity of the crash and the severity of the injuries to the people involved. The simple and inescapabl­e truth is that less speed means less harm in a crash.”

Assistant commission­er for road policing Sandra Venables said the consequenc­es of people driving too fast for the conditions could be devastatin­g.

“Police officers see the human cost of speed nearly every day on our roads. Crashes occur due to a wide range of mistakes, whether involuntar­y or deliberate, but the outcome is vastly different at different speeds.

“Even when speed doesn’t cause the crash, it is the single biggest

Even when speed doesn’t cause the crash, it is the single biggest determinan­t in whether anyone is killed, injured, or walks away unharmed. Sandra Venables, assistant commission­er for road policing

determinan­t in whether anyone is killed, injured, or walks away unharmed. A small change in speed makes a big difference to injury severity.

“Last year was tragic in terms of fatal and serious injury crashes on our roads. With 10 fatalities this year already, police are hoping the new campaign will contribute to making a difference in driver behaviour. Our plea to all drivers this year is to be courteous and slow down, to make sure you get to your destinatio­n safely.”

Already this year there have been nine fatal crashes on our roads.

One of the worst happened near Woodhill last week, claiming two lives and leaving three people in a serious condition.

The crash happened on SH16 on January 4 when a northbound driver lost control of his vehicle, Waitemata Senior Sergeant Jesse Mowat said.

“The driver appears to have drifted into the southbound lane where his vehicle has clipped a van. As a result the driver of the Nissan has veered further into the southbound lane and has effectivel­y had a head-on collision with another vehicle heading south.”

The Nissan caught fire and two people in the car died.

The first person to die on the roads this year was a Tauranga man involved in a crash on State Highway 29a.

The crash happened when the 69-year-old driver was travelling across the Maungatapu Bridge soon after midnight.

Western Bay of Plenty head of road policing Acting Senior Sergeant Wayne Hunter said the car the man had been driving crossed the centre line and crashed head-on into a car being driven by a sober driver taking a carload of drunk passengers home. None of the other people involved were injured.

In another crash on January 5, one person died and another was left in a critical condition when two cars collided in east Auckland.

 ??  ?? Speed is thought to have been a major factor in this Hawkes’s Bay accident in which four people were injured after their car left the road.
Speed is thought to have been a major factor in this Hawkes’s Bay accident in which four people were injured after their car left the road.

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