Slower speeds loom in towns
Speed limits through Burkes Pass are ‘‘not safe’’ the NZ Transport Agency has admitted and they are set to be reduced.
Residents of the township have been campaigning for several years to have the limit reduced and yesterday the NZTA announced a consultation period to reduce speeds from 80kmh to 60kmh.
‘‘We agree the current limit is not safe,’’ NZTA director of regional relationships Jim Harland said.
‘‘We are proposing to reduce it from 80kmh down to 60kmh to improve safety, especially for the pedestrians who cross the highway.
‘‘Residents and the Mackenzie District Council have been calling for a speed review in Burkes Pass for some time, concerned at the speed people have been travelling on State Highway 8, and the risk this poses to pedestrians and other road users.’’
The confirmation of the consultation period follows an announcement in August that NZTA was to review the speed limits in the township after saying in March 2018 that it was ‘‘currently not reviewing speed limits through Burkes Pass’’.
Mackenzie District mayor Graham Smith said the proposal had been a long time coming.
‘‘Any reduction in speed would be of benefit.
‘‘The residents would have really liked it to have been dropped to 50kmh, but the NZTA has dropped it to 60kmh. It’s up for consultation, so the public will also get to have their say,’’ Smith said.
Burkes Pass resident Dave Taylor said he had witnessed a number of near-misses or examples of dangerous driving.
‘‘It’s just getting so busy these days. We have been pushing for a speed reduction for several years now,’’ Taylor said.
‘‘We would have liked it to drop to 50kmh, but we will settle for 60kmh.’’
Harland said the area, with relatively low levels of commercial development and the approach into Burkes Pass, did not support reducing the speed lower than 60kmh.
‘‘Speed limits need to relate to the road environment so that drivers slow down as they perceive the situation has changed.’’
Harland said the speed limits through Tekapo were also in the process of being reviewed, but ‘‘the current and planned significant growth of the town makes this a more complex review’’.
Smith said with the increasing population of the Mackenzie District – up by 17 per cent over the past five years – meant NZTA needed to invest more in the district’s roads.