The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Call for enforcemen­t of new speed limits

ANGUS: Broad welcome for new speed restrictio­ns, but residents call for tougher enforcemen­t

- gbrown@thecourier.co.uk GRAHAM BROWN

“This shows it isn’t an isolated problem and that we need toughter enforcemen­t of these limits when they come into force.

COUNCILLOR BRADEN DAVY

A welcome for new speed restrictio­ns coming into force for Angus villages has been accompanie­d by a call for tougher enforcemen­t when the limits drop.

Angus Council communitie­s committee members have unanimousl­y approved changes bringing 40mph buffer zones into place at Lunanhead and Gowanbank and an extension of Gowanbank’s current 30mph limit.

On the B954, a 40mph buffer zone will be applied to put the brakes on drivers at Muirhead.

The changes follow safety concerns raised by residents as well as bodies including Muirhead, Birkhill and Liff Community Council, but support for the additional measures was accompanie­d by shock over the scale of the speeding problem.

Councillor Braden Davy pointed towards data delivered by roads officials highlighti­ng figures for the B9134 at Lunanhead that revealed more than one-third of the vehicles recorded were travelling between 40 and 50mph within the 30 limit, with some even hitting 60mph.

Mr Davy said combined totals showed almost 40% of vehicles at the two locations were doing more than 10mph above the limit.

“This shows it isn’t an isolated problem and that we need tougher enforcemen­t of these limits when they come into force,” he said.

Councillor Lynne Devine thanked officers for bringing forward the proposals for the new limits so quickly, but a note of caution over how quickly the signs will go up was sounded by councillor Ronnie Proctor.

After the new speed limits for the area around Kirrie Hill and the town’s Neverland play area were agreed last September, Mr Proctor told the committee he had been told the signs are due to go up in May or June.

“That is quite a long time from flash to bang, so it seems quite a time to put these very necessary speed limits into operation,” he said.

The Muirhead buffer was welcomed by councillor Sheila Hands, who said speed restrictio­ns relied on drivers taking responsibi­lity behind the wheel.

The A923 between Muirhead and Coupar Angus has also been the subject of safety scrutiny after a string of serious and fatal crashes, and Ms Hands said speeding concerns had featured strongly in the community charrette discussion.

“We need to emphasise that we can only do as much as we can with putting in place buffer zones and speed limits,” she said.

“I was shocked at the number of vehicles recorded over the limit and the speeds they were going at, and at the end of the day we need drivers to think about their behaviour, not just in relation to other drivers but pedestrian­s and other road users as well.”

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