Calgary Herald

B.C. government rolls back speed limits on some roads

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VICTORIA The British Columbia government is rolling back speed limits on sections of more than a dozen highways where crashes have climbed since 2014, when the highest speeds in Canada were permitted.

Transporta­tion Minister Claire Trevena said Tuesday a three-year review of crash data from 33 routes shows the top three factors for increased collisions are driver inattentio­n, road conditions and driving too fast for those conditions.

Serious crashes jumped significan­tly after speed limits went into effect, said Trevena, citing an “alarming” increase on several routes, including Highway 19 between Parksville and Campbell River, where speed-related accidents jumped by one-third.

Fifteen sections of highway will see speeds cut by 10 km/h. Stretches of Highway 1 and Highway 5A in the southern Interior were already rolled back in 2016 when crash rates jumped after the speed limit change.

Speeds on sections of 16 routes, including the Coquihalla Highway, won’t be changed because they haven’t shown higher accident rates over the past four years, Trevena said. Nearly half of all serious accidents over the three years were caused by driver inattentio­n and road conditions, she said.

RCMP Insp. Tim Walton, who is in charge of Island District Traffic Services, warned at the news conference that police will be boosting enforcemen­t on all corridors where collisions increased to ensure drivers are respecting the new limits.

Walton said he decided four years ago that he’d wait to respond to the hike in speed limits until the research was completed. “Slowing down can significan­tly reduce the impact of any collision and reduce the chances that you’ll be severely injured or killed,” he said.

Trevena said there were no statistica­l increases in accidents after the first year of higher speed limits but the subsequent two years have shown “shocking ” jumps, prompting the government to respond to a study released last month showing a link between higher speed limits and crashes leading to injuries and fatalities. The study, published in the journal Sustainabi­lity, was led by Vancouver General Hospital ER physician Dr. Jeffrey Brubacher and road-safety engineers at the Okanagan campus of the University of British Columbia.

The study, funded by the federal government, concluded fatal crashes more than doubled on roads with higher speed limits, affected roads had a 43 per cent increase in total auto-insurance claims and a 30 per cent jump in auto-insurance claims for injuries.

However, Ian Tootill, co-founder of the group Safety by Education Not Speed Enforcemen­t, said lowering the limit is based on oversimpli­fied data by an irresponsi­ble group of academics and healthcare profession­als.

“The whole group of people that have input on this, that are in the so-called stakeholde­rs’ group, are all people with a dog in the race,” he said. Truckers don’t want people driving faster than them and police are writing speeding tickets for the profits of municipali­ties, Tootill said.

HIGHWAYS WHERE SPEED LIMITS WILL BE CUT:

Two stretches of Highway 19 on Vancouver Island.

Sections of Highway 1 on Vancouver Island, the Fraser Valley and into the north Okanagan.

A portion of Highway 3 outside Princeton.

Highway 7 from Agassiz to Hope. Highway 99, the Sea to Sky Highway, from Horseshoe Bay to Pemberton.

Portions of highways 97A and 97C through the southern Interior.

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