Horowhenua Chronicle

Limits reviewed for rural roads

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Horowhenua District Council intends to a review speed limits on rural roads in Horowhenua, and wants your input.

Roading services manager Kevin Peel said council wanted to gauge the community’s views about safe and appropriat­e speed limits for the conditions and driving environmen­ts on rural roads.

“Nationally, due to the increase in numbers of deaths and serious injuries on New Zealand’s roads, there is a growing demand for safer speeds,” he said. “Council’s aim is to enhance the safety of the district’s road network by establishi­ng consistent and credible speed zones that accurately reflect the safety risk to road users while minimising frequent speed limit changes to avoid driver confusion.”

The review follows the Government’s Safer Journeys Action Plan, which aims to reduce the number and severity of crashes on New Zealand roads, and the NZ Transport Agency’s (NZTA) 2016 Speed Management Guide and Risk Assessment Tool, which sets the criteria for determinin­g and implementi­ng speed limits.

Mr Peel said NZTA’s 2016 guide reflects changes in the way speed limits are set following the adoption of the Government’s Land Transport Rule ‘Setting of Speed Limits 2017’ as part of the Safer Journeys Strategy.

“Under the old rules, all rural roads had a 100km/h speed limit unless certain stringent criteria could be met for allowing the speed to be lowered. However, this approach led to some cases of inconsiste­nt and inappropri­ate speed limits that were unsafe for the road environmen­t and conditions.

“The new approach aims to create national consistenc­y of speed limits in areas with similar roads, taking into account factors such as roadside hazards, developmen­t, traffic and alignment,” he said.

The survey closes at 4pm on Friday, February 1.

The results will help inform proposed changes to the speed limits schedule in the Land Transport Bylaw 2017. A more formal public consultati­on period where you can make a submission on the proposed changes begins in February.

You can take part in the survey online on the Have Your Say page of council’s website, www.horowhenua.govt.nz/ SpeedLimit­Review-Rural Roads, or by visiting council’s customer service centres at its main office in Oxford St or Te Takeretang­a o Kura-hau-po¯ in Levin, Te Awahou Nieuwe Stroom in Foxton or the Shannon Library.

 ??  ?? Rural road users plead with drivers to slow down.
Rural road users plead with drivers to slow down.

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