The Bay Chronicle

Speed drop to 80kmh eyed

- SUSAN BOTTING LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.

Northland has become New Zealand’s first region-wide location for potentiall­y slashing highway speed limits to 80kmh because of its roading management challenges.

That is according to Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency Road to Zero portfolio manager Tara MacMillan. She said the rural nature of its state highways, long skinny shape and needing to address pending issues contribute­d to a decision making it New Zealand’s first region-wide approach to cutting speed limits to 80kmh.

The outcome of this regional approach would inform potentiall­y using the same option in other parts of New Zealand, MacMillan said.

Waka Kotahi is proposing slashing speed limits from 100kmh to 80kmh across Northland.

The agency is already working to do this on selected highways in other parts of New Zealand, but only with one or two changes in a region.

MacMillan said Northland was ‘‘one of the challengin­g ones that if we can crack it it will be good’’.

She said it was not financiall­y possible to engineer major road safety improvemen­ts such as median barriers for every state highway in rural areas such as Northland.

Speed limit was a more immediate and less expensive way to address road deaths and significan­t injury.

Northland has six state highways stretching 880 kilometres along highways one, 10, 11, 12, 14 and 15.

MacMillan said 770 kilometres of Northland’s state highways had been potentiall­y earmarked for the speed reduction. She would not be drawn on whether the speed reduction would refer to the whole region in a blanket approach.

Waka Kotahi reduced the Kawakawa to Moerewa SH1 limit from 100kmh to 80kmh in August.

Northlande­rs are expected to ‘‘soon’’ be able to have their say on the Waka Kotahi proposals for across the region.

Waka Kotahi was at edition time unable to provide a time frame for this in terms of the consultati­on start date. It was also unable to indicate when the proposal on which the community consultati­on would be based would be finalised.

Waka Kotahi is looking to permanentl­y slash Northland’s state highway speed limits as part of Road to Zero, a national safety campaign to reduce road accidents deaths and injury. Cutting the 100kmh speed limit on the region’s state highway network to 80kmh would be the biggest Northland main road speed change for almost 40 years.

New Zealand’s national speed limit was raised from 80kmh to 100kmh in July 1986. It had been at 80kmh for 13 years before then – after being reduced to that speed in December 1973 as a fuel-saving measure.

The proposed reduction has angered some Northland roading leaders who have said its potential blanket approach was not the best way to address the problem and warned that slashing mandatory 100kmh speed limits must not be used as an excuse to put less government money into Northland state highways’ safety improvemen­ts.

MacMillan said Northland roading leaders were an important part of the group approach needed to make the proposal work and reduce death and serious road injury. She said there had been unacceptab­le trends in state highway road deaths and injuries in Northland.

That needed to be stopped. Everybody needed to play their part in getting everyone home safely and reversing these trends.

MacMillan said Waka Kotahi would take consultati­on feedback into considerat­ion and in some situations had modified its approach to speed limit reductions for state highways in other parts of New Zealand.

She was unable, however, to provide an example of where this had occurred on the ground.

 ?? TANIA WHYTE/NORTHERN ADVOCATE ?? Will this Northland 100kmh roadside sign become a thing of the past as Waka Kotahi looks to slash speed limits to 80kmh across the region’s state highways?
TANIA WHYTE/NORTHERN ADVOCATE Will this Northland 100kmh roadside sign become a thing of the past as Waka Kotahi looks to slash speed limits to 80kmh across the region’s state highways?
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