National is promising to undo the Government鈥檚 鈥渂lanket speed limit reductions鈥 and return many state highways to 100km/h and local roads to 50km/h, except where it would be unsafe to do so.
Transport spokesman Simeon Brown said as well as doing away with many 80km/h speed reductions on state highways and 30km/h on local roads, National will look at increasing the speed limit on new highways to 110km/h.
鈥淣ew highways like Transmission Gully and the K膩piti Expressway, near Wellington, were designed for vehicles to travel at 110km/h but Labour has mostly imposed a 100km/h speed limit. Both roads will rise to 110km/h under National,鈥 Brown said.
The speed limit on the P奴hoi to Warkworth motorway would also rise to 110km/h if a current review finds that would be safe.
National plans to increase the speed limit to 110km/h on the P奴hoi to Warkworth highway if a review finds that would be safe. Photo / Jonathan Kubiak
In Auckland, National鈥檚 policy signals the end of subsidies for Auckland Transport鈥檚 鈥淪afe Speeds鈥 programme that has seen speed limits reduced on thousands of local roads with lower speeds about to be rolled out on another 1646 roads from December.
Brown told the聽Herald聽that a National Government will not provide funding from the National Land Transport Fund - money collected from fuel taxes - to Auckland Transport (AT) and other councils for 鈥淩oad to Zero鈥 projects to slow people down, and up to $450,000 on building raised pedestrian crossings.
The 鈥淪afe Speeds鈥 programme is a key part of AT鈥檚 鈥淩oad to Zero鈥 goal of no deaths or serious injuries on roads by 2050.
Brown said under the guise of safety, Labour has exposed its anti-car ideology by slowing down New Zealanders going about their daily lives.
聽鈥淣ational will repeal and replace the rules that set speed limits so that economic impacts - including travel times - and the views of road users and local communities count, alongside safety,鈥 he said.
National's transport spokesman Simeon Brown. Photo / Bevan Conley
鈥淲e anticipate this resulting in highways going back to 100km/h speed limits, except where it would be unsafe to do so. Similarly, we鈥檒l restore local roads to 50km/h from 30, except where that would be unsafe.
鈥淚t makes no sense to have roads that can safely accommodate higher speed limits, only to require motorists to drive more slowly.鈥
The speed reduction, he said, was part of Labour鈥檚 expensive 鈥楻oad to Zero鈥 road safety campaign, which has not worked.
鈥淭he road toll was 350 in 2019 when 鈥楻oad to Zero鈥 was introduced, and it rose to 374 last year.鈥
Under National, Brown said, road safety will be focused on issues such as alcohol and drugs which is the number one killer on the roads.
鈥淭his Government has dropped the ball on both these issues with a lack of breath-testing and hasn鈥檛 been able to implement oral roadside drug testing.
鈥淲e will also reduce the use of road cones and limit temporary speed restrictions where they are not justified,鈥 he said.
Many speed limits on local roads in Auckland have been reduced to 30km/h. Photo / Dean Purcell
Meanwhile, AT has removed an advertisement for its Safe Speeds programme following a complaint by Brown to the Advertising Standards Authority.
Brown was rankled by AT鈥檚 claim in an advertisement there had been a 鈥38 per cent decrease in road deaths where speed limits were changed, compared to where no changes were made鈥.
His beef was AT overstated the benefits of speed limit reductions during consultation on the latest draft proposals without the statistical evidence to back them up.
鈥淎T should be providing correct information to help Aucklanders make up their own minds on the proposed speed limit reductions rather than using ratepayers鈥 money to tell them what they should think,鈥 Brown said.
The Advertising Standards Authority decision said the parties had settled the matter with AT agreeing to pull the advertising, but Brown claimed the information was still on AT鈥檚 website.
An AT spokesman said it had not pulled any advertising as a result of the complaint because the consultation period had ended by the time the complaint was made.
鈥淲ith respect to the website content, our road safety engineering team is quite comfortable with the way the information is presented,鈥 the spokesman said.
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