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Delays to reducing Atawhai speed limit upset councillors

Tuesday, 16 April 2019

Councillors say concerns about the speed limit on State Highway 6 through Atawhai are not being addressed quickly enough by NZTA.
Councillors say concerns about the speed limit on State Highway 6 through Atawhai are not being addressed quickly enough by NZTA.

The speed limit on a dangerous stretch of State Highway 6 through Atawhai is still potentially years away frustrating councillors who say the delay is 'ridiculous'.

The city council asked NZTA last year to investigate reducing the speed from 100kmh to 80kmh on the busy highway from Haven Rd to Todd Bush Rd.

NZTA representative and strategic planner Steve Higgs updated the regional transport committee on Monday on the request.

He said speed reductions to SH6 were included in a larger project, the Blenheim to Nelson safety improvement plan, and would be looked at as part of that project.

**READ MORE:

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Councillors want the stretch of State Highway 6 from Haven Rd to Todd Bush Rd to have its speed limit reduced.
Councillors want the stretch of State Highway 6 from Haven Rd to Todd Bush Rd to have its speed limit reduced.

* Safety and sound reduction scheduled for Nelson motorways

* Call for speed limit cut at Atawhai as part of highway improvements**

He said a 'comprehensive speed management programme' would be rolled out nationally over the next three years, including Nelson in the years 2020 to 2021.

He said any interim measure to reduce speed would not necessarily be quicker than waiting for the national programme or the Blenheim to Nelson plan, as changes to the speed limit needed to go through a rigorous process and be signed off by the chair of the NZTA.

'Safety is a key focus for the NZTA for the next three years, and of course you all know that the number of deaths and serious injuries is heading in the wrong direction, so there's a lot of work that needs to be doing,' Higgs said.

He said the NZTA had nationally recognised three areas as being the highest risk: Auckland, Waikato, and Canterbury.

Councillors expressed frustration at the delay, which committee chair Mike Rutledge said was 'bureaucratic'.

Some Atawhai residents have been campaigning for the speed to be reduced on that stretch of highway for years.

Councillor Gaile Noonan said it was 'ridiculous'.

'We had two deaths last week in our area,' she said. 'I can't understand why we can't have a trial. I am very concerned about this … can we not do something at pace?'

Councillor Paul Matheson said it had been an issue for a long time, saying the council had been talking about it 'for 10 years'.

'How many times do we have to go to you guys and highlight the problem of speed?

'We have been asking for a long, long time … We've got the statistics to say its a lousy piece of road and it does unfortunately claim lives.'

Mayor Rachel Reese floated the idea of a member's bill, saying it was an 'urgent piece of legislation'.

'The really sad thing around this … is the more people die on the road the more likely you are to get money. After going to a funeral last week, it really upsets me,' she said.

'I don't know what we're going to do here. It doesn't sound like NZTA has the tools to support us. We need to find … some kind of estuary improvements all the way along so we can put in some temporary speed reductions.

'I'm going to try really hard to think about what we can do, State Highway owners [NZTA], you're going to have to bear with us because we've got to do something.'