30km speed limit proposed for Whakatāne towns

Residents have until July 30 to have their say.

A plan to lower the speed limit in Whakatāne district towns to 30km/h has been described as fanatical by Mayor Victor Luca.

'I have no problem with a 30kmh limit near schools, which seems sensible. I am not in favour of a 30km/h limit around urban Whakatane,” says Victor.

Residents have until July 30 to have their say on Whakatāne District Council's speed management plan, which includes lowering speed limits to 30km/h on urban residential streets sometime between 2024 and 2027.

The council adopted the draft plan for consultation at its recent infrastructure and planning committee meeting and is urging the community to make submissions.

'The safety management plans that Whakatāne District Council has come up with are at the urging of Waka Kotahi and it is they that have placed some quite tight guidelines that don't give [the council] much room to manoeuvre. However, we could go for 40kmh rather than 30kmh. For some reason, we went for the latter.

'Waka Kotahi are showing a level of fanaticism and idealism that I am not convinced is going to yield significant results. They are trying to reduce deaths and injuries to zero in the cheapest way possible, by slowing us down to a snail's pace.”

With legislation introduced in 2022, the transport ministry has laid down a framework for councils throughout New Zealand for setting speed limits in their districts.

The framework states speeds must be reduced to 30kmh for areas around schools and school travel routes, and 30 to 40kmh for local urban streets. Speed limits of 40 to 60kmh are allowed for urban connector streets linking residential areas.

Whakatāne District Council's proposed Speed Management Plan shows 30kmh speed limits on most streets in the Whakatāne and Ōhope urban areas. Maps showing proposed speed limits on all of the district's urban areas can be viewed through links on the council's website whakatane.govt.nz. Beacon graphic.

The council's draft plan includes 30kmh limits for all roads in urban areas except a handful of urban connector streets that will stay at 50kmh. In a report to councillors, staff said having 30kmh, 40kmh and 50kmh areas would be too confusing for drivers and result in a proliferation of speed signs.

Whakatāne council's elected members are urging district residents to make submissions on the plan.

Deputy mayor Lesley Immink said it was another example of a Crown agency imposing changes on councils.

'It's going to be a really hard ask. I don't think anyone disagrees with keeping it at 30kmh around urban schools, but [the plan] raises lots of concerns, for example, Harbour Road, at 30kmh.

One Port Ōhope resident, Pam Mossman, told the Beacon she's always happy to see improvements and safety to roads, but questions whether any issues with safety have more to do with the condition of the roads, rather than people's speed.

She says having a 30km/h limit on Harbour Road will have a serious impact on Port Ōhope residents' daily commute.

'My husband travels to Kawerau each day, as do a lot of Ōhope residents. The proposal, combined with the proposal of Waka Kotahi to have a variety of speed zones between Whakatāne and Kawerau, would increase travel times significantly over the working week.”

Council transport planner Joe Metcalfe says Whakatāne district ranked 10th out of more than 70 other districts for high rates of serious crashes involving speed and has the second-highest crash rate involving pedestrians. He says something has to change.

"We want everyone who calls the Whakatāne District home, or who visits our community, to be safe when using our streets and roads. To do this, we need the right speeds on our roads for everyone, whether you are walking to the shops, biking to school, driving to work, or making deliveries."

Whakatāne urban connector streets, where speed limits will remain at 50km/h, include Landing, Domain, Eivers, Valley, Arawa and Gorge and Keepa roads and Peace, Hinemoa and Te Tahi streets. In Ōhope, Pohutukawa Avenue will stay at 50kmh.

Joe says along with setting speed limits, the council will also be installing infrastructure that encourages appropriate speeds and work with other agencies, such as police, on enforcement methods to ensure people kept to the limits.

'New Zealand has some of the worst road fatality rates in the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) with crashes costing our society almost $6 billion dollars each year.

'That's a lot of resources being taken out of our health care system that could be drastically reduced if we all just take a bit of extra time on our roads. Great Aunt Betsy might just get that hip replacement without needing to wait four more years if we all just slow down.”

The draft District Speed Management Plan, including maps showing which speed limits apply to which streets, and a link to where people can make a submission, is now available to view on the Whakatāne District Council website, whakatane.govt.nz or paper copies of the plan are available at the council's customer services office.

-Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.

2 comments

Don't you wonder...

Posted on 05-07-2023 11:36 | By morepork

... how we ever managed to get by for many decades with a speed limit in built up areas of 50 KPH (30 MPH). Modern cars have better steering and brakes than was the case, but we have this insane mantra in the Transport Ministry that speed is always responsible for accidents. (It is sometimes a factor... but the condition and nature of the road, along with the training and capability of the driver, is probably more important.) If you want to lower road deaths, provide free (or subsidized) advanced and defensive driving courses.


Absolute Lunacy

Posted on 05-07-2023 13:23 | By Rob .

Whakatane traffic is already a congested mess, half of the people driving here probably don't or shouldn't have licences and the other half have no idea how to drive and consider basic road rules to be for everyone else, the comprehension of how a round-about works to this day eludes many. The insanity of lowered speed limits and the rhetoric mantra of less speed equals less accidents is an oxymoron, doing 35 - 40km/h in a 50 zone, 80km/h in a 100 zone only creates a backlog of frustrated drivers who will tend to take risks due to being impeded in their travels. Whakatane roads are the result of continued failure to update infrastructure to cope with the increased population and vehicular traffic. What's next? Speed cameras for revenue gathering in these new speed zones? My bet is that it is will be next on the agenda.


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