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Aus introduces speed limits and increases deaths

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Kickstart
The Oracle



Joined: 04 Feb 2002
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PostPosted: 08:44 - 20 Jul 2009    Post subject: Aus introduces speed limits and increases deaths Reply with quote

Hi

Until recently the Northern Territories in Australia had no speed limits outside towns. Speed limits were introduced in 2007 and it seems it has resulted in a large increase in deaths.

Link

theNewspaper wrote:

Australia: Deaths Go Up After Speed Limits Imposed
Imposing a speed limit on the Australian equivalent of the Autobahn created an increase in fatalities.

Up until 2007, rural roads in the Northern Territory, Australia had no speed limit. Claiming that speed limits were essential to saving lives, the state government imposed a 130km/h (80 MPH) limit on the Stuart, Arnhem, Victoria and Barkly highways and a 110km/h (68 MPH) speed limit on all other roads, unless otherwise marked lower. Despite the best of intentions, however, the number of road deaths actually increased 70 percent after the change -- despite worldwide drop in traffic levels (view chart).

"Our roads are safer, vehicles are safer, paramedics more skilled, drought affected roads are dry, the public have never been more aware of speed limit enforcement, penalties have never been tougher," RoadSense founder Harry Brelsford explained. "These factors should have driven the road toll lower than before. They have not, it is rising. Clearly more of the same is not only not working, it is killing people."

The Australian motorist rights group compiled the latest road fatality data provided by the Northern Territory Police. In 2006, the last year without rural highway speed limits, the road toll was 44. Last year, with speed limits on all roads, the death toll grew to 75 (view data, 400k PDF). The proliferation of speed cameras throughout the country has also increased the level of hazard faced by motorists.

In all of Australia, the death toll decreased by nearly a third between 1989 and 1996 -- without automated enforcement. In the next eight years following the introduction of speed cameras, 1997-2004, fatalities only dropped ten percent. Between 2005 and 2007, the death rate began to skyrocket.

"A major reason for the failure of the policy is the extreme focus on the dangers of above the limit travel to the exclusion of nearly all other risk factors," Brelsford said. "This implies that traveling below the speed limit is safe, leading to complacency, inattention and increased fatalities. Additionally, the current policy of hidden speed cameras has actually impaired driver awareness through adding to an increasing list of dangerous distractions."

RoadSense advocates setting speed limits at the 85th percentile speed, or the speed at which the vast majority are comfortable traveling. The group suggests that government efforts would be better directed at the 98 percent of accidents that happen while traveling at or below the posted speed limit.


All the best

Keith
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Wafer_Thin_Ham
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Joined: 18 Nov 2005
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PostPosted: 20:51 - 20 Jul 2009    Post subject: Reply with quote

Send that to the minister of transport!
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D O G
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Joined: 18 Dec 2006
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PostPosted: 09:17 - 21 Jul 2009    Post subject: Reply with quote

Interesting, but then again not especially surprising. I'd roll out my scrapping of all speed limits and speedometer argument but I shant bother.

As some fairly pointless information, we were friendly with a family who had moved to Brisbane from Darwin. The reason why the Territory had imposed limits was from insistence by the federal government, otherwise they would cancel funding for the key highways within the NT. The Terrotorians did not want them at all.

I briefly went to the NT (to see that big rock), and actually started to overtake a police ute, which was doing an indicated 130kmh (in my defence there were no police markings from the rear). Seeing my mistake I began to pull in behind. As luck would have it this was only a few k's from the junction with the Stuart Highway, where we were stopping for fuel and refreshments. The copper came over and just had a slight word with me and said 'Unfortunately you can't do that anymore, be careful for radars.'

The Australian focus on speed and speeding is total overkill, even worse than it is here. There are no safety messages for anything other than speeding. According to Australian police 'Every K over is a Killer'. The statement is so mind bogglingly moronic that I just do not know where to begin my tirade.
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