Speed Management Plan 2023/27

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Consultation has concluded

In 2022, new legislation was introduced to change the way that speed limits are planned, consulted on and implemented. The aim of the Land Transport Rule: Setting of Speed Limits 2022 is to improve the process of setting speed limits, provide consistency in speed limits, and create better alignment of speed management generally. As required under this rule, the Council is developing a phased approach to Speed Management Planning which focuses on schools and a few other major roads/intersections in its first iteration. We want to wait for the new Government to be formed to see if promises to repeal speed limit rules are realised in its transport policies before deciding on a district-wide approach. For this reason, Councillors have requested that a minimum option be progressed for now that prioritises the safety of school children and some known road safety concerns

The two key proposals are:

Speed Limits at Schools

The Speed Management Plan, at this stage, primarily focuses on reducing speed limits around our schools. This aligns with the specific requirement under the Land Transport Rule that Councils use reasonable efforts to reduce speed limits around all schools by the end of December 2027, with an interim target of 40% of schools completed by the end of June 2024. The plan proposes a mix of fixed and variable speed limit signage around schools.

Key Intersections and Other Proposals

We are also consulting with the public on a proposed speed limit changes to a small number of roads and intersections around the District. This is to ensure that the speed limits at these specific locations are safe and appropriate for their current and future use, and to create slower speed environments through intersections when a vehicle is approaching on the side road. These proposed changes are intended to provide consistency with speed on the surrounding roads and are in response to increased traffic in the key areas.


Speed Limits at schools

We are proposing a mix of permanent speed limit signage at some school locations and variable speed limit signs outside those schools on roads with high volumes of traffic. Variable speed limit signs at schools are active between specific hours at the beginning and end of school days only. These temporary speed limit reductions are intended to slow traffic passing through school zones when students are more likely to be in and around the road.

Key Intersections and Other Proposed Changes:

  • Pegasus Boulevard, between State Highway One and Infinity Drive (70 km/h to 60 km/h to align with Waka Kotahi’s State Highway One proposed speed limit change)

  • Beach Road, from 80 m east of Tuhoe Avenue to 690 m east of Tuhoe Avenue (70 km/h to 50 km/h) to coincide with extending development.

  • Beach Road, 690 m east of Tuhoe Avenue to 200 m west of Dunns Avenue (100 km/h to 80 km/h)

  • Ferry Road (north), Beach Road to end of formed road (100 km/h to 60 km/h)

  • Ferry Road (south), Beach Road to end of formed road (100 km/h to 60 km/h)

  • Ashley Gorge Road (German Road intersection speed zone), from 150 m east of the German Road intersection to 150 m west of the German Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit)

  • Oxford Road (Tram Road intersection speed zone), from 150 m east of the Tram Road intersection to 150 m west of the Tram Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit)

  • Tram Road (Two Chain Road intersection speed zone) – 150 m east of the Two Chain Road intersection to 150 m west of the Two Chain Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit)

  • Tram Road (Earlys Road intersection) – 150 m east of the Earlys Road intersection to 150 m west of the Earlys Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit))

Variable speed limits at intersections are signage that activate only when vehicles are approaching the intersection from the side road. These temporary speed limit reductions are intended to reduce the likelihood of a crash at several of our highest-risk rural intersections.


What's in the plan?

The proposed plan outlines the detailed approach to speed management including the background to the plan, how it was developed, Council’s 10-year vision, and the implementation programme over the next four years.

Objectives of the Plan

The speed management objectives of the Waimakariri District Council are as follows:

  • Speed limits that support the Council’s community outcomes,

  • Speed limits that achieve consistent road and speed environments,

  • Speed limits that enable safe journeys for all users,

  • Speed limits that prioritise vulnerable users around schools, marae, parks, and town centres.


Why are we proposing these changes?

In short, the legislation requires that the Council develop a Speed Management Plan and this proposed plan is the minimum that the Council can progress in relation to speed around our schools.

Speed Management Plans form part of New Zealand’s Road to Zero Strategy that aims to stop people being killed or injured on our roads. Reducing road speed will reduce the impact of road crashes and injuries. It will also provide a safer environment for all road users.

Speed needs to be set so that crashes are survivable and even legal speeds can be dangerous. Lowering speed from 50km/h to 40km/h reduces chance of death from 80% to 30%. Our speed limits do not always reflect the risk on the road. When crashes happen, there are many causes – people make mistakes, the road might be unfamiliar, the weather might be bad. The vast majority of severe casualties are not from extreme high-risk behaviours, but from generally law-abiding people making a simple mistake.

The number of people walking and cycling is increasing across the District. The Council’s goal is to provide an accessible network of roads, paths, lanes and corridors so people of all ages and abilities can safely travel around the District.

Implementing safer speed limits on our roads is just one area of focus where we can address harm. Other areas include improving our roads and roadsides, encouraging the use of safer vehicles and encouraging better driver behaviour. The Council has a wide programme of work addressing all of these areas and we continue to deliver road safety programmes in the community such as cycle skills in schools and support national advertising around safer road use and vehicles. Safer roads contribute to improvements to health and wellbeing. Lower speed limits help to reduce emissions and help response to climate change.


More information:

For more detailed information about the changes to speed limits around schools please see that maps included in the document tab. You can also the review the full speed management document there too. And here you can see what will happen next with your feedback as well as the decision making process.

You can also come along to one of our drop in session near you to find out more about this proposed plan.

Tell us what you think:

We welcome your feedback on the proposed speed management plan. We also have included some questions about speed generally to help us to better understand what residents think about speed in various different environments across the District.

We have a couple of options available for you to use to provide feedback. There is a mapping tool which let's you drop pins on to a map of the District and leave your comments or feedback and a survey option below with a number of questions. Please choose what works best for and let us know what you think by Monday 27 November 2023.

In 2022, new legislation was introduced to change the way that speed limits are planned, consulted on and implemented. The aim of the Land Transport Rule: Setting of Speed Limits 2022 is to improve the process of setting speed limits, provide consistency in speed limits, and create better alignment of speed management generally. As required under this rule, the Council is developing a phased approach to Speed Management Planning which focuses on schools and a few other major roads/intersections in its first iteration. We want to wait for the new Government to be formed to see if promises to repeal speed limit rules are realised in its transport policies before deciding on a district-wide approach. For this reason, Councillors have requested that a minimum option be progressed for now that prioritises the safety of school children and some known road safety concerns

The two key proposals are:

Speed Limits at Schools

The Speed Management Plan, at this stage, primarily focuses on reducing speed limits around our schools. This aligns with the specific requirement under the Land Transport Rule that Councils use reasonable efforts to reduce speed limits around all schools by the end of December 2027, with an interim target of 40% of schools completed by the end of June 2024. The plan proposes a mix of fixed and variable speed limit signage around schools.

Key Intersections and Other Proposals

We are also consulting with the public on a proposed speed limit changes to a small number of roads and intersections around the District. This is to ensure that the speed limits at these specific locations are safe and appropriate for their current and future use, and to create slower speed environments through intersections when a vehicle is approaching on the side road. These proposed changes are intended to provide consistency with speed on the surrounding roads and are in response to increased traffic in the key areas.


Speed Limits at schools

We are proposing a mix of permanent speed limit signage at some school locations and variable speed limit signs outside those schools on roads with high volumes of traffic. Variable speed limit signs at schools are active between specific hours at the beginning and end of school days only. These temporary speed limit reductions are intended to slow traffic passing through school zones when students are more likely to be in and around the road.

Key Intersections and Other Proposed Changes:

  • Pegasus Boulevard, between State Highway One and Infinity Drive (70 km/h to 60 km/h to align with Waka Kotahi’s State Highway One proposed speed limit change)

  • Beach Road, from 80 m east of Tuhoe Avenue to 690 m east of Tuhoe Avenue (70 km/h to 50 km/h) to coincide with extending development.

  • Beach Road, 690 m east of Tuhoe Avenue to 200 m west of Dunns Avenue (100 km/h to 80 km/h)

  • Ferry Road (north), Beach Road to end of formed road (100 km/h to 60 km/h)

  • Ferry Road (south), Beach Road to end of formed road (100 km/h to 60 km/h)

  • Ashley Gorge Road (German Road intersection speed zone), from 150 m east of the German Road intersection to 150 m west of the German Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit)

  • Oxford Road (Tram Road intersection speed zone), from 150 m east of the Tram Road intersection to 150 m west of the Tram Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit)

  • Tram Road (Two Chain Road intersection speed zone) – 150 m east of the Two Chain Road intersection to 150 m west of the Two Chain Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit)

  • Tram Road (Earlys Road intersection) – 150 m east of the Earlys Road intersection to 150 m west of the Earlys Road intersection (100 km/h to 60 km/h as a variable speed limit))

Variable speed limits at intersections are signage that activate only when vehicles are approaching the intersection from the side road. These temporary speed limit reductions are intended to reduce the likelihood of a crash at several of our highest-risk rural intersections.


What's in the plan?

The proposed plan outlines the detailed approach to speed management including the background to the plan, how it was developed, Council’s 10-year vision, and the implementation programme over the next four years.

Objectives of the Plan

The speed management objectives of the Waimakariri District Council are as follows:

  • Speed limits that support the Council’s community outcomes,

  • Speed limits that achieve consistent road and speed environments,

  • Speed limits that enable safe journeys for all users,

  • Speed limits that prioritise vulnerable users around schools, marae, parks, and town centres.


Why are we proposing these changes?

In short, the legislation requires that the Council develop a Speed Management Plan and this proposed plan is the minimum that the Council can progress in relation to speed around our schools.

Speed Management Plans form part of New Zealand’s Road to Zero Strategy that aims to stop people being killed or injured on our roads. Reducing road speed will reduce the impact of road crashes and injuries. It will also provide a safer environment for all road users.

Speed needs to be set so that crashes are survivable and even legal speeds can be dangerous. Lowering speed from 50km/h to 40km/h reduces chance of death from 80% to 30%. Our speed limits do not always reflect the risk on the road. When crashes happen, there are many causes – people make mistakes, the road might be unfamiliar, the weather might be bad. The vast majority of severe casualties are not from extreme high-risk behaviours, but from generally law-abiding people making a simple mistake.

The number of people walking and cycling is increasing across the District. The Council’s goal is to provide an accessible network of roads, paths, lanes and corridors so people of all ages and abilities can safely travel around the District.

Implementing safer speed limits on our roads is just one area of focus where we can address harm. Other areas include improving our roads and roadsides, encouraging the use of safer vehicles and encouraging better driver behaviour. The Council has a wide programme of work addressing all of these areas and we continue to deliver road safety programmes in the community such as cycle skills in schools and support national advertising around safer road use and vehicles. Safer roads contribute to improvements to health and wellbeing. Lower speed limits help to reduce emissions and help response to climate change.


More information:

For more detailed information about the changes to speed limits around schools please see that maps included in the document tab. You can also the review the full speed management document there too. And here you can see what will happen next with your feedback as well as the decision making process.

You can also come along to one of our drop in session near you to find out more about this proposed plan.

Tell us what you think:

We welcome your feedback on the proposed speed management plan. We also have included some questions about speed generally to help us to better understand what residents think about speed in various different environments across the District.

We have a couple of options available for you to use to provide feedback. There is a mapping tool which let's you drop pins on to a map of the District and leave your comments or feedback and a survey option below with a number of questions. Please choose what works best for and let us know what you think by Monday 27 November 2023.

  • Please tell us what you think about the proposals in the Speed Management Plan and provide feedback about what you think about different roads across the District.

    Consultation has concluded
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