Speed Limits Catching up to Drivers – Re-post

by The Philosophical Fish

Speed Limits

Cute sign at the Lion’s Gate Marina boat yard

Sometimes you read an article that is so bang on that you have to share it, and sometimes it’s so good that you don’t want to lose it. Those are the ones that are worth hanging on to and re-posting.

Like this one in the most recent North Shore News

The current speed limit increases are a step in the right direction. I disagree with the doomsayers and am glad that we have made the unusual step in NOT increasing the “Nanny State” further. That the powers-that-be actually recognized the nature of today’s roads, vehicles, and drivers, and made a decision based on the majority of drivers rather than move towards appeasing the lowest common denominator on a somewhat sliding scale, is an intelligent move in my opinion.

We shouldn’t be lowering speed limits because drivers are aging and becoming uncomfortable with the pace of traffic. I’d argue that if we made driver’s testing mandatory every 5-7 years we’d take a lot of drivers, who shouldn’t be driving, off of the roads. Driving isn’t a right, it’s a privilege, and that means if you don’t like the speed on a certain road, take a slower road, or get the heck out of the fast lane for a change!

And that brings up another driving peeve: Move over to where you should be driving in the first place. Just a reminder, it’s the law! I’ve had this argument with so many people; too many have no idea that it really is the law to stay in the right hand lane, here’s the legalese from the Motor vehicle act below:

Driver on right

150  (1) The driver of a vehicle must confine the course of the vehicle to the right hand half of the roadway if the roadway is of sufficient width and it is practicable to do so, except

(a) when overtaking and passing a vehicle proceeding in the same direction,

(b) when the right hand half of the roadway is closed to traffic while under construction or repair,

(c) on a highway designated and marked by signs for one way traffic,

(d) if necessary when operating snow removing equipment, or

(e) if

(i)   the movement of a vehicle, or combination of vehicles, is permitted by and is done in conformity with the terms of the oversize permit issued under theCommercial Transport Act, and

(ii)   the width of a vehicle, or combination of vehicles, or the width of a load on the vehicle makes the operation of the vehicle or combination of vehicles on the right hand half of the roadway unsafe.

(2) The driver of a vehicle proceeding at less than normal speed of traffic at the time and place and under the conditions then existing must drive the vehicle in the right hand lane then available for traffic, or as closely as practicable to the right hand curb or edge of the roadway, except when overtaking and passing a vehicle proceeding in the same direction, or when preparing for a left hand turn at an intersection or into a private road or driveway.

(3) The driver of a vehicle passing around a rotary traffic island must drive the vehicle to the right of the island

But that’s another issue altogether, I can only hope that the police start to finally enforce that problem.

I wholeheartedly agree with the recent speed limit increases on BC roads, they are a step in the right direction. This author sums up nicely, and humorously, many of my own opinions on the issue.


Speed limits catching up to drivers

BRENDAN MCALEER / NORTH SHORE NEWS

JULY 18, 2014 12:00 AM

This month, the British Columbia government raised speed limits across the province on rural highways.

Most of the changes were a bump of about 10 kilometres per hour, including portions of the Sea-to-Sky now set at 90 km/h, and some parts of the Coquihalla now at 120 km/h. Immediately, everybody started driving at the speed they were driving at anyway.

Despite protests from police groups and some environmental groups over the potential impact on safety and pollution, the change is a welcome one. The thing is, it’s not really a change in speed on our roads, it’s just a change of the numbers on those funny little signs you see on the side of the road. What? That’s how fast we’re supposed be going? Oops.

Speed limits, as Homer Simpson famously observed, are just a suggestion — like pants. At least that’s the way most North Americans seem to view them, with the average speed travelled on the road routinely exceeding the posted limit.

Routinely — that’s the word to focus on. Rather than the limit being an absolute ceiling that no one would trespass over, it’s become the baseline speed which drivers seldom drift below. It’s almost a lower limit, rather than an upper one.

Moving the speed limit up, you might imagine, would just cause everyone to drive 10 km/h faster than they did before, but the evidence indicates that simply doesn’t happen. B.C. has raised speed limits before, on the Shuswap corridor, and average speeds did not change one whit. Collisions were actually reduced over the time period, even though traffic increased.

People tend to drive at a speed that they feel reasonable and prudent for the road conditions dependent on the time, the weather, and the traffic level. The same person will drive more slowly on a crowded rainy afternoon on the Upper Levels Highway than they will on a bright and sunny morning with nobody else on the road. Of course they would — that just makes sense.

Traffic, it turns out, has a natural flow, and while we need guidance when approaching a tight corner or an area with cross-traffic, drivers tend to travel at the speed everyone else does. It’s the old George Carlin line: everyone who drives faster than you is a maniac, everyone who drives slower is an idiot.

Thus, setting speed limits below what people ordinarily travel makes maniacs of us all. It’s especially frustrating when a speed trap crops up in an area where everybody is travelling faster than the limit every single day — which little fish is going to get picked off? Who gets culled from the herd?

For instance, last week there was a speed trap set up under the Lonsdale overpass, facing Westbound. On Monday, I followed an unmarked police Tahoe on the same route, and as I slowed to something approaching the speed limit, they continued on at a rate that would have fetched a ticket costing several hundred dollars and points on your license. Were they driving dangerously? No: it was the speed everybody else was doing. It could be argued that it was me, dawdling in the slow lane, that was causing the hazard by creating a variance in traffic speeds.

Frustrating? You bet — I may have bitten a chunk out of my steering wheel.

Happily, the raised speed limits also reduce somewhat the further frustration of our 40 km/h excessive speeding law. While the principle is relatively sound – surely anyone travelling that much over the flow of traffic is at super-maniac status — it makes passing an outright hassle.

Travelling back from Calgary a while ago, I was stuck behind a slow-moving RV on a winding part of the Trans-Canada. As the brief passing lane opened up, the flow of traffic (and the RV) sped up — they always do, don’t they? Getting around him took a lot of oomph. If there’d been a sudden speed trap, I might have got a ticket, but the guy in the minivan behind me might have had to walk home with his car on a flatbed. Behind us, the RV again slowed to sub-limit speeds as the bends came up. That extra 10 km/h cushion would help.

I’d say that if speed limits were correctly set, 90 per cent of people wouldn’t even think of brushing their brake pedal if they saw an officer with a radar gun on the side of the road. Too-low limits create an us-and-them cat-and-mouse game with the highway patrol, which shouldn’t be the point. Do we need patrols to catch those who would double the limit using the road as their own personal racetrack? Absolutely, but those folks are going to be out there breaking the law by 50 or 100 km/h regardless, and they’re going to do it whatever the limit is set at, high or low.

If I’d my druthers, I’d alter every single highway speed sign in B.C. to read “-ish” as in, “100 km/h-ish”. The speeding ticket would be outlawed, and there would be no more speed traps.

Ah, but there’s a second part of this plan. Officers of the law would receive special training allowing them to issue tickets for being a jackass. Travelling 120 km/h up the Sea-to-Sky at 6 a.m. on a perfect summer Sunday in a car with good brakes and tires? Not being a jackass. Going 100 km/h on the Upper Levels in a monsoon on three bald tires and a donut spare? License and registration, please.

Using your cellphone while driving would earn you double jackass points, and drinking and driving would receive a punishment slightly more strict. Like being fired out of a catapult from the top of Grouse.

Earn enough jackass points, and you’d be required to affix a large paper-mâché donkey to the roof of your Audi. Oh, and I’d bring back the pillory too, and replace ticket-based revenue generation by selling rotten cabbages to throw. It’d be a grand day out — bring the kids!

A lovely thought, but enough of the flights of fancy. The increase in speed limits for B.C. is a step in the right direction for most motorists. It’ll create slightly safer roads, let people drive at a reasonable rate of speed without feeling like a criminal and allow us to all get where we’re going safely. If that isn’t the point of having rules for the road, I don’t know what is.

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2 comments

Rosalind Leggatt July 20, 2014 - 9:08 pm

The speed limit has been 30 km/h for my entire side of Bowen Island for a couple of years now. I find I am an extremely unsafe driver at that speed because I’m so relaxed and casual, I’m looking around at the scenery, peering into peoples yards, daydreaming, basically looking everywhere but the road. Slower is definitely not always safer.

Reply
Paige Ackerman July 20, 2014 - 9:13 pm

Very interesting point Ros! Not one I would have thought of.

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