I'll pay the extra $ to speed ah! Who wants?
http://smh.drive.com.au/motor-news/pay-to-speed-20120910-25nn9.html
http://smh.drive.com.au/motor-news/pay-to-speed-20120910-25nn9.html
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Pay to speed
Date
September 10, 2012 - 5:36PM
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Joshua Dowling
Associate Editor, Drive
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US freeway will allow drivers to do 137km/h – for a fee.
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Motorists in North America will be allowed to drive legally at 137km/h – almost 20km/h more than the speed limit on most highways – if they pay to use a new toll road.
Proving that speeding raises government revenue other than with fines, the state of Texas is expected to receive a one-time $100 million payment – plus a percentage of all toll fees collected – from the private operators who will maintain the 65km section of freeway.
But not everyone is happy about the fastest stretch of road in North America – between Austin and San Antonio, two of the biggest cities in Texas.
More: $25 not to speed
According to the Wall Street Journal, Texas authorities signed a contract with the road operators that offered the state “a one-time payment of $100 million for approving an 85mph (137km/h) speed limit”. However, the newspaper reported, the payout would have dropped to $67 million if the limit was set at 80mph (128km/h).
Consumer groups claim Texas has sacrificed safety for money.
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“Desperate for cars on a vacant toll road, private toll-road operators now offer the state an extra $33 million to win a reckless competitive advantage,” Andrew Wheat, research director for Texans for Public Justice, an Austin-based consumer-advocacy group, told the WSJ. “Such cosy deals are unsafe at any speed.”
The Texas government defended its decision.
“With transportation funding being a challenge all over the country, we must continue to look for innovative ways to generate revenue and be good stewards of taxpayer dollars,” Veronica Beyer, a transportation commission spokeswoman, told the WSJ.
A public health report in 2009 found increased speed limits adopted by some states in 1995 had led to a 3.2 per cent increase in road fatalities over the next 10 years, to 2005.
“When you increase speed limits, you have an increase in the severity of injuries,” Lee Friedman, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago and one of the authors of the 2009 report told the WSJ.
Meanwhile, another consumer group has accused the government of driving traffic to the new road – by lowering the speed limit on the alternative route.
“The state is penalising the motoring public by lowering the speed limit on the free alternative so that it can draw more business to the toll road,” David Stall, a co-founder of CorridorWatch.org, a group opposed to the privatisation of roads.
The newspaper interviewed a driver, Roger Dooley, who uses that route regularly, who claimed that the higher speed limit would make him “much more likely to remain engaged”.
However, lower speed limits do not always save lives.
At the start of 2007, the Northern Territory imposed a speed limit of 130km/h on the Stuart Highway between Alice Springs and Darwin after decades of being speed-limit free.
However, the road toll rose sharply in the years that followed.
In 2006, the NT recorded 45 deaths among all road users. It rose to 58 in 2007 (the first year of the 130km/h limit) and 75 in the second year of the 130km/h limit.
In 2011, the road toll among all users returned to similar levels as 2006 – before the limit was imposed – with 44 deaths recorded.
But driver deaths have increased. Before the NT speed limit was imposed, 15 drivers died on the roads (in 2006), compared to 24 each in 2007 and 2008. Last year 17 drivers died on NT roads, according to statistics compiled by the federal government.
When NT speed limits were introduced, the then opposition leader Jodeen Carney said: “This obsession with imposing a speed limit is not the silver bullet. The major causes of accidents and fatalities in the Territory are failure to wear seatbelts and drink-driving.”