
There鈥檒l be a blitz on road maintenance this summer. But safety measures including lower speed limits around schools are at risk from the Auckland Council鈥檚 budget cuts and the new Government鈥檚 desire to overturn speed restrictions.听
Auckland Transport听will today launch a big new campaign to fix the region鈥檚 roads. It鈥檚 called the Summer Road Reno and will include 550km of road renewal and repairs. NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi will run a similar campaign nationwide.听听
鈥淲e want Aucklanders to know we鈥檙e out fixing the roads,鈥 AT鈥檚 chief executive, Dean Kimpton, told听Auckland Council鈥檚 transport and infrastructure committee yesterday.听
His chief engineer, Murray Burt, said they鈥檙e also hoping people will respect the roadworkers. 鈥淭hey get a lot of abuse, sometimes. And we want everyone to drive safely when they encounter the work.鈥听
There will be social media, posters, billboards and radio ads to support the programme.听
Burt explained that the January floods damaged the roads at 2000 sites, mainly through slips and washouts.听
Of those, 1200 were repaired in the first three months and a further 300 have been repaired since. There are still 500 more to fix.听
Summer Road Reno is an attempt to get ahead of the potholes. 鈥淚t costs $12-$16 per square metre for chipseal renewal and about $40sq m for asphalt. But if water gets in and we have to repair the road, the cost rises to $200-$400sq m.鈥听
Poster for Auckland Transport's Summer Road Reno campaign.听
Maintenance has to be done in good weather. 鈥淏ut because Auckland has had so much rain this year,鈥 Burt said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 been very hard to keep up.鈥听
However, they won鈥檛 be fixing everything. There is a gap of a little over $1 billion, nationwide over three years, between what councils want from NZTA for maintenance and repairs, and what they are getting at the moment. 鈥淚t鈥檚 only about $350 million a year.鈥听
The听Herald听asked the new Minister of Transport, Simeon Brown, if the Government will make up this shortfall.听
He replied, 鈥淣ational campaigned on focusing our transport sector on building and maintaining our roading network. We have now started work on rewriting the Government policy statement on land transport so we can deliver on this commitment. This will help support NZTA and road controlling authorities across New Zealand to focus on fixing our roads, a top priority for this Government.鈥听
Transport Minister Simeon Brown with Prime Minister Christopher Luxon inspecting potholes during the election campaign. Photo / Alex Burton听
The council also heard from several presenters about threats to Auckland Transport鈥檚 draft speed management plan, called Katoa, Ka Ora. The name means 鈥渆veryone alive, healthy and well鈥.听
On Wednesday, AT鈥檚 head of safety, Stacey Van Der Putten, advised the council鈥檚 budget committee that proposed cuts to AT funding will 鈥渙bviously鈥 reduce its ability to lower the number of deaths and serious injuries on the roads.听
鈥淢ore people will potentially die or be seriously injured,鈥 Van Der Putten said.听
Yesterday, Students Against Dangerous Driving, the police, a pediatrician from Starship, a public health specialist and a road safety analyst all turned up to reinforce the message.听
Orewa College student Rachel Slacke explained that she had grown up in a rural environment. 鈥淚 cannot tell you the amount of times I have had to jump into a ditch walking my dogs, just to avoid being hit by a car.鈥听
Two children are killed on our roads every week, she said, and 60 per cent of crashes involving children happen within 500 metres of their homes.听
Ryan Antia from Mt Albert Grammar told the council, 鈥淵ou are adults, you are our guardians and yet you have failed to protect us, to speak up, to change the way we drive on our roads.鈥听
Ryan Antia of Mt Albert Grammar School and Rachel Slacke of Orewa College, representing Students Against Dangerous Driving at a meeting of Auckland Council on Thursday. Photo / Simon Wilson听
Lower speeds in dangerous areas, including around schools, along with speed-reduction features such as raised tables and speed bumps, are identified in听Mayor Wayne Brown鈥檚 draft 10-year budget听as low-priority spending likely to be cut.听听
Geoff Upson disagreed with the students. He鈥檚 a member of the Rodney Local Board but he was appearing in a private capacity. Reducing speed limits doesn鈥檛 work, he said, because 鈥渢here are still some fatal crashes on roads with lower speed limits鈥.听听
Councillor Chris Darby asked him, 鈥淗ow important is evidence to you?鈥澨听
AT has reported that听while deaths and serious injuries are rising on Auckland roads, they are falling on those roads with lower speed limits.听听
Councillor Ken Turner agreed with Upson. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to slow everybody down, for what gain?鈥 he asked. 鈥淲hy should everyone have to slow down because of the bad drivers?鈥听
But Inspector Scott Webb had an answer. 鈥淩educed speed will mean reduced deaths and serious injuries,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a mindset thing for drivers. We all make mistakes, so if you鈥檙e not going so fast, you won鈥檛 do so much damage if you do crash.鈥听
He supported the use of 鈥渢raffic calming鈥 measures 鈥渙ne hundred per cent鈥.听
鈥淭ake Takapuna as an example. It used to be a racetrack, but the street design now makes people slow down and it has definitely worked.鈥听
AT鈥檚 Kimpton had some good news. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a new kind of road bump,鈥 he said, 鈥渢hat can be prefabricated offsite and installed overnight.鈥听
Auckland Transport (AT) chief executive Dean Kimpton: There's a better way to do speed bumps now. Photo / Jason Oxenham听
It was suggested during the meeting that the new Government鈥檚 commitment to overturning existing speed reductions 鈥渨here it is safe to do so鈥 might make Katoa, Ka Ora redundant.听
Councillors discussed this at length, and in some apparent confusion, before adjourning, then reconvening, and deciding they should not let the Government divert them from setting their own policy and programmes.听
鈥淲ellington should not tell Auckland what to do about Auckland,鈥 is a common refrain from the mayor.听
Councillor Turner suggested the question of speed in school zones should be dealt with separately from speed in other areas, but nobody took this up.听
Councillor Christine Fletcher, who was chairing the meeting, told the听Herald听when it was over, 鈥淚 feel very strongly about this. We need to have safety around schools. There are other issues around speed that are not so clear for everyone, but there鈥檚 a consensus around schools.鈥听
But they did not vote only on schools. Despite the threats to funding and the potential for Government to intervene, the committee accepted a proposal by Councillor Julie Fairey to support the Katoa, Ka Ora in its entirety. That included its 鈥減rinciples, objectives and measures鈥 and its 鈥渢hree-year implementation plan and 10-year vision鈥.听
This contradicts the cuts proposed in the mayor鈥檚 draft 10-year budget. But although councillors have听voted to send that budget to public consultation, they will not decide whether to adopt it until June next year.听听
It鈥檚 not clear if all the councillors realised they were endorsing the road-safety plan so enthusiastically.听听
Also at the meeting,听members of Restore Passenger Rail staged a 鈥渟leep in鈥, wearing pyjamas and dressing gowns, to protest the way council has 鈥渇allen asleep鈥 over its emissions targets. While most of them lay on the floor, with signs saying 鈥淲ake up! Climate crisis鈥, spokespeople read speeches and a story. Then they left.听
Another poster for the Summer Road Reno campaign.听
Simon Wilson is an award-winning senior writer covering politics, the climate crisis, transport, housing, urban design and social issues, with a focus on Auckland. He joined the听Herald听in 2018.听
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