What about the economic implications of denying a sizeable proportion (the retarded drivers) the ability to travel to employment and suchlike.
They won't need to erect any new signs, they'll just change the meaning of the NSL sign from 60MPH to 50MPH.How much is this going to cost the country erecting all the new 50mph signs?
So the people that obey the speed limit now, will still obey the lower speed limits, and the people that don't obey the speed limits now, will continue to break the speed limits.
I guess the only difference will be that people doing 70-odd in what were 60 zones will be doing 20mph over now so more points and fines to hand out![]()
. . . and get banned, making the roads both safer and less congested for the rest of us - RESULT!Exactly. It's like changing the National Lottery to have one less number... of course more people will score the jackpot.
They won't need to erect any new signs, they'll just change the meaning of the NSL sign from 60MPH to 50MPH.
They won't need to erect any new signs, they'll just change the meaning of the NSL sign from 60MPH to 50MPH.
I thought NSL was 70.
Well who are you going to vote for? Tories and Lib Dems both back the suggestions in the house. I can't see Green Party not supporting them either.
Anyway, I agree with cutting the 60mph on single carriage rural roads. Young boy racers see it as a target to be achieved, not a limit. I've seen and heard of so many fatal crashes on such roads around where I lived in Yorkshire. Rural roads aren't in best shape and normally involve a lot of bends, hidden dips, bumps and hide water and ice very well. No one needs to do 60 on them, so make it illegal to do so and hopefully save the lives of some idiots (hmm..)
The 20mph limit, apart from outside schools and parks etc is stupid.
In a recent column I suggested that the A44, a lovely road that connects my house with Oxford, should not have a 50mph speed limit. I argued that most people could see no reason for it and spent most of their time on the wrong side of the road overtaking the Rover-driving minority who will obey any law no matter how stupid and pointless it might be.
Inevitably, my views were reported in the Oxford Mail, along with those of Colin Carritt, who’s mayor of Woodstock, one of the small towns through which the A44 passes.
Carritt, a former county highways engineer and therefore a man who knows what he’s talking about, reckons I’m a big bag of nonsense. But sadly, while making his point, I’m afraid old Col makes a bit of a booboo.
He says: “The accident record on the A44 is not dissimilar to other roads in the area. It is not an accident blackspot.”
Well Mr Carritt, if it is not an accident blackspot, could you please explain why there are three fixed speed cameras along its length and one mobile site? Because, you see, the Department for Transport is very specific on this. They say that a road must be an accident blackspot before cameras can be installed.
Actually I don’t mind the Gatsos. They’re in villages and make sense, but the mobile site, on an open piece of road, has only recently been installed. And now the local mayor is saying there’s no reason for it. Good. I expect it to be removed this instant. And if it isn’t, I shall pull over and ask the civil servant who operates it why not. If he has no sensible answer, I may have to arrest him and confiscate his van.
I love it when this happens — when authority figures desperately trying to defend the indefensible come a cropper. We see it with climate-change scaremongers who are trying to argue — preposterously — that the only way to prevent the end of the world is to give Gordon Brown five pounds.
Unfortunately, in the big scheme of things, a lone voice discovering that one mobile speed camera is in the wrong place is nothing but a gnat bite on the elephant hide of lunacy that is being used to suffocate Britain’s motorists under a blanket of rules and fines.
It’s such an all-enveloping blanket in fact that, for the first time ever, last week I actually began to feel that soon there will be nowhere left for people who like cars to have some fun. And that’s a shame, because I was driving a Ferrari 599.
I don't pay much attention to speed limits anyway... unless it's a 40 or 30 zone.
NSL to me, and always will, mean: "do whatever you feel is safe and your car is capable of doing safely".
Gawd, my 55 year old driving instructor said the exact same thing when i was learning to drive (7 years ago).
The Govt will also be proposing the installation of many more specs cameras to ensure these new speed limits are adhered to so it won't be a question of choosing to stick to these new limits on many roads.
it's making the driving of a performance car/bike in this country a foolhardy choice for the future.