Transport Minister Simeon Brown announced in December the Government planned to reverse mandated blanket speed limit reductions introduced under Labour.
In June, he made public the new draft Transport Rule requiring speed limits that had been reduced since January 2020 to be reversed on streets, arterial roads, and state highways.
However, FNDC voted to push ahead with its speed management plan for the wider Bay of Islands area, which includes more than 300 roads in Kerikeri, Waipapa, Ōpua, Paihia, Waitangi, Haruru Falls and Whangaroa.
The changes cost $800,000, of which 69% is funded by NZ Transport Agency [NZTA] and 31% by FNDC.
Lately, new signs with reduced speed limits have popped up around Kerikeri township, including a 50km/h limit along Kerikeri Rd.
The council confirmed it had rolled out changes in Kerikeri-Waipapa, Haruru, Paihia, Ōpua and the southern rural roads in the Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Ward catchment.
Those yet to be implemented include Kerikeri urban periphery, Whangaroa, and northern rural roads in Bay of Islands-Whangaroa Ward.
Council head of infrastructure strategy Tanya Proctor said the council planned to complete its rollout, as “none of the remaining proposed speed limit changes will be impacted by the Government’s proposed reversal of set speed limits”.
Each road had been assessed individually and any speed limit changes were implemented following public feedback, she said.
Council staff were are currently reviewing the Government’s draft rule.
“Once the speed rules are finalised by the Ministry of Transport, the council will consider the implications of the new rules across all the catchments that have been completed.”
McCallum said the blanket speed limits referred to any “widespread” speed reductions.
He said he had been getting a lot of feedback from residents “very upset with sudden changes, which are illogical”.
“What it shows is the level of consultation wasn’t adequate.
“No one is objecting to lowering the speed limits around schools, but some others are frustrating people.
“If this was so well consulted on, why is there so much pushback?”
Mayor Moko Tepania said the council’s Bay of Islands-Kerikeri speed limit review “was a process that had already been underway for more than 16 months before the new direction from the Government, and the funding has already been allocated”.
“It went through a full consultative procedure, and there are many in the community who have been waiting decades to see these changes.”
McCallum said he understood there “wasn’t much engagement” with the community.
“The opportunity [for public consultation] might have been there, but most people don’t get involved in something unless it hits them in the eyes.”
Jenny Ling is a news reporter and features writer for the Northern Advocate. She has a special interest in covering roading, lifestyle, business, and animal welfare issues.