Danielle Williamson offers a Northland view of SH1 which she says deserves funding priority
The Auckland Regional Council chairman calls it a holiday highway.
Which is all good if like Mike Lee, you live in Auckland and only use State Highway 1 on your way to the beach.
You needn't use it often and when you do, you're not in any hurry. You know the Government has identified it as a "road of national significance" but you can't quite figure out why.
Surely a road which carries fewer than 20,000 vehicles a day can't be all that nationally significant, can it? All you know is the Puhoi to Wellsford stretch has been earmarked for priority motorway extension and it's going to cost you, the taxpayer, a horrendous $2.3 billion. Minimum.
And you know that in doing so, in four-laning a whole 34km chunk of SH1 of such little consequence, Auckland misses out on urgently needed public transport funding.
It hardly seems right, does it? After all, Auckland is New Zealand's largest city, gateway to the country and in need of a proper commuter rail system.
But on behalf of the 250,000 New Zealanders who live north of Albany and use SH1 not as a holiday highway but as the only viable route into Auckland and beyond, let us be fair. SH1 north of Puhoi is a disgrace and in dire need of an upgrade.
People die on this road in appalling numbers. It is substandard, narrow and too winding. Anyone who travels this road on a regular basis can see it is unable to handle current traffic volumes.
And finally, when it does in fact go into holiday highway mode - because hoards of Aucklanders must all escape the city at the very same time - Warkworth and Wellsford become holiday hell and are gridlocked from one end of town to the other. Or further - sometimes traffic is blocked for up to 25km.
No it doesn't happen every day, but it does happen enough to warrant both communities a bypass. And yet for some Aucklanders, this seems to be a problem. So much so that when it comes to regional transport priorities, the Auckland Regional Transport Committee thinks it barely rates a mention and puts it bottom of the list.
But wait! With 32 per cent of the national transport budget (and one third of the national population) allocated towards Auckland roading projects - completion of the Western Ring Route and the Victoria Park Tunnel - Auckland is hardly missing out.
To the Northland region as a whole - and particularly its economy - SH1 is the only viable access to the rest of the country. It is our transport lifeline and critical to the prosperity of the region.
Better - and safer - roads allow for easier movement of freight and people between Northland and Auckland and beyond. It allows for community growth, economic development and helps bring much needed tourists our way. It may even benefit the Auckland economy.
To the individuals who live here, SH1 is of critical importance. Whether it be for business, medical care, education, pleasure or practicality, SH1 is the only link south. We need this road. And we need it to be reliable and safe.
Unfortunately for Northlanders, frequent SH1 traffic delays and road fatalities are not simple inconveniences on the way to bach. They are a fact of life.
Gone are the days where one could hop in the car and be in the city without incident.
Greater traffic volumes now mean when travelling from the North, precautions must be taken in case of delays. If you require medical treatment in Auckland, you allow yourself plenty of time for the journey and hope that for whatever reason, the road is not closed.
If you have an early morning flight at the airport, it's best to go the night before. And if the weather is bad and conditions less than ideal, you may cancel altogether because you know that on this particular patch of road, the Grim Reaper may be around the next corner.
But this is not about Northland prosperity or total project expense. The main issue here is road safety. SH1 from Puhoi to Wellsford in its present capacity as a two lane single carriage way is unsafe.
In the first three quarters of 2009 alone, 100 accidents occurred here.
Eight people were killed. Since the new Northern Gateway dual carriage toll road from Orewa to Johnstone's Hill in January 2009 (to the end of August 2009), there were just five accidents and no injuries. The numbers speak for themselves.
The Government is right in declaring this particular stretch of SH1 one of national significance as it is high time the road from Puhoi to Wellsford be divided into a proper motorway.
For the 30 people who lost their lives on this small stretch of New Zealand road in the past five years, it is long overdue.
* Danielle Williamson lives at Maungaturoto, Northland.