Recently installed speed bumps on an arterial route in Pāpāmoa are causing concern for locals.
The speed bumps are on Te Okuroa Drive near the intersection of Waikiwi Way in Pāpāmoa East.
Pāpāmoa Residents and Ratepayer Association chairman Philip Brown says the speed bumps are 'aggressive” and should only be used in carparks.
Brown has heard from a number of residents who are frustrated with the traffic calming measure.
'The local residents are definitely not happy about it.
'I'd hate to go through there in an ambulance in a hurry, or even a fire engine.”
He is concerned the new additions could cause accidents.
Brown gave some possible scenarios, these were, a driver seeing the bump too late and swerving or losing control of their car, a driver not seeing the car in front slowing for the bump and hitting them, and a driver not slowing for the bump then losing control or leaving the road.
Te Manawa o Pāpāmoa School, that opened this year, is on the section of Te Okuroa Drive where the speed bumps are but the school's entrance is not directly on that road.
Pāpāmoa Residents and Ratepayer Association chairman Philip Brown wants the speed bumps removed. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.
Brown says where the speed bumps are he doubted many school children would go that way to school, so the installation was 'puzzling”.
He would like to see the speed bumps removed and questioned whether the policy was to put speed humps around every school.
'It [the road] should be go back to being an arterial route and being acknowledged as that, it's not a little local route.”
Brown is also eager to find out why Tauranga City Council had installed the speed humps.
'It doesn't make any sense because this is a major road, not a road to make traffic go down to about five kilometres an hour to cross it.
'I don't even think that road needs any kind of speed moderating devices.”
Tauranga City Council says the current speed bumps are temporary. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.
Tauranga City Council transport infrastructure outcomes manager Mark Burgess says the speed humps were installed in April.
'The speed humps were installed as a temporarily measure to reduce traffic speed in front of Te Manawa o Pāpāmoa School to provide a safe crossing location for school children,” says Burgess.
He says a raised pedestrian crossing will be installed during the October school holidays.
'The permanent raised table is designed to cater for all vehicles, including buses.”
'The location of the speed humps was dictated by the Ministry of Education installing an entrance to the primary school off Waikiwi Way.”
Burgess says the work was to help facilitate the Land Transport Rule for speed limits that required setting a 30kph permanent speed limit outside schools.
Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.
4 comments
Aggressive Measures
Posted on 21-07-2022 18:32 | By R1Squid
For aggressive speed. So common everywhere and anywhere in all conditions while tailgating. No wonder there are so many casualties.
Surprise
Posted on 21-07-2022 20:42 | By Informed
The ratepayer association, which is a front for the ult right wing taxpayers union is as usual only worried about themselves and their cars. Zero care about safety or kids. They shouldn’t have licenses if they can’t drive over them without crashing.
Right idea wrong execution
Posted on 22-07-2022 08:56 | By TGA Local07
Speed bumps are effective at reducing speed. These cheap ones are terrible for ones car however. The absolute cheapest speed bumps you can buy, normally reserved for supermarket carparks are installed on an arterial route. Why not pay the extra money to install proper wide speed bumps? As usual the cheapest option wins. Even at the expense of increased costs to local individuals.
bump[
Posted on 22-07-2022 11:43 | By dumbkof2
everyone just has to get into their car now and expect to be at their destination immediately. just obcessed with speed.
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