Media Release 18th May 2014 No Embargo
From NZ School Speeds
Children Tackle John Key Over Road Safety
19th to 26th May is Road Safety Week and to draw attention to this Lucinda Rees from NZ School Speeds has interviewed
children at her local primary school in Swannanoa, North Canterbury and has a personal plea from the children for the
Prime Minister John Key.
Swannanoa School is on a 100km/h road. During start and finish times the speed limit has recently been reduced to 60
km/h and the rest of the time the speed limit reverts back to 100km/h —just metres from where children play cars travel
at 100km/h during the school day.
Rees spent some time with the children to find out their views and was surprised at their knowledge. Those who walked or
cycled seemed acutely aware of the road dangers that are posed to them on a daily basis. Apart from asking for lower
speeds they want more police visibility, colours on the roads of school zones and speed bumps. And they wanted
consistent speed reductions outside schools throughout the country.
There is plenty of rhetoric from the Ministry of Transport about school zone safety practices that are being put in
place but these don't target the children who attend schools, instead they merely confuse drivers with inconsistent
school zone speed limits. The World Health Organisation recommends a maximum school zone speed limit of 30km/h. Many
European countries have adopted this and their road toll is reducing.
'Our road toll is going up, rather than reducing like the Netherlands and Sweden. Our vehicle fleet quality is improving
so the road toll should be going down. It's time for the Ministry of Transport to learn from these countries and adopt
road safety practices recommended by the World Health Organisation.
'To change the culture laws need to be forced upon them. In Sweden, in 2013, there was a 9% decrease in road fatalities
over the previous year. Penalties for driving offenders are tough and enforcement measures are regular and consistent,
as are speed limits.
'Start with the basics: introduce a law that has consistent school speed limits and also give cyclists better visibility
with a law that states a safe passing distance. Children should be able to cycle safely to school, learn about road
safety before they get behind the wheel themselves.' 'Our school zones should have speed limits of no more than 70km/h
during the school day and when children are coming and going the speed limit should reduce to a maximum of 30km/h,’ says
Rees.
'Rural children, like those in Swannanoa School, deserve the same safe conditions as urban ones,' says Rees, 'but as the
rules stand even those who take the bus are endangered: You can't expect drivers to slow for school buses to the
mandatory 20km/h speed limit, whether they have all the bells and whistles as well as flashing lights, if they are still
allowed by law to speed in excess of the recommended 30km/h speed limit through school zones.
'Drivers will soon adopt the habit of slowing near children if they are made to do it.
Watch these inspirational children from Swannanoa School on the NZ School Speeds Facebook site
https://www.facebook.com/NZSchoolSpeeds. 'These children are not just perceiving the dangers on their route to and from
school - they are living them. Drivers need to be made to slow consistently in all school zones and the children need
laws that protect them on route to school.' Since the Ministry of Transport do nothing, we need leadership from the top.
As one 9 year old student says: 'The speed limit should be slowed down or something bad could possibly happen.'
https://www.facebook.com/NZSchoolSpeeds
On Monday 19th May Lucinda will also be representing the road safety charity Brake at Cathedral Grammar College, 62
Ferry Road, Christchurch from 8.30am until 9.30am and will be available for interviews for both Brake and NZ School
Speeds.