Speed limits rising

Moderated by Tom Sabulis

The Georgia Department of Transportation is looking at raising the limit from 55 to 65 on I-285. In Texas, the nation’s first 85 mph speed limit is planned for a 41-mile toll road between Austin and San Antonio. A local policy analyst argues that increased speed doesn’t necessarily mean more accidents and fatalities. A national safety expert says drivers automatically go over current limits and the statistics don’t bode well for healthy travel at higher speeds.

Commenting is open below Adrian Lund’s column.

By Benita M. Dodd

Most Georgians who travel the long, watch-paint-dry stretch that is I-16 between Savannah and Macon understand the unwritten rule:

You may exceed the posted speed limit of 70 mph, but not by more than 9 mph. If law enforcement clocks you at 80 mph or over, you’re toast.

In Texas, transportation officials acknowledge this reality and want to profit from it. In their case, they’re not just seeking revenue from speeding tickets, like most other jurisdictions.

They plan to implement the nation’s first 85-mph speed limit on a stretch of toll road in return for $100 million from the private toll operator.

The plan, for about half of a 91-mile toll road between Austin and San Antonio, is by no means outrageous or a harbinger of safety problems:

  • Some rural roads in Texas and Utah already permit speeds up to 80 mph. A Utah Highway Patrol spokesman warned that people who thought they were safe in the 10 mph-or-less window would find less leniency for exceeding the speed limit.
  • More than half the German Autobahn’s 8,000-mile network has no posted speed; the average speed is 84 mph.
  • Australia’s “autobahn” was Stuart Highway, a 1,761-mile stretch where an 80-mph speed limit was implemented in 2007. Just this month, Northern Territory leaders expressed support for once again eliminating the limit, pointing out that 44 people died on the territory’s roads in 2006 but more than 50 were killed in 2007 — after the speed limit was introduced.

The United States saw a 22.1 percent decline in traffic fatalities from 2001 to 2010, according to the Annual Road Safety Report 2011 produced by the International Transport Forum.

Forty-eight percent of those fatalities took place on highways outside urban areas, despite higher population concentrations in urban areas.

Yes, higher speed limits are often allowed in rural areas, but it’s tough to determine how many fatalities would have been avoided if the speed was lower, drivers were less tired on long roads or trauma care facilities were nearer.

The speed differential — the difference between the speed of vehicles continuing along a main roadway versus those that are entering and exiting the road — is not as great a concern on a well-kept, limited-access toll road that has few entry and exit points.

The private operator is betting that when the toll road opens in November, the higher speed will draw more customers looking for a quicker, faster drive and willing to pay extra for a congestion-free trip.

It’s a safe bet.

It’s also planning ahead: “Smart” cars that can automatically keep a safe distance from other vehicles — and can even operate driverless — already promise to be the wave of the future.

They increase lane capacity, improve traffic flow, set higher safety benchmarks and avoid human error.

Google recently announced that its driverless cars had traveled 300,000 miles without incident.

Of course, some Texans may think officials appeared to “game the system” by deciding to simultaneously reduce the existing speed of the adjacent “free” frontage road.

Benita M. Dodd is Vice President at the Georgia Public Policy Foundation.


By Adrian Lund

Imagine cruising down the highway at 85 mph without getting so much as a raised eyebrow, let alone a ticket.

For many drivers, it sounds like a dream, and it’s set to come true on one Texas road.

But we’ve seen this one before, and it doesn’t end well.

Decades of research show that when speed limits are raised, drivers go faster and more people die in crashes.

The Texas Transportation Commission’s decision to establish the highest speed limit in the land on a new toll road between Austin and San Antonio means drivers there will be able to get to their destinations quickly, but at a cost.

High speeds increase the likelihood of a crash while simultaneously slashing the odds of surviving one.

Crashes are more likely because, at a higher speed, a vehicle travels a longer distance in the split second it takes to react to an emergency.

And the faster the vehicle is going, the further it will travel before coming to a stop after the driver slams on the brakes.

When crashes occur, they are deadlier at high speeds because the energy involved increases exponentially as speed rises.

At the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, before we rate a vehicle for frontal crash-worthiness, we send it hurtling toward a barrier at 40 mph, resulting in a severe collision.

Most new vehicles today do well in our moderate frontal overlap test, meaning people could survive a similar real-world crash without serious injuries.

But at high speeds, all bets are off.

The vehicle’s structure won’t hold up, and airbags and safety belts won’t be able to do their job. When a crash is imminent, a car traveling 65 mph has a much better chance of getting down to a survivable speed before impact than a car traveling 85 mph.

We know that many drivers exceed posted limits, but that doesn’t mean they don’t take them into account.

Drivers typically pick a speed at which they think they won’t get a ticket — often 5 to 10 mph over the limit.

Many Texas drivers are no doubt already used to driving 85 mph on roads with 75 or 80 mph limits.

They’ll read the 85 mph signs as license to go 90 or more.

The 17 years since Congress did away with the national 55-mph maximum speed limit have given us plenty of opportunities to see what happens when speed limits are raised.

After the speed limit on three urban freeways in Texas was raised from 55 to 70 in the mid-1990s, we found that half the vehicles were going faster than 70 within a year, compared with 15 percent before.

Seventeen percent were exceeding 75 mph, compared with 4 percent before the change.

Around the country, such increases translated into more deaths. In 24 states that raised speed limits, including Georgia, we found 15 percent more fatalities on interstates and freeways than otherwise would have been expected.

Even with today’s speed limits, speed-related crashes cause more than 10,000 deaths a year — nearly a third of all crash fatalities in the country.

States could prevent some of these deaths if, instead of giving drivers permission to go ever faster, they vigorously enforced existing limits to slow drivers down.

Adrian Lund is president of the Insurance Institute of Highway Safety.

33 comments Add your comment

Grumps

September 19th, 2012
1:20 pm

I own two vehicles. The speed limit is the same for both. I’ll assure you I’m a lot more comfortable on I-16 at 100 mph in my little German sporty sedan than I am at 70 mph in my 3/4 ton pickup.

I’d like to see some statistics regarding fatal accidents on limited access highways where excess speed was the primary cause. I’ll guess there are not many — reckless driving (drunk or sober), too fast for conditions (rain and snow, etc), and similar violations of good sense will probably be way ahead of pure speed.

Woody

September 19th, 2012
10:04 am

I myself practice my God-given right to drive 8mph over the speed limit. I’m surprised our forfathers didn’t put it into the Constitution. But increasingly, the interstates are playgrounds for the truly lawless drivers who like to go 100mph, just weaving in and out between the other cars. The speed limit is irrelevant to this problem. I would like to see the state patrol going after these folks, using the rest of us as spotters; I’d happily call them in using my cellphone if I thought there was a system in place to catch them. Maybe the state could pay anyone ten bucks for a successful report. As it is, I just tell my wife – “well, there goes another organ donor.”

MoFaux

September 19th, 2012
9:46 am

@ Bill: You aren’t factoring in vehicle safety improvements at all. Cars have gotten a LOT safer over the decades. We weren’t even required to wear seat belts at ALL until about 20 years ago I think. This makes a HUGE difference in why vehicle fatalaties have remained relatively stagnant over the years, despite increased speed limits.

Good Grief

September 19th, 2012
9:03 am

I like the German system of slower speed in the outside lanes, and getting faster the farther toward the inside you get. But I would also support a relaxation of speed limits during the hours of 1am to 4 or 5 am. The problem with speed limits is that they all too often bunch cars up in packs, and then when one person screws up, it causes damage to multiple cars. Then there are places with winding, 2-lane roads and speed limits of 55, but then the next road over, a relatively straight 4-lane road has a speed limit of 45.

I was under the impression that, when driving on the highways, the rule was “keep right except to pass.” I personally can’t stand it when someone gets in the left lane and barely goes the speed limit with no intention of passing anyone.

Rickster

September 19th, 2012
8:31 am

That should read: was set at 55mph (not 50).

Rickster

September 19th, 2012
8:28 am

Cudos to MANGLER. You said it well, and based on facts and truth.

However, as a life-long Atlantan, I would add that the reason behind the current is based on the ’70s energy crisis. That’s when gasoline prices soared from ~.40/gal to up over .60/gal and the Nixon administration wanted to lower the Nation’s speed limit to a maximum of 50mph to save gas and reduce the Nation’s need to depend on other countries for foreign oil (sound familiar). As a result, the trucking industry had a cow and protested more than a little. They then asked for a maximum of 60mph. That’s when the great compromise was set at 50. Now, I’m not saying that Nixon was a great anything, but that move actually worked. Saved gas AND lives!

That’s the end of today’s history lesson; but not my blog.

Now that gasoline prices are back down to below .40/gallon, AND there’s no shortage of oil, energy or anything in this Nation, I see no reason to keep the speed limit at 50mph. Shucks, let’s raise the limit to 150! At least a third of us will make to our (final) destination that much quicker!

Seriously, if driving slower by lowering the speed limit back in the ’70’s to help save gas and reduce dependency on foreign oil, why in the h3!! would anyone in their right mind want to increase the speed today? And just as MANGLER said: to get there a whole 2 minutes faster!

Just a comment – and a History lesson!

Bill

September 18th, 2012
10:53 pm

Since the elimination of the national 55 speed limit, the mantra of “speed kills” touted by the NHTSA and insurance companies has not been supported by crash data. Since 1995, fatalities per million miles traveled have been static or decreased. Since Texas has an 80 mph limit in effect, drivers are likely already exploring the 85 mph limits, the change allows them to do so legally.

Observed behavior in the Southeast says 5-20 mph, i.e., 70-85 is the norm on interstates which further refutes the “speed kills” argument. 2010 had fewer fatalities than 1949.

2010 NHTSA data states 59% of fatalities occurred in single car crashes, which indicates factors other than speed are at work, such as loss of control thru inattention. Motorcycle deaths have almost doubled since 1995 & 32% of all fatal crashes involved alcohol. Reduce these by 50% to have a positive impact on fatalities.

An observer

September 18th, 2012
9:43 pm

It is okay if speeders want to kill themselves. The only problem is that they often take others with themselves because they really are not as good drivers as they imagine themselves to be.

tRUTH

September 18th, 2012
5:23 pm

Richard – Those signs are for drivers doing less than the speed limit. If the driver is driving the speed limit they do not have to yeild the lane to you so you can exceed the speed limit.

Captain Blah – There is no “Move Over” law for yeilding the left lane. Like I said to Richard above if the driver is driving at the speed limit they have every right to be there. THey do not have to move over to allow you to exceed the speed limit. The “Move Over” law is for emergency vehicles parked on the shoulder so idiots do not hit them.

[...] The Foundation’s Benita Dodd writes in an op-ed in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution of September 17, 2012, that raising the speed limit can be a safe move in the right direction. [...]