logo
'Oh hell no' - crash survivor angry at increased speed limits on SH3 near Waitara

'Oh hell no' - crash survivor angry at increased speed limits on SH3 near Waitara

RNZ News29-04-2025

Waitara community board member and head-on crash survivor Trevor Dodunski campaigned for the construction of roundabouts on SH3 between Waitara and Bell Block. He think the speed limit should stay at 80kmh.
Photo:
RNZ / Robin Martin
Trevor Dodunski understands the consequences of a head-on crash better than most.
In 1987, the car he was travelling in collided with another vehicle that had crossed the centre line on a stretch of State Highway 3 between Waitara and Urenui.
"I was driving along the road on a nice day happy as Larry and came around a corner and there was a car in front of me going flat out on my side of the road.
"It's hard to live with I tell you. It turned me into a vegetable, I couldn't read or write when I came out of hospital.
"Everything was changed, my whole life changed," said the former engineer who was trapped inside his wrecked vehicle for three hours.
Almost 40 years on, the Waitara community board member was angry about a plan to reinstate a 100kmh speed limit on SH3 between Waitara and New Plymouth.
"Oh hell no, we don't want that. Mine was probably an 80kmh crash head-on and you're doing 160kmh when they're coming the other way.
"The impact is phenomenal. Your windscreen leaves the car. You feel all your bones breaking and your teeth and everything are gone.
"Everything changes in a matter of seconds."
Dodunski, who suffered a brain injury and has not worked since, helped campaign for the construction of four roundabouts between Waitara and New Plymouth.
He reckoned the lower speed limit should remain in place.
"This should stay at 80kmh because if you're going to go up to 100kmh back to 80kmh and up to 100kmh again all the way through to New Plymouth, what's the point?
"It's a hell of a lot safer at 80kmh than it is at 100kmh, and I for one have had an experience I never thought I would have in my life and wouldn't wish that on anyone."
The government's new Speed Limits Rule required lower limits set on some roads in 2020 to revert to their previous limits by 1 July.
The Transport Agency could retain the 80kmh limit on SH3 from Waitara to Bell Block if the public supported the lower speed.
But only 43 percent of those who took part in an online consultation process backed keeping the lower limit.
New Plymouth mayor Neil Holdom found the consultation method curious.
"Having an internet-based opinion poll to set a State Highway speed limit is certainly an interesting legislative approach.
"But any local person will tell you the road is a patched-up and potholed shambles with significant work needed to be done.
"There's no doubt once they've thrown a bit of money at it it could go back to a 100kmh speed limit, but right now it's simply not safe."
New Plymouth mayor Neil Holdom says the stretch of SH3 between Waitara and Bell Block is not safe enough for a 100kmh speed limit.
Photo:
RNZ / Robin Martin
Holdom, who described the stretch of highway as a "shooting gallery", said the lower limit was saving lives.
"Since we dropped the speed limit from 100kmh to 80kmh we've seen a reduction of serious injury accidents of around 60 percent and given that we've had 11 people die on this section of highway in the last 12 or 13 years we don't think they should increase the speed limit to 100kmh until all the safety upgrades are done."
New Zealand Transport Agency director of regional relationships Linda Stewart said for the speed-limit reinstatement process, the consultation result was the only factor NZTA could take into account in its decision-making.
"During consultation, the majority of respondents submitted in opposition to retaining the lower speed limits which is why this Waitara to Bell Block stretch makes up some of the 43 locations which will return to its previous higher speed limit."
Stewart said typically consultation feedback was only one factor used by NZTA to help inform the outcome of a speed review.
"Other factors, including safety or technical guidance, are normally weighted alongside consultation feedback to determine the outcome of a speed review.
"For a full speed review in the future, as we have always done in the past, themes from both the local community and key stakeholders from consultation will be considered alongside safety and technical data, including a cost benefit disclosure statement, to help inform decision-making."
Stewart said safety remained a key priority for NZTA and was a factor in decision making around road design, layout, modifications and speed.
She hoped new roundabouts being constructed at the intersections of Princess Street, Waitara Road, De Havilland Drive/Airport Drive, and SH3A, along with flexible median barrier and other improvements, would improve the safety and efficiency of the highway.
"But we appreciate the speed change will come into force ahead of the completion of the entire project."
On Waitara High Street there were mixed views on the speed limit change.
Bulk carrier driver David did not think putting up the speed limit was a good idea.
"Coming through there, they do dumb enough shit at 80kmh let alone if you put it back up to 100kmh again. I don't think it's a good thing."
A woman, who preferred not to give her name, thought the limit should go back up.
"I think the accidents that happen are usually through poor driving not so much the speed."
Jeremy could not see the reasoning behind changing the speed limit.
"They've gone and put all these roundabouts in, so what's the point of sticking the speed limit back up to 100kmh. You're just going to get to a roundabout faster. May as well keep it at 80kmh."
Another David was in favour of the change.
"I reckon it should go back to 100kmh because you're slowing traffic down and it's piling up, and with the road works in the meantime it's just pathetic trying to go to town."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gisborne Truck Route To Quieten As Council Changes Permits
Gisborne Truck Route To Quieten As Council Changes Permits

Scoop

time11 hours ago

  • Scoop

Gisborne Truck Route To Quieten As Council Changes Permits

A truck route "in a constant state of deterioration" might become a lot quieter after a Gisborne District Council decision regarding heavy vehicle permits. During council meetings last year, councillors and community members raised safety concerns around trucks travelling along Back Ormond and Ormond Roads. A man who drove daily along Ormond Road to and from work said he had seen too many "near-misses" involving schoolchildren. In July, the council added new maps to the Transport Agency's (NZTA) "H" permit system, which exclude Back Ormond and Ormond Roads. Trucks that carry over 44 tonnes require "H" permits to be driven on roads. These permits were valid for up to 24 months, a council Regional Transport Committee report said. Once these expired, it would be "a decision of Council whether to continue or not". "Over the coming year or so, trucks should stop using this route," the report said. Eastland Wood Council chairman Julian Kohn said the concern was over traffic coming out of the Waimata Valley and Ormond area. "In the next 10-15 years, there's going to be a very significant increase in the volumes of wood coming out of our forests from the Waimata-Hokoroa-Tauwhareparae area, not only from wood council members, but from other forest owners." According to the report, the Ormond Road-Back Ormond Road route is "a local road which the council pays 32 percent towards maintaining and is in a constant state of deterioration because of heavy vehicle traffic". The report said traffic data captured at the port reflected the number of log trucks across the road network, which was 87 percent rural, most of which was built on "unstable ground, not built for heavy vehicles and sustained significant damage from weather events". It also said the number of heavy vehicles to support roading recovery after Cyclone Gabrielle had increased significantly since a 2017 freight report. The move regarding "H" permits on Ormond and Back Ormond Roads comes as the council looks to get safety work funding for "a preferred route" for heavy goods vehicles along State Highway 2 and SH35 (including Awapuni Road and Customhouse Street). The report said the council approved the route in 2020, provided NZTA made "appropriate safety improvements ... at key locations along the way". During consultation in 2020, the "preferred route" received 57 percent support. However, there were significant reasons given for supporting a dual route, such as limiting adverse effects on Kiwi Pools, Awapuni School and residents, beach and surf lifesaving clubs, sports facilities and the Oneroa walkway/cycleway, the report said. To date, NZTA had not allocated any funding for the safety improvements, so the council was working to secure the funding by using transport modelling to demonstrate potential increases and identify "priority safety improvements". No longer permitting heavy vehicle use of Ormond and Back Ormond Rds would allow the council to "monitor enforcement and the impact and use the data for modelling purposes". 56 percent increase in logging truck movements According to the report, since 2019, the number of logging trucks to the port have averaged 800 a day (400 each way). In December last year, the port gained consent to build a twin berth and expects a 42 percent increase in freight movement. "With the port's ability to take logs more consistently with a twin berth by 2030, the number of logging truck movements on the region's network is going to increase from 800 daily average to a peak of 1250, a 56 percent increase." The port said in its Traffic around Eastland Port 2022 resource consent application brief that it did not anticipate a large increase in peak truck volumes, rather, more consistent volumes closer to peak, according to the report. No funding was set aside by NZTA in the 2024-27 National Land Transport Plan for Tāirawhiti state highways to improve road safety at the Hirini Street T-intersection to access Eastland Port, or any other safety upgrades required to safely implement the preferred route, the report said. Eastland Port supported NZTA and council upgrading Hirini Street. "They stated busier days could become more common and the congested periods could become longer before the intersection is upgraded."

Holiday road toll: 4 dead and at least 10 injured
Holiday road toll: 4 dead and at least 10 injured

Otago Daily Times

time6 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Holiday road toll: 4 dead and at least 10 injured

The official road toll period will end at 6am on Tuesday. Photo: RNZ/Marika Khabazi Four people have been killed and at least 10 injured in separate crashes in the first two days of the long weekend. A woman died in hospital on Sunday after her vehicle rolled on Tuakau Bridge-Port Waikato Road in Waikato on Friday, just a few hours after the holiday road toll period began. Three others were injured in the single vehicle crash. A man died several hours later in a crash in the Waipā district, also in Waikato, after his vehicle left the road and rolled into a paddock. Just after midnight Saturday a person died in a two vehicle crash south of Kawakawa in Northland. And on Saturday night a man died after his car ended up on its roof on State Highway 16 in Auckland. Four people were taken to hospital, two in a serious condition and two in moderate condition. The official road toll period will end at 6am on Tuesday. Last year, three people died on the roads during the King's Birthday holiday weekend.

Four dead in separate crashes this long weekend
Four dead in separate crashes this long weekend

Otago Daily Times

time6 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Four dead in separate crashes this long weekend

The official road toll period will end at 6am on Tuesday. Photo: RNZ/Marika Khabazi Four people have been killed and at least 10 injured in separate crashes in the first two days of the long weekend. A woman died in hospital on Sunday after her vehicle rolled on Tuakau Bridge-Port Waikato Road in Waikato on Friday, just a few hours after the holiday road toll period began. Three others were injured in the single vehicle crash. A man died several hours later in a crash in the Waipā district, also in Waikato, after his vehicle left the road and rolled into a paddock. Just after midnight Saturday a person died in a two vehicle crash south of Kawakawa in Northland. And on Saturday night a man died after his car ended up on its roof on State Highway 16 in Auckland. Four people were taken to hospital, two in a serious condition and two in moderate condition. The official road toll period will end at 6am on Tuesday. Last year, three people died on the roads during the King's Birthday holiday weekend.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store