Police oppose Oxford ring road speed limit cut
Thames Valley Police says pulling limit on A40 from 70mph to 40mph is potentially dangerous

A40 Oxford ring road: currently 70mph, could become 40mph
As part of Oxford City Council's proposal to build up to 1,200 houses alongside the Barton area of the A40, a new 40mph speed limit has been proposed to create an 'urban boulevard'. Since some of the new houses are planned to directly face the dual carriageway, three pedestrian crossings are also proposed, linking the houses to the city on the other side.
Thames Valley Police has been reported in the local press as saying that a 40mph limit would be inappropriate for a dual carriageway and that it simply wouldn't be possible to enforce the limit effectively. It has also voiced concerns over pedestrian safety, suggesting that people could find it hard to judge the speed of oncoming traffic - especially if that traffic is flowing at a variable rate.
The issue could turn into a power struggle between the City Council and Oxfordshire County Council, which has responsibility for speed limits in the area. The county council has suggested that 50mph would be a more appropriate figure for a dual carriageway and has estimated that placing pedestrian crossings on the A40 would lead to an extra six accidents per year.
But these questions of safety, a cynic might suggest, might actually be secondary to noise considerations. There is of course a desire to build as many homes in the area as possible, but a limit higher than 40mph might require houses to be moved back from the road so as to accommodate barriers to mask traffic noise.
But whatever the real reasons for the call for the 40mph zone, it's refreshing to see both police and local authorities campaigning for the often apparently mutually exclusive causes of safety and decent-speed traffic flow.
The scheme undergoes a public planning enquiry this week.
The counter argument about pedestrians not being able to judge the speed of oncoming cars is not a particularly strong one mind, as there are very rarely pedestrians anywhere along it, let alone trying to cross over it.
The counter argument about pedestrians not being able to judge the speed of oncoming cars is not a particularly strong one mind, as there are very rarely pedestrians anywhere along it, let alone trying to cross over it.
Oh, I know the answer to that - because we're in the UK and therefore do everything in a half-arsed way.
So who is it desirable for? The council no doubt, who want more housing rate money, and the developers who want to ring the last penny out of the land they’ve acquired (probably cheaply because it’s next to the road).
These idiots are starting to get on my nerves. They’ll pack hundreds of houses onto a postage stamp, without any thought about the damage that will be caused to surrounding communities because of extra stress on local services, schools, hospitals, the road network, employment, etc, etc.
speed limits in oxford have been falling steadily for a few years now. pretty much everywhere off the main roads now sports a 20 mph speed limit. the ring road being reduced to 40 is ludicrous. also, the money would be better spent de-chaving barton. building these extra 1200 homes will bring more traffic to an area that has been given a ridiculous amount of traffic due to the council's new bottle neck procedures
Oh, I know the answer to that - because we're in the UK and therefore do everything in a half-arsed way.
Although I recently moved house and during my search I viewed numerous properties close to roads... I was absolutely AMAZED at the difference the speed made to the noise level - 30mph = unnoticeable; 40mph = slight nuisance; 60mph = no way. Completely invasive.

Great thinking, Oxford City Council.
See also the Purley Way Croydon 'bypass', which was created to allow seaside traffic to reach Brighton quickly and easily, but is now an out-of-town retail park, with 30mph limit and close-packed traffic lights.
The counter argument about pedestrians not being able to judge the speed of oncoming cars is not a particularly strong one mind, as there are very rarely pedestrians anywhere along it, let alone trying to cross over it.
http://mycouncil.oxford.gov.uk/mgMemberIndex.aspx?...
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