Originally posted by Caligastia
Highway speed limits, more often than not, are simply revenue-gathering exercises. People in general rarely work up enough of a lather to get it changed because not enough are affected, and it's an issue that can too easily be dismissed by the unthinking majority as one of safety. Evidence be damned.
The people of Ontario should count themselves fortunate that they can go 130-140 without fear. In NZ the roads are a police state, rigged with speed cameras at every turn, and cops who won't hesitate to pull over anyone going more than 110km/h (100 km/h limit).
Highway speed limits, more often than not, are simply revenue-gathering exercises. People in general rarely work up enough of a lather to get it changed because not enough are affected, and it's an issue that can too easily be dismissed by the unthinking majority as one of safety. Evidence be damned.
The people of Ontario should count themselves fortunate that they can go 130-140 without fear. In NZ the roads are a police state, rigged with speed cameras at every turn, and cops who won't hesitate to pull over anyone going more than 110km/h (100 km/h limit).
), 120 kph is the accepted maximum. I often hear people say it should be raised to 120 and then ticket all the cars above that. While there would be no shortage of tickets written (people will always speed) the average speeding ticket will be for fewer kms over the limit than they are now. As ticket fine amounts are determined by the amount over the limit, municipalities (the province doesn't actually get this money) will get less revenue from an equal number of tickets. The disencentive is obvious.

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