A statistical evaluation of the default 50km/h speed limit in Victoria.

Author(s)
Hoareau, E. Newstead, S. & Cameron, M.
Year
Abstract

Victoria introduced a statewide default 50 kilometre per hour speed limit in built-up areas (except where otherwise signed), on January 22, 2001. The purpose of this legislation was to reduce the incidence and severity of crashes involving unprotected road users. The effectiveness of the initiative has been evaluated under a quasi-experimental design framework at various intervals with the last covering a period of almost three years. The first evaluation, covering the first five months of the initiative, showed that the program was associated with statistically significant reductions for all casualty crashes. Results of the second evaluation were unable to show continuing crash reductions for the six to seventeen month post implementation period. It was believed that contamination of the comparison group (as defined by the study design) had occurred due to the introduction of a number of new speed enforcement initiatives. To overcome this issue, an alternative methodology was devised and applied to data covering a 35-month post implementation period allowing the effects of the 50 kilometre per hour speed limits to be estimated separately. This alternative methodology is described in detail, as well as the results derived from this study design. (a) For the covering entry of this conference, please see ITRD abstract no. E214057. Printed volume contains peer-reviewed papers. CD-ROM contains submitted papers.

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Publication

Library number
C 38013 (In: C 37981 [electronic version only]) /82 / ITRD E214038
Source

In: Australasian Road Safety Research Policing Education Conference 2005, Museum of New Zealand, Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington, New Zealand, 14-16 November 2005, [Print] p. 181-185, 8 ref.

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