Calgarians may get a vote on whether the city lowers speed limits on residential roads - Action News
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Calgary

Calgarians may get a vote on whether the city lowers speed limits on residential roads

Calgarians may have a say, through a plebiscite, on whether the city reduces the speed limit on residential streets.

Council delays decision on change, votes to consider plebiscite

A 40 km/h speed limit sign.
Calgary city council is looking at reducing the speed limit on residential streets from 50 km/h to 40 as a way of improving safety for drivers, cyclists and pedestrians. (CBC)

Calgarians may have a say on whether the city reduces the speed limit on residential streets, through a plebiscite.

There is a proposal to reduce the current residential limit from 50 kilometres an hour to 40 as a way of improving safety for drivers, cyclists and pedestrians.

Council decided Tuesdayin an 8-6 vote to put off a decision on lowering the speed limit. Instead, it will askadministration to come up with potential plebiscite questions on the issue.

Most of council seems to support the idea of lowering the speed limit from 50 to 40 km/h on residential streets as a way of reducing the number of collisions, deaths and injuries.Council members say it's a response to the concerns of Calgarians about speeding on side streets.

Coun.Peter Demong, who put forward the idea of a plebiscite, said changing the speed limits is something that would affect every Calgarian, so they should decide.

"Let's ask the people," Demong said. "Councillor [Jeff]Davison was absolutely correct in his statement for saying [that]for this actually to work, we need to have buy-in from Calgarians or it could make things very difficult for the next couple or three years."

The city has postedonline maps of the streetsthat would be affected by the lower speed limit.

The proposal recommended aposted speed limit of50 km/h on busy collector streets those that typically have a yellow line or a bus route. Officials saidit would cost $2.3 million to post new 50 km/h signs on collector streets as well as signage aboutthe default speed limiton all roadsentering Calgary.

The money would come from the city's approved capital budget.

Mayor Naheed Nenshi said council was elected to make decisions and should just vote on the matter, adding that the decision to ask for proposals does not commit the city to holding a plebiscite.

"We'll see what happens in February, so it's a matter of delayed gratification here," Nenshi said. "Do a little more work and then council will decide in February, either not to do anything, to go forward with these recommendations or amended ones or to push the thing past the next election through a plebiscite."

The proposal was that if council approved the lower speed limit Tuesday, it would take effect next April. Nenshi said a vote in February to proceed would delay that by a couple of months.

With files from Scott Dippel