Cancelling of controlled crossing dismays

Pembroke School principal Brent Godfery is devastated the government has "pulled the pin" on...
Pembroke School principal Brent Godfery is devastated the government has "pulled the pin" on funding for a new controlled crossing on Thames Highway. PHOTO: NIC DUFF
A beefed-up pedestrian crossing on State Highway 1 in Oamaru has been canned after the government "pulled the pin", a concerned principal says.

Late last year, a $5.2 million crossing upgrade outside Pembroke School was confirmed by NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi.

It would have led to a radical safety improvement for the school’s Thames Highway crossing, principal Brent Godfery said.

To now have that work cancelled, under revised transport funding last month, was a "big disappointment", Mr Godfery said.

"That crossing down the end of our road is highly dangerous. All that work and God knows how much they wasted on consultancies and that sort of stuff, and then they pulled the pin."

He previously told RNZ a Pembroke pupil had been struck on the crossing and had their leg broken.

Mr Godfery told the Oamaru Mail for years the school had paid staff to monitor the safety of pupils on the existing crossing.

"People just don’t stop.

"I’ve nearly been hit myself standing in a big orange jacket standing on the edge of the pedestrian crossing."

There had also been nose-to-tail crashes "quite frequently", where stationary vehicles waiting at the crossing for pupils to cross were rear-ended.

The cancelled upgrade would just make it more difficult for pupils to walk to school independently, Mr Godfery said.

"They [pupils] should be able to get there themselves. They shouldn’t have to rely on an adult to walk them across, especially the older ones."

The government announced its 2024-27 Land Transport Programme last month.

While it boasted a $32.9 billion investment for "roads of national significance" and pothole fixes, traffic-calming funding was slashed.

Also from the beginning of October, the government’s new setting of speed limit rules passed into effect, removing the permanent 30kmh speed limit around schools.

This means that by July next year all speed limits will be variable — lower limits will only be in force at certain times, such as school drop-off and pick-up times.

Waitaki District Mayor Gary Kircher said he was as disappointed as Mr Godfery.

"They were looking at how they could cut out wasteful spending but I think this was a situation where there was going to be a lot of benefits," he said.

Waitaki MP Miles Anderson said the Land Transport Programme was developed to encompass all of New Zealand, rather than on an individual basis.

"Part of the problem was NZ Transport Agency had proposed a lot of things we can’t afford and are looking to probably make savings here and there."

However, he was open to lobbying on Pembroke School’s behalf, Mr Anderson said.

"If the community feels there was a definite need for something on the main road, I’m more than happy to go in to bat with them.

"Come and see me and we’ll discuss it."

However, he had not personally been in contact with anyone from Pembroke School.

nic.duff@odt.co.nz