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Virginia assembly approves 70 mph speed limit

By: William C. Flook
Examiner Staff Writer
February 3, 2010

Officials expect the higher limit — part of Gov. Bob McDonnell’s transportation plan — to apply to rural sections of interstates, not in traffic-choked Northern Virginia. (Brig Cabe/Examiner file)

The Virginia House and Senate moved Tuesday to raise the maximum interstate speed limit from 65 to 70 miles per hour, passing a measure backed by Gov. Bob McDonnell to speed traffic on wide-open stretches of highway.

The identical bills passed by wide margins in both chambers. Proponents argued the change would result in shorter travel times for motorists, with many roads already designed to safely handle greater speeds. Officials expect the higher limit — part of McDonnell's transportation plan — to apply to rural sections of interstates and not in the traffic-choked corridors of Northern Virginia. Each proposed increase would require a Virginia Department of Transportation engineering study before being put in place.

How they voted:

»  House: 71-26

(HB 856, sponsored by Del. Charles Carrico, R-Galax)

 

»  Senate: 29-11

(SB 537, sponsored by Sen. Stephen Newman, R-Lynchburg)

Critics said the change would hurt gas mileage, make roads more dangerous and do nothing to address Virginia's transportation funding crisis. Others took a wait-and-see approach. AAA Mid-Atlantic is "of two minds" on the legislation, said spokesman Lon Anderson. "We know people want to speed, speeding is popular, nobody wants to do 60, 65 if they can do 70," Anderson said. "That said, we have so many people on the road, and we have so many distractions on the road, the question becomes, Will higher speed limits translate into more fatalities and make the roads more dangerous?"

The governor called the legislation an "important proposal to speed up traffic in rural and less populated sections of Virginia."

State Sen. Creigh Deeds — McDonnell's opponent in the 2009 election — for the second straight day delivered a fiery floor speech criticizing GOP legislation.

"This is one more bill that does nothing to fix the problems we have," Deeds said. The higher speed limit could result in more reckless-driving arrests, which can still be triggered by driving more than 80 mph. That leaves speeders with a smaller window between a simple traffic ticket and a far more serious charge.

wflook@washingtonexaminer.com

 


More from William C. Flook

  • Collapse of Medicaid extension squeezes Md., Va.
  • VDOT readies massive traffic shift, demolition in Tysons
  • Airports authority looks to cut toll road noise
  • U.Va. fights Cuccinelli's global warming subpoena
  • McDonnell tempers reaction to drilling ban

Topics

Washington Examiner , Virginia House , Senate , Gov. Bob McDonnell , Northern Virginia , AAA Mid-Atlantic , Creigh Deeds , reckless-driving

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