POLICE
 say they are surprised at calls on a Facebook page that supports a 
proposal to increase the speed limit on the Hume Highway to 130km/h.
The page, described by its creators as a petition to raise the speed limit, received more than 30,000 likes in 24 hours.
Albury
 highway patrol officer Sgt Matt Zemaitis said those who had commented 
on or liked the page were lacking knowledge of the dangers of increasing
 the speed limit on the highway.
“Why people would like it I would
 think is in relation to reducing their travel time but they aren’t 
taking into account the safety factors,” he said.
“It would lead to worsened consequences for everyone involved.”
Sgt
 Zemaitis said a speed limit of 130km/h would see drivers’ reaction 
times fall and potentially intensify the results of an impact.
“Obviously
 my concerns are vehicles that travel that much quicker have greater 
risk of having an accident with serious injuries,” he said.
“This would increase the road toll as a result.”
The Facebook page argues “increase the speed, lower fatigue” and Sgt 
Zemaitis said there was no evidence to show travelling more quickly 
would reduce drivers’ fatigue level.
“It’s not a matter of time, 
it’s a matter of getting to the destination safely and being able to see
 those family and friends,” he said.
RoadSafe North East road 
safety officer Robert Allen agreed there was no research to support the 
premise that an increased speed limit lowered fatigue.
“Fatigue
 is caused by tiredness and if a person is tired then common sense would
 say no matter what speed they are going, it is still likely they would 
fall asleep at the wheel,” he said.
Mr Allen said if a speed limit of 130km/h had any positive impact on the road toll, it would be researched.
“People
 are supporting this campaign because social media has an impact on how 
people think but they’d be better supporting experts than a Facebook 
page,” he said.
http://www.bordermail.com.au/story/1804433/130kmh-hume-hwy-speed-limit-petition-is-misguided-poll/?cs=53 
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