Metro Press release, 10/29/2019 - Mayor John Cooper today announced his commitment to improving
neighborhood quality of life by instructing Metro Public Works to begin
the rollout of lowering speed limits on neighborhood streets.
The Neighborhood Speed Limit Reduction initiative will impact
neighborhood streets currently signed at 30 Miles Per Hour, reducing the
posted speed limit to 25 Miles Per Hour. Metro Public Works, which
released a Speed Reduction Feasibility Study earlier this year at Metro
Council’s request, will work to implement the change over a one-year
period, upon completion of a comprehensive signage inventory.
Street sign updates and community education on the speed limit change
were previously funded in the 2018-2019 Capital Spending Plan with a
$500,000 allocation, in addition to $1M for related engineering
improvements from the Neighborhood Traffic Calming program.
Lower speed limits on Nashville’s local streets will improve safety and promote active living. Transportation research has shown that lowering speed limits to reflect an all-users approach to neighborhood streets results in decreased crash rates – in particular, dramatic improvement in crash-survival rates for vulnerable users, such as pedestrians and cyclists – as vehicular speeds decrease.
“With Nashville’s growth, more drivers have been prone to using our
neighborhood streets as cut-through routes to avoid traffic on major
corridors, impacting quality of life for our residents,” said Mayor John
Cooper. “Slowing vehicular traffic in residential neighborhoods is a
commonsense next step for public safety and health, and it’s important
to many Nashvillians I’ve spoken with in recent years. I know Metro
departments, the Metro Council, and our many community partners will
help to make this effort a success.”
Mayor Cooper will ask Traffic and Parking Commissioners to consider
the speed limit change at their November 18 meeting. He will then ask
Metro Council to ensure the code reflects the change in speed on local
neighborhood streets.
To help guide community engagement and public outreach around the
rollout, the Mayor’s Office and Metro Public Works have assembled a team
of stakeholders, Safe Speed Limit Outreach (SSLO), that will have its
first meeting on Wednesday, November 6. Members include:
- Burkley Allen, Metropolitan Council Member At-Large
- Sgt. Michelle Coker, Metropolitan Nashville Police Department
- Saralee Woods, Commissioner, Traffic and Parking Commission
- Lindsey Ganson, Director of Advocacy and Communications, Walk Bike Nashville
- John Gore, Chair, Metro Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee
- Ruby Baker, President, Bordeaux Hills Residential Association
- Kara (KB) Holzer, Director of Marketing and Development, Conexión Américas
- Kathy Buggs, Director, Mayor’s Office of Neighborhoods
Multiple Metro transportation plans have recommended strategies to create better neighborhoods for walking through safer speed policy, safety education programs, traffic-law enforcement, and additional traffic-calming measures. The speed limit change builds upon recent improvements to Metro’s Traffic Calming Program in order to make streets safe for everyone, including but not limited to motorists. Metro Public Works will design future engineering improvements under the Neighborhood Traffic Calming Program to 25 MPH, and Safe Speed Limit Outreach will spearhead a grassroots education strategy over the coming months. A full change-out for Metro’s street signs will take approximately one year to complete.
More information can be found in the Metro Public Works Speed Reduction Feasibility Study.
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