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I think I may have come up with a solution to South Africa’s endemic speeding problem. It’s not billboards reminding the poephol in the Porsche screaming by at 190kmh that speed kills. It’s not speed cameras, or Metro Cops sleeping next to the road at regular intervals. No, the solution is much, much simpler.

All the authorities need to do in order to ensure responsible driving behaviour is leave the roads unmaintained long enough for potholes to develop, and they need never worry about law enforcement again.*

For instance, this weekend, while returning from ten blissful days in the bush, I found myself leading a long and snaking convoy of vehicles at speeds of between 60-90kmh on a road with a 120kmh speed limit for a distance of well over 100km (after the caravan moved over into the yellow line and I passed the fart in the Honda Jazz). Nobody — with the exception of a couple of dooses in bakkies and SUVs — attempted to overtake. Nobody drove up anybody else’s backside. Everybody drove with lights on. Motorists were patient and considerate, and paid careful attention to the road ahead.

In short, they were everything that South African drivers typically are not.

Why? Because the R40 between Hoedspruit (now known as Maruleng) and Belfast is so potholed that in parts it barely qualifies as a road at all. You’re forced to slow down because you never know whether that patch on the road ahead will reveal red soil beneath the tar. You cannot risk overtaking because of the risk of potholes on the other side of the road. Simply put, you have no option but to crawl from the Lowveld all the way up to the N3.

The R40 has been in a parlous state for years now. Potholes are repaired, only to open up again almost immediately. The worst damage extends across the entire road, and the potential for a nasty accident is obvious, especially if a vehicle travelling at 120kmh should suddenly hit dirt, or swerve to avoid it. It’s also an extremely stressful drive, because most of the holes are not visible until the last moment, and you cannot afford to relax, ever. Driving this route at night is not recommended.

All of this is somewhat mystifying, because the R40 is one of the major routes into the Lowveld and several major tourist attractions, including Pilgrim’s Rest, the Blyde Canyon, the Kruger Park and many private game lodges. Perhaps it’s all a scheme to prevent the area from being overpopulated by British soccer fans come June 2010.

There was one positive moment in all of this. Just outside Dullstroom, the road was pothole-free long enough for me to increase my speed to 120kmh while, conversely, the limit was reduced to 100. Naturally, there were cops waiting for me, and I was pulled over. I lowered my window and sheepishly awaited the issuing of a fine.

The officer and I exchanged polite greetings. I admitted that I was aware that the speed limit was reduced, and that I knew I was speeding. “Please don’t speed,” he said. “Have a Happy New Year.” And he waved me off. I was astonished. He was polite and courteous, and he didn’t solicit a bribe.

Maybe if more traffic officers were like him, our appalling road death rate would be reduced. Or maybe not, but it would make the schlep of driving back after a holiday less likely to undo all that lovely relaxation.

* Not that the authorities generally worry about law enforcement, since speed trapping is largely a revenue-generating mechanism, but for the purposes of this argument I will assume that they do care, just a little.




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23 Responses to “Potholes: The solution to our speeding problem”

Oh dear Sarah, speed may not kill with potholes all around, but I can well imagine that; the SAB Zombies the “walking dead” ie the largest single grouping killed on SA roads are the slowest moving things, would double, as people swerve off the road for the potholes…

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Ad on January 4th, 2010 at 4:35 pm

Not really funny my step son just walked away from an horrendous crash on the R55 caused by badly maintained roads. Had he been driving anything other than my gas guzzler we would be one child down. Think I am going to trade the Honda Jazz in for 2 more gas guzzlers and to hell with going green until the roads are fixed

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Sandra on January 4th, 2010 at 4:38 pm

I judge a country by the state of its roads and by the cleanliness of all its public toilets (well, those I need to use, obviously).

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Jon on January 4th, 2010 at 6:40 pm

Fools behind the wheel are the cause of death on the roads not speed. These would cause a death at any speed.

I bet if one had to collate the number of parking and other fines by a driver it will be found that the higher the number, the most likely to be involved in an accident.

Over the years every near miss I have unfortunatley experienced has been the result of disrepect for other road users or deliberate breaking of basic road rules. I do not accept speeding fines as a law eforcement tool.

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Hugh Robinson on January 4th, 2010 at 7:54 pm

Except it is not just the poephol that is the problem.
This morning I and several other people were overtaken at speed by a Toyota Hilux dodging in between lanes, followin at less than half a cars length (we were all travelling at a safe speed and distance for peak hour) and using the emergency lane on the left as his private overtaking lane. In the rain!!! A formerly advanatged person who should know just how dangerous all these moves were. Not a cop in sight, and no number plates on the bakkie to report to the authorities.
Potholes cause more accidents, so no more please!!!

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Ian on January 4th, 2010 at 8:09 pm

I think I have earlier referred to my experiences in Beira (Mozambique). City traffic at an acceptable pace due to potholes. People politely giving way to oncoming traffic on a road converted into a single lane due to potholes on both sides of the road.
Little road maintenance and no speed cops. Double savings.
When the president came to visit, the municipality organised a few tons of sand from the nearby beaches to fill the potholes on his route.
The first rains would bring the sand back to the beaches.
In SA much drama was made about 400 cops on the road over the Christmas weekend. Driving forward and back from Pretoria to the Northern Cape (1400km one way) I came across no cops on the way up, taking the N12 and 5 posts on the way back via the N14.
One of the 5 posts was actually halting traffic and checking cars, 3 were having the usual camera duty on clever spots and one was sitting on the bonnet, watching the traffic. All posts were manned by 2-3 cops.
The roads, both ways, were quiet, mostly in excellent condition and allowed for speeds of 100-140 km/hr. My old Golfie asked me to stick to 110-120 which I duly did.
I agree: potholes is the answer to the annual road carnage.

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Benzol on January 4th, 2010 at 10:14 pm

[…] Thought Leader » Sarah Britten » Potholes: The solution to our speeding problem www.thoughtleader.co.za/sarahbritten/2010/01/04/potholes-the-solution-to-our-speeding-problem – view page – cached I think I may have come up with a solution to South Africa’s endemic speeding problem. It’s not billboards reminding the poephol in the Porsche screaming by at 190kmh that speed kills. It’s not speed cameras, or Metro Cops sleeping next to the road at regular intervals. No, the solution is much, much simpler. […]

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There is nothing one can do that is more greener than pushing up daisy’s.

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Larry Goodfella on January 5th, 2010 at 6:37 am

Hi Sarah

You may not have have noted that most the reported accidents have involved trucks and taxis. The guy in his Porsche (not one of them) keeps his car well and can probably stop in less distance than you or me from 100Km/h. It would be interesting to find reliable stats regarding the ratio of accidents per type of vehicle related to their numbers on the road. It is pretty safe to say that all speed timing is targetted at the 130 plus road user, where a laden truck doing 90 is possibly less controlable in a emergency. Sometimes I even have my doubts about anladen trucks being able to pull up in a straight line, in a hurry. The wheels on the trailer often lock from faulty/non existant load sensors which would moderate the braking effort to the wheels . . .

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Bruce on January 5th, 2010 at 9:01 am

Is it not interesting that the average death toll on our roads, for a year, is in the region of 22,000. This works out to 1,833 people per month. Over Easter and the Festive Season the death count reduces to around 1,000 and a huge fuss is made as to the senseless waste? It appears that the safest time to travel on our roads is Easter and Christmas? We simply ignore the rest of the year when the cops go back to their prime motivation which is collecting fines for minor offences or bribes for themselves.
Road safety is not the amount of income that the cops can get per month/annum, it is the amount of lives that can be saved. On a recent trip from Joburg to Durban, the only cops to be seen where hiding in the bushes with their radar guns. I personally saw 7 people overtaking on a solid white line and on a blind rise but there were no cops to be seen as they were doing the ‘important’ stuff - making money and archiving their daily target of fines issued, not serious offenders caught.

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Peter Joffe on January 5th, 2010 at 9:15 am

Well said, Sarah. I will include your thoughts in my book, for which you allowed me the use of your cartoon in The Art of South African Insult. I will also include one or two photos of potholes. The point is that the potholes are a symptom of a system that has gone to pot.

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Andre de Villiers on January 5th, 2010 at 9:35 am

A friend of mine described how the speeding traffic along his residential street was quite effectively managed by putting a length of thick rope across the street - all cars slowed down when driving over it (with no danger to life as with potholes). Let’s start importing rope.

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JvM on January 5th, 2010 at 9:48 am

I read to my horror that a vehicle caused a head on collision during the festive period when he/she swerved into the oncoming lane to avoid a large pothole. Four people were killed as a result.

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Banana on January 5th, 2010 at 10:02 am

Dear, sweet, Sarah,

As usaul, the cynic. Did your mother not tell you that cynicism is unhealthy wheras scepticism is healthy? Hence, alter your rhetoric to scepticism. What you are saying is that the powers that maintain roads would rather spend the money on cars than tar.

Or wives rather than health-care for women.

Or arms deals rather than barracks for soldiers.

Or…

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Graham Johnson on January 5th, 2010 at 12:27 pm

I have always been amazed at the road signs saying ‘pot holes for the next x km’. I thought the authorities were supposed to fix these things, not put up signs warning you of their incompetence.

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Andrew Slaughter on January 5th, 2010 at 2:02 pm

Lack of money means the potholes will get worse; as they always are after the rains. The reason we complain is because we perceive our roads to be perfect until we hit a pothole at speed. Accidents are caused when cars are driven too fast for safety (circumstances), except in the case of stationary vehicles, and then only one is (stationary). To my knowledge, only 14 800-odd people were killed on our roads last year. And yes, Easter and Christmas are safer because the cops are out there. None of us manages to obey the law without them. And those silly signs: cost R5 000 each in 1998, to produce and erect. They’ve been up 11 years. That’s under R500 per sign per year. The cheapest advertising you’ll ever see and tourists think they are simply wonderful, because each is situated at a dangerous spot. At least they pay attention! I know, because I helped put them there…drove the country ragged to identify the positions! Treat every other driver like a fool and yourself as a bigger one and you have the chance of living a long life, if cancer, AIDS or TB doesn’t get you first.

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MLH on January 5th, 2010 at 9:41 pm

Advertising people are adept at making a virtue out of a necessity. But a new iPhone which costs two month’s wages. OK, it will go totally kaput on you in only two years hence, as per its design parameters, but — guess what? — then you can spend another two month’s wages buying a NEW one that can do even more of the stuff you didn’t bother doing with the first one because it conked out so quickly and you didn’t have the time to learn them because you were just too busy working in order to pay off your phone! And the blimming BMW whose routine authorised dealer service charges are obviously designed with the profiling of Donald Trump or Bill Gates in mind.

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Jon on January 6th, 2010 at 1:23 am

I am 45 - usually drive around at about 140-150kmh sometimes 160kmh,sometimes even faster, have never had an accident and have become very experienced at negotiating my way around taxi drivers and persons that have just bought their driver’s licences - potholes are the least of our problems!

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marty on January 6th, 2010 at 10:51 am

Most of the roads (if not all) in South Africa were build during the apartheid years … The new administartion have failed to maintain most of the roads … to a level that SOME ACCIDENTS HAVE TAKEN LIVES because of potholes … YOU HAVE THE NERVE to right about something thats is hazardous … Very dangerous …

TRUE we have a problem of speeding BUT thats no where close to a solution … CNT beleive you took time and wrote this BULL …

The only way to reduce speeding is HAVE A LAW that any car that comes in the country must tapped not to go over 120km/h … THAT’s the only way …

VERY DISAPPOINTING ARTICLE … especially coming from you … :( :( :(

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anopothole on January 7th, 2010 at 10:39 am

@ anopothole: Get a copy of your dictionary (assuming you have one) and do two things:
1. Look up the spelling of the word “write” and
2. Look up the meaning of the word “irony”

Thank you.

(Report abuse)

Sarah Britten on January 7th, 2010 at 12:44 pm

Oh Marty,

You’re so wonderful! Obviously you were lucky enough not to meet another moron like yourself.

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Bovril 24 on January 7th, 2010 at 8:07 pm

Sarah, lost in translation is all I can say, anopothole is probably from some dark corner of Poffadder or some such dorp.
Arguably a lot of accidents are caused by the peophols driving at some ridculously slow speed in the middle/fast lane causing everyone behind them to lose patience and try overtaking on that blind rise… etc etc. I’ve seen so many times someone in the middle lane of highway causing traffic jams - and just in front of them is clear road whilst behind is a long queue. I wish the driving schools would teach some common sense regarding driving and that the driving test was more stringent… All these laws, speed traps, etc etc are just trying to close the barn doors after the horses have bolted.

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Simba on January 8th, 2010 at 9:19 am

Hi Sarah

I really enjoy your sense of humour.

I drive a little Daewoo Matiz so speed humps are like climbing mountains and potholes are akin to doing the 4×4 thing in deep dongas!

The potholes might even encourage courteous driving and reduce road rage, slower driving means better fuel economy and less carbon going into the atmosphere, and we might even get to spare a smile or two for each other!

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Dave Thorpe on January 8th, 2010 at 10:04 am

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Sarah Britten has written three books on South African insults. During the day she is a communication strategist in the ad industry; by night she writes books and blog entries. It helps to have insomnia.
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