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Travel Safe

Travel Safe is an all-ages community focused approach to road safety in Tauranga and the Western Bay of Plenty.

A joint initiative between Tauranga City Council, Western Bay of Plenty District Council, NZ Police, and NZ Transport Agency. The Travel Safe team partner with and work alongside communities, schools, parents, caregivers, volunteers, and students, to deliver programmes and initiatives to reduce accidents and improve road safety.

The programmes are developed to address identified high risks for targeted audiences.

Travel Safe is driven by guiding principles:

  • listening to communities
  • keeping it simple and flexible
  • developing community and school ownership at the beginning
  • strengthening community action
  • developing personal skills
  • creating supportive environments
  • supporting building healthy public policy
  • valuing volunteers

Find out more using the links below and follow Travel Safe on Facebook for updates.

Latest news

Proposed investments aim to support homes, community facilities, jobs, transport

Tauranga could lose 1100 construction jobs and $2.5 billion from the local economy unless  investments are made to help the city thrive and grow.

Those estimates were among several discussed at a Tauranga City Council meeting today about the Long-term Plan 2021-31, which aims to address problems caused by the city growing faster than its infrastructure can handle.

The council’s commissioners heard that Tauranga’s population has grown by an average of 25,000 people every 10 years since 1980, and that this growth was expected to continue for at least the next two decades.

Meanwhile, the city had fallen behind in its infrastructure investments, creating problems such as traffic congestion, a lack of quality community facilities and a housing shortage.

The meeting heard that significant investment was required to:

  • address a worsening shortage of space for homes and businesses
  • mitigate traffic congestion
  • improve public transport
  • revitalise the city centre
  • improve parks, reserves, walkways, theatres and other community facilities.

A ‘working draft’ version of the plan proposes $4 billion worth of investment in roads, water pipes, wastewater systems, community facilities and other important infrastructure that will allow more homes to be built, help people move around the city more easily and provide facilities which create a richer living environment.

This includes more than $1 billion in transport and $700 million in growing the city to accommodate more families and businesses.

These investments will allow the city to grow ‘up’ – with the intensification of the Te Papa peninsula from the city centre to Greerton – and ‘out’ – with the new suburbs of Tauriko West and Te Tumu.

Commission chair Anne Tolley said the magnitude of the challenge was clear.

“Tauranga desperately needs investment in its infrastructure and community facilities. We have an opportunity to build a city that not only meets the needs of our citizens now, but also for the future.
  
“It’s vital that our community has a voice in this process, that they understand the challenges we face as a city and the reasons for any decisions we’re making."

The long-term plan will go out for public consultation on May 7.

LONG-TERM PLAN TIMELINE

  • 15 March:   Decisions made on contents, funding and financing
  • 29 March:   Adopt draft documents for provision to audit
  • April:   Audit processes
  • 3 May:   Adopt consultation document and all supporting documentation
  • 7 May to 7 June:   Consultation period
  • Mid-June:   Hearings
  • Late-June:   Deliberations
  • Week starting 26 July:   Adoption of final LTP
Posted: Mar 8, 2021,

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