RonJohn
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 5,048
From: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/ar...ess,urban interstates and noninterstate roads.Well … yes and no. Both seat belts and the 55 MPH speed limit were put into the federal law first. For seat belts, the feds simply required car manufacturers to put them in cars and let nature take its course. I remember the debate on this in Georgia. Culver Kidd, the "Silver Fox", had gone out to Colorado - a state that required seat belt use - to see his daughter. While there the family got in a three car wreck and all of them walked away. Kidd made a requirement for seat belt use his main legislative initiative. Once he told the story and put his position behind it, the General Assembly rolled over like a puppy dog. Later, the feds required three point hanesses, just to make the point. By then the states had decided that "personal freedom" shouldn't mean carnage on the highways and came around.
On the 55 MPH rule, the feds gave the states a choice: change your laws or don't get the federal highway funds. Louisiana held out for two years, but everybody else immediately changed the speed limit. It's been nationally regulated on federal highways ever since.
The first is now called a "nudge"; the second is a straight regulation. Both work.
In 1974, the federal government passed the National Maximum Speed Law, which restricted the maximum permissible vehicle speed limit to 55 miles per hour (mph) on all interstate roads in the United States.
Speed limits have not been a federal requirement since 1995. Montana actually changed their regulations on 1995 to "no greater than is reasonable and prudent", which was touted in the media as no speed limit. There were court challenges to the regulations vagueness, and Montana now has a maximum speed limit of 80.On November 28, 1995, Congress passed the National Highway Designation Act, which officially removed all federal speed limit controls. Since 1995, all US states have raised their posted speed limits on rural interstates; many have also raised the posted speed limits on urban interstates and noninterstate roads.
Are speed limits strictly enforced where you live? Most of the time you have to be going at least 10 mph over the speed limit before even being concerned about getting a ticket. On 285, the average speed is probably at least 10mph over the speed limit unless traffic is bad. I haven't driven on 400 lately, but it used to be that the average speed was at least 15 mph over the speed limit. It is a legal regulation, but almost everyone ignores it. People who do obey the speed limit on the interstate around Atlanta stick out like a sore thumb. I wouldn't use speed limit laws as an example of how to get universal mask usage.