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Virtual Speed Bumps
By Tom Shoop | Friday, June 20, 2008  |  09:24 AM

Here's the latest effort to crack down on aggressive driving: The Telegraph reports that the city of Philadelphia is painting phony speed bumps on city streets in an effort to get people to slow down.

Cool idea, but it will only work the first time anybody sees one of these, right? Regular drivers will quickly learn to drive as fast as they want over the images. How effective can that be? That's what the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will attempt to find out. It'll be collecting data on the roads emblazoned with the fake bumps to see if they actually make roads safer.

(Hat tip: Andrew Sullivan)



Comments


Are they going to collect data on how many people get used to the fake bumps and then hit real ones at the legal speed limit, thinking they are fake?

wallyp  | Wednesday, June 25, 2008 |  10:08 AM



Worth a try.

Wise Old Owl  | Friday, June 20, 2008 |  11:17 AM




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Government Executive Editor Tom Shoop takes a look at news and events affecting the federal bureaucracy, from the perspective of a longtime observer of government.

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