Thanks to a push from rural Minnesota drivers, the 55 mph speed limit on most two-lane state highways is being bumped up to 60 mph.
While many applaud the change, some national safety experts cringe, fearing that it will mean more fatal crashes.
"Raising the speed limit never comes without a cost," said Russ Rader of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, a nonprofit based in Virginia. Increases in speed limits over two decades have contributed to the deaths of 33,000 people, according to the institute's research.
It's a matter of physics, because an impact is stronger and the damage more severe when a vehicle crashes at higher speeds, Rader said. Most crash tests are done at 35 to 40 mph because that's considered a severe-impact speed, he explained.
"Raising the speed limit reduces the ability of the driver to brake and bring the vehicle to a survivable [crash] level," Rader said.
In addition, the risks are higher on rural two-lane roads, where vehicles travel at each other on roads often lined by ditches, trees and other hazards, he said.
Safety hasn't been the only concern behind lower speed limits. Many states dropped speed limits to 55 mph during the 1970s oil crisis in an effort to save fuel. They adopted the lower limit if they wanted their share of federal highway funding. "It was the power of the purse that brought speeds down," said Kara Macek of the Governors Highway Safety Association.
That law was repealed in 1995 and states began increasing speed limits, she said, noting that a stretch of road in Texas has a posted limit of 85 — the highest in the country.