As a knowledgeable driver you are aware of the three blanket speed limits that cover the whole province of British Columbia. These limits are 80 km/h outside a municipality, 50 km/h in a municipality and 20 km/h on a municipal lane. There is one more method of setting a smaller blanket speed zone and that is through the use of an area sign.
Area signs may set a blanket speed limit of 60 km/h or less and provide for exceptions through the words "unless otherwise posted" shown on the sign. These smaller blanket zones are advertised in the British Columbia Gazette published by the Queen's Printer. Unfortunately, on line access to the Gazette only comes at a price. If you are curious about the extend of an area zone, the easiest free access to the Gazette is at your local library.
As with any speed sign, you are expected to be traveling at the posted limit as you pass it. Should you encounter an exception by passing a sign with a higher limit, be prepared to slow back to the area limit if you turn onto another highway and don't see a sign telling you that you may do otherwise or you know that you have left the boundaries of the blanket area.
Violations of area speed zone limits carry the same penalty as all other speeding offences.
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How and where police enforce speed limits depend on the officer and what the officer may have been ordered to focus on. Generally it is expected today that enforcement focuses on high collision locations. It is impractical to enforce precisely to the boundary of speed limits, but I didn't have a problem doing this when the driver was over the speed limit in the zone that they were leaving.
The speed zones are mandated by highway design practice. You can find out about some of these practices on the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure's web site. Failing to follow these accepted engineering practices would leave the government and construction companies open to civil action in the event of a crash.
Just because drivers fail to follow and you don't see police doing enforcement does not mean that these zones should be done away with. Unlike you, I don't have much faith in the average driver's ability to make the right choice on their own.
Finally, it depends on what risk you are talking about. The risk to the two of you doing 110 travelling side by side might be minimal, but you are not the only road users out there.
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