Plus British overseas countries (or whatever the term is) such as Monserrat in 
the Caribbean which has consistently voted against independence.  They use 
'imperial' road signs by the way.

From: vliets...@btinternet.com
To: usma@colostate.edu
Subject: [USMA:47720] RE: Are metric speed limit and/or distance signs 
permitted by US Federal law or regulation?
Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2010 20:44:10 +0100


























My reading of the various bits of UK legislation is that the UK is an
exceptional country – there seem to be exceptions for everything.

 

Firstly we have the EU directive which
permits miles, yards, feet and inches on road signs and distances in all member
states that were using them in 1972. That also includes the Republic of Ireland,
Malta and Cyprus. 
The RoI has chosen to abandon imperial units in the last few years while Malta 
and Cyprus did so well before they even
thought of joining the EU.

 

Northern Ireland has its own parliament (Stormont) who has virtual complete
autonomy in this respect provided that they observe their EU obligations –
although the UK Government has to give a reason why they see fit to overrule
Stormont.  Britain (as
opposed to the United
  Kingdom) has not outlawed metric units for distances
– they just have not permitted them. Scotland has its own parliament who
can authorize metric distances but not speeds on their roads.  The Welsh 
assembly
has similar powers.

 

To add to the confusion, Britain has two Overseas
Territories (Gibraltar which is
administered by the Ministry of Defence) and a military area in Cyprus) and in 
addition there are the Crown
Dependencies in Europe (which are independent of the UK,
but are part of the Queen’s domains) – Jersey, Guernsey
and the Isle of Man.  These five territories have freedom to choose metric
or imperial units.  Gibraltar and the army bases in Cyprus use metric units – 
the
others use imperial units.

 

And you guys thought that the status of Puerto Rico was complex? 

 









From: owner-u...@colostate.edu
[mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf
Of ezra.steinb...@comcast.net

Sent: 11 June 2010 05:18

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:47688] Are metric
speed limit and/or distance signs permitted by US Federal law or regulation?



 



All:



I just realized I am not clear about the legal status of metric distance and
speed limit signs in the USA.



Do Federal laws and regulations permit them in all circumstances? Only some?



What role do state, county, and local laws and regulations play in all this?



I ask because I'm wondering if turns out to be the case that the UK is the only
country on the planet that has officially outlawed metric distance and road
signs on officially maintained roadways. Even though such signs are virtually
non-existent here in the USA,
I'm presuming this is so simply because the states have chosen not to use them
rather than because they have been made illegal either at the Federal or the
state level.



Thanks,

Ezra



                                          
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