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Results revealed of survey about truck drivers from overseas

More than 85 per cent of 1900 survey respondents say foreign truck drivers should not be able to drive in Australia on their foreign licence.

That was one of the key findings from an Austroads probe released this week that canvassed industry views on the management of overseas licensed heavy vehicle drivers.

Austroads said the anonymous questionnaire was a response to growing industry safety concerns and the need to recognise the differences between driving in Australia and overseas.

It asked questions around how long heavy vehicle drivers from overseas should be permitted to drive on an overseas licence, what kind of vehicles they should be allowed to operate, and the process of transferring to an Australian licence.

Austroads hopes that the answers given will provide it with “valuable information” that will help inform policy review and decision making.

Below is a summary of the main findings from the survey and an outline of the next steps.

Safety concerns

A number of respondents commented that there are many skilled and competent heavy vehicle drivers who hold an overseas licence or have transitioned to an Australian licence and work as drivers. However, there were also areas where safety and skills issues were raised.

Key areas of concern were:

Road safety culture and driving etiquette: In general, Australians place a high value on safety including on the road. This is supported by road rules and laws. It also translates into the way people drive on the road where most people seek to respectfully and safely share the road with others. These same values and legislative frameworks are not universally shared. Someone coming from a country with a different road use culture may drive in a way that is not aligned with Australian expectations or safety focus e.g. accelerating to merge ahead of someone; tailgating; not observing line markings and passing in situations where it is not safe to do so.

Knowledge of Australian road rules: To support safety outcomes, Australia has a robust set of road rules and regulations to promote safe driving, particularly for heavy vehicle drivers e.g. fatigue laws; chain of responsibility. A person driving on an overseas licence may not have any knowledge of these laws or the enforcement consequences if they are broken.

English language skills: Where a driver does not have a good grasp of English they may struggle to comprehend or clarify instructions from their employer; fail to use or understand what is being said on the two-way radio; and not understand road signs. All these situations can lead to poor safety outcomes.

Experience in Australian road and driving conditions: Rural and long-distance driving in Australia presents some particular challenges. A person who has not driven on these sorts of roads and under these driving conditions, can present a safety risk.

Experience in larger combination vehicles: Australia has a system of graduated licensing where a person progressively builds their skills in rigids before moving to combination vehicles. This graduated licensing system is not found in most other countries. In addition, the size of heavy and multi-combination vehicles often exceeds the vehicle types a person has experienced in their own country. There are safety concerns with a person driving large combinations without progressively building a bank of experience.

Skills: Some drivers have limited experience developing skills that are routinely expected of a heavy vehicle driver in Australia (including reversing and trailer coupling).

 Quality of training and assessment: A significant number of respondents outlined the need for increased quality and integrity of Australian training and assessment standards. The number of very short courses on offer is considered a problem. The relatively low level of behind-the-wheel time was of particular concern.

Possible options for exploration

The survey canvased some possible options and sought views about these. Key findings were:

  • 85 per cent said that a person should not be able to drive a heavy vehicle while on an overseas licence. By contrast, only 25 per cent said that a person should not be able to drive a car while on an overseas licence.
  • 17 per cent of people said that it is acceptable to drive a rigid but not a combination heavy vehicle for personal. (therefore not work-related) purposes. This compares to only 10 per cent who said that it was acceptable to drive a rigid but not combination vehicle for work-related purposes.
  • 36 per cent of people said that a person transferring from an overseas licence should first hold an Australian car licence for a period before being able to obtain any heavy vehicle licence.
  • 50 per cent of people said a person who passed all the Australian learning and assessment requirements should be able to transfer from an overseas licence and obtain either a rigid or heavy combination licence.

Next steps

State and territory licensing regulators will be presented with the findings of the survey, as well as information gained from a number of industry interviews, said Austroads.

Based on the issues raised, the findings paper includes a discussion on potential areas for policy change. Options supported by states and territories for further investigation will need to be more substantively assessed.

“Legislative change may be required to implement most policy changes and this change is subject to processes of community and government scrutiny and oversight.”

9 Comments

  1. I genuinely believe the survey that I contributed to is correct and no racial bias was in the answers.

    1. Total support for mandatory review on licencing on all overseas drivers and operators , It needs to be consistent with all Australian rules and regulations as we Austrlians face to obtain an Multi Combination licence.

    2. That’s all well and good, but the politicians will not do anything about it until one of their own family members are killed. They’re too scared of getting called racist by the leotards.

    1. Yes I agree with most other Aussie drivers these oversea drivers shouldn’t be allowed to just come into Australia and start driving B/Doubles on our roads. I’m semi retired now so only doing a little bit of driving now but boy it’s not as safe now as it was many years ago. They should have to do some sort if a driving test, there is some good one’s amongst them but the percentage is the wrong way.

  2. I have held a multi licences over 50 years of driving multi vehicles .But looking at today’s multi cultural drivers are the worst on the road total disregard to other road users. I always think how the hell are these drivers allowed to drive these big rigs.

  3. I was talking to an acquaintance the other day. He said he sold a truck to an overseas person, who had an MC licence. It turned out to be a motorcycle licence, which is what MC is in there country. He received a heavy vehicle licence here when he applied in Australia. Maybe this should also be looked into.

      1. The testers get paid for results and it’s a race to the bottom of the barrel, like a car licence getting a truck licence should be a minimum amount of hours under instruction, but in real live situations, not tooling around the back streets on a weekend
        Testers should not be self certified, they can’t be trusted there should be a government testers in the truck

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