Opinion

Our road safety academics need to start talking to truckies

The ONLY regional road safety solution Australia’s academics appear to have is to lower speed limits on WA and NT regional roads.

As WA heads towards a road safety summit next week with the premier, the mainstream media has been flooded with calls by such academics (often from the inner city) calling for speed reductions.

This one-dimensional solution by Australia’s road safety academics does not do justice to their intelligence whilst depriving Australia of the multi-factor solutions needed to improve road safety, particularly in the regions.

Examples

  • What about road funding? No mention of the appalling underfunding of Australia’s regional roads, as The Guardian reported on November 12, 2023:

“Regional Australian roads have become a “dangerous disgrace”, according to a new report that warns they will get worse due to paltry funding that favours cities and forces poorer regional councils to waste repair money erecting signs in tribute to government grants.” 

  • What about enforcement? Recently driving back from Sydney to Perth, I saw just two police patrol cars over a 4000km trip through three states.
  • What about driver attitude? One of the most frequent comments from truck drivers is the appalling attitude of drivers. People in various vehicle types who think that they are more important than others on the road and whose driving behaviour is commensurately high risk.
  • What about alternative travel? What about things like why regional people are forced to drive. Regional families may need to get to a capital city for a medical appointment etc. What options do they have? Regional airfares are prohibitively expensive and limited, as for taking a train or bus well that is not an option in large parts of regional Australia.
  • There are lots of other “what abouts” that could be added, especially by truck drivers who are the on-road driving professionals in Australia, but rarely if ever consulted by the road safety academics.

National Road Safety Strategy is failing

The National Road Safety Strategy 2021 to 2030 target was to reduce Australia’s annual fatalities by at least 50 per cent and serious injuries by at least 30 per cent by 2030. YET, in the last five years, the national road toll has risen over 20 per cent from 1102 people in FY 19/20 to 1327 FY 23/24. Clearly it is NOT working.

Canberra bureaucrats proposed a 40km/h dusk-to-dawn speed limit on some regional highways. Image: Bluedog Cartoons

What do the speed limit academics really want? 

The call by road safety academics to lower speeds may or may not have merit. But where do they stop in lowering speeds? Recently Canberra bureaucrats proposed a 40km/h dusk-to-dawn speed limit on some regional highways. Similar proposals to have night time road safety speed limits have also been proposed for regional highways. This poses the question of what is the target speed limit academics want on Australia’s regional roads?

Need to try harder

Our road safety academics need to try harder, as do we all, to find solutions to this national road safety tragedy. For the academics, their first step should be to start consulting with our nation’s truck drivers!

4 Comments

  1. I recently operated a BDouble side tippers from Bowen to Townsville for 6 weeks – 2 round trips per shift and am appalled by the disgusting behaviour of caravanners mainly, but other road users who play games with trucks, alternating between slowing down and then speeding up so they cannot be overtaken in the passing lanes. Surely anyone who purchases a caravan should have some sort of licence endorsement after a course?? Most seem oblivious to having a long line of vehicles behind them but treat overtaking lanes as a drag strip and speed up.
    My heart goes out to truckies who traverse this highway all the time.

    1. Trucks are usually able to do 100km/h, Caravans are generally unstable at that speed. My tow vehicle manufacturer sets a limit of 90 and recommend 80.
      So truck (and other Caravans) are often overtaking me and I don’t want them just behind me anyway so I do everything to let them pass.
      Truck drivers are well trained. Caravan drivers are mostly not. I did the 1 day course available through a private provider and got little benefit.
      Governments provide no training. Some private websites provide amateur opinions as advice that is often wrong.
      Many Caravans are waiting for something to go wrong. I have just completed a 20,000km 4 month lap and can confirm there are many drivers out there not going too well including some trucks that cut me off and cannot keep on their side of the road when overtaking. I saw only a couple of police cars so that is not working.

  2. That will only cause more problems.
    I am not a truck driver.
    But I believe it is time car driver’s had more respect for truck drivers.
    These suicide jockeys that pull in front of truck’s at intersections are the worst

  3. I’m a caravan owner & I share your pain. Followed many cars & caravans going well below the speed limit then floored it all the way through the overtaking lane before slowing down again.

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