Mercury (Hobart)

Five-car pileup ties city traffic in knots

- CAMERON WHITELEY

A FIVE-VEHICLE pileup on the Tasman Bridge sparked traffic chaos during morning peak hour yesterday, giving a new fleet of rapid response tow trucks their stern first test.

The tow-trucks initiative was rolled out by the State Government this month as a congestion-busting measure, with the vehicles stationed at either end of the bridge to respond to traffic incidents.

The crash was reported to police at 8.48am and police notified at 9.24am that the crash scene had been cleared.

But traffic disruption continued, with a photo taken by a Mercury photograph­er at 9.47am showing gridlock on the approach to the Tasman Bridge.

Outbound vehicles were brought to a standstill because Eastern-bound traffic was restricted to one lane.

“City outbound is a carpark,’’ one driver observed.

Another driver, Trish Beck, was driving to the airport to drop a family member off for a flight to Brisbane when she was caught in the chaos.

Traffic had already slowed to a crawl by the time she neared City Hall, but she was able to detour to get on to the Brooker Highway and to the airport via the Bowen Bridge.

The trip from Hobart to the airport eventually took 45 minutes, far longer than she had allowed. Mrs Beck feared her relative would miss the Jetstar flight. Luckily, even though they arrived 10 minutes after the close of check-in, they were allowed to fly.

No serious injuries were reported from the crash, but one patient was taken to the Royal Hobart Hospital in a stable condition.

Infrastruc­ture Minister Michael Ferguson said the crash was an example of why the Government had invested in the new fleet of tow trucks, which can be on the bridge and responding within a matter of minutes.

“Through the increased capability of these trucks, and the ability to tow two cars at once, I’m advised the affected vehicles were able to be cleared this morning within 35 minutes of the crash taking place, a massive achievemen­t during peak-hour traffic and much quicker than has ever happened before,’’ he said.

 ?? Picture: RICHARD JUPE ?? STANDSTILL: Cars banked up on the Tasman Highway heading out of the Hobart CBD yesterday morning.
Picture: RICHARD JUPE STANDSTILL: Cars banked up on the Tasman Highway heading out of the Hobart CBD yesterday morning.

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