The Gold Coast Bulletin

RAT RUN GOD BOTHERS

Grave fears as fed-up drivers take high road to dodge M1 chaos

- KIRSTIN PAYNE kirstin.payne@news.com.au

PASTOR Trevor Mildren has had enough of ‘unholy rollers’ using his 150-year-old church to escape peak-hour gridlock on the Pacific Motorway. The pastor has locked the heavenly gate to the Pimpama Uniting Church on Creek St after near misses involving frustrated drivers. Motorists were zipping through the church cemetery to avoid crawling 150 metres in 23 minutes on congested roads. “We have had two near misses. One was a child who was just missed,” Pastor Mildren said. The Bulletin last week revealed more than half the traffic at Exit 45 at Pimpama comprised locals trying to get to shops and children to school.

A GOLD Coast pastor has closed the heavenly gates outside his 150-year-old church to stop rat-run commuters using it to avoid M1 gridlock.

Trevor Mildren padlocked the main gate at the Pimpama Uniting Church in Creek St after a series of near misses involving frustrated drivers.

Motorists tired of crawling 150 metres in 23 minutes at congested roundabout­s and arterials were zipping through the church cemetery to beat the peak-hour rush.

“We have had two near misses. One was a child who was just missed so I thought enough was enough, we had to do something,” Pastor Mildren said.

“Cutting minutes off a journey is not worth someone getting hurt.”

Exit 45 at Pimpama has become a nightmare for drivers. The Bulletin last week revealed more than half the traffic at the clogged interchang­e comprised locals trying to get to shops, work and children to school.

Previous stories showed a round-trip school drop-off was taking parents well over an hour.

Pastor Mildren (pictured) said about two dozen speeding rat runners were using the church every afternoon to shave time off their trip.

“We have a few schools in the area and train stations, so after school they come down the hill from the overpass to avoid the first roundabout on to Creek St,” said Pastor Mildren, who has lived at Pimpama for more than 40 years.

“Cars have come flying across and cut through the cemetery.

“The trouble is we have people visiting the cemetery and playgroups. It is a very family-friendly church.

“The gate is now closed. We are sorry for the inconvenie­nce to some, but we could not take the chance of someone getting hit.

“It really wasn't done lightly. People just weren’t slowing down. We had spoken with council.

“When we moved here there was no train station, the only primary school was the Ormeau State School and Creek St was considered the main road. I guess this is what comes with watching the area grow so much.”

The church was built in

1871.

Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show Pimpama’s population swelled from 9484 residents in 2016 to 12,464 in 2017 while Coomera went up another 10 per cent, welcoming an extra 1400 people. Nearby Ormeau was another booming suburb.

Coomera MP Micheal Crandon said he was aware of the school rush build-up that occurred in the area.

“It is disappoint­ing. We know that there are traffic issues on the M1 and we have been fighting for upgrades to the exits,” he said.

“But at the same time it is disappoint­ing to hear that some constituen­ts have decided to use a road through a cemetery to avoid the traffic.

“I can understand the frustratio­n but often people and children are walking around that area.

“This is an indication of what has been going on and the shortfall in the planning and infrastruc­ture for the area.

“That being said, we have got issues in other areas that are a lot worse. There are plenty of off and on ramps still need work.”

The State Government is expected to spend $1.5 million this month upgrading the Pimpama and Ormeau M1 exits.

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