Mercury (Hobart)

Call to catch tailgaters

- HELEN KEMPTON

CATCHING tailgaters on speed cameras, reducing the speed limit in urban areas and around schools to 30km/h and replacing wire rope barriers with cement ones are just some of the recommenda­tions to come into a Legislativ­e Council inquiry into road safety.

Chair and Launceston MLC Rosemary Armitage said almost 100 individual­s and groups had made submission­s to the Inquiry.

Bicycle Tasmania said the state needed to transform its transport planning approach from one focused on speed and convenienc­e to one focused on the safety of all road users.

The group made seven recommenda­tions including that parliament amends legislatio­n to permit the adoption of camera technology to capture drivers using mobile phones and issue fines.

Dr Martin George asked that cameras be mounted on tailgating hot spots like Launceston’s Southern Outlet to detect tailgaters.

Bicycle Tasmania and Safe Streets to School both want reduced speed limits.” Please separate our kids from fastmoving traffic so they can walk or ride to school safely. We are asking that within 2km of every school there are pedestrian priority crossings and footpaths on streets with speed limits 40km/h and higher or 30km/h limits for streets without,” Safe Streets to School wrote.

The Tasmania Motorcycle Council criticised the government’s delays to provide funding for a TV campaign directed at bikers but said the introducti­on of a new motorcycle training program that included and on-road component in 2017 had seen MAIB claims fall from 125 a year to 38 in 2020-2021.

“There had been one motorcycle fatality when we requested funding there has now been seven,” the submission said. “Could the committee also look into the use of wire rope barriers on the highway compared to using cement. Wire rope is cheaper but works out a lot dearer over time.”

Ms Armitage said the number of fatalities on Tasmanian roads has remained stubbornly high over the past decade and it appeared current strategies had not delivered the desired result.

“But this is about more than statistics. Each and every fatality and serious accident on our roads is a tragedy that affects friends and family for many years. The emotional and financial cost to the community is massive and we need to look for solutions to the challenges we face.

“Shortly, the inquiry will hold hearings and I look forward to talking to community members and stakeholde­rs regarding how to tackle this issue.”

RACT Chief Advocacy Officer, Garry Bailey, said its submission covered what it considered were the key areas – speed, enforcemen­t and deterrence, roads, vehicles and vulnerable road users.

“In all, we have made 38 recommenda­tions to the committee We can’t go on as we are with a per capita rate of road fatalities that is twice as high as Victoria’s. The fact is, we need fresh thinking and new ideas that are evidenceba­sed, he said.

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