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By Brad Gardner | January 15, 2010

Truck drivers travelling the Newell Highway may face pressure to cut their speed limits because of claims “lawless” truckies are harassing grey nomads.

Mobile home owner Raymond Moore claims the Newell has been turned into an “outlaw zone” filled with B-doubles tearing down the road at speeds of 130km/h.

Moore told ATN truckies are tailgating caravan and mobile home drivers and threatening them if they do not get out of their way.

He says he and other travellers are taking their complaints to the NSW Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA) to urge greater on-road enforcement and for trucks to be restricted to a top speed of 90km/h.

“We’re going to call on the RTA to bring the speed limit of trucks down,” Moore says.

Moore wants the RTA to implement a system similar to the one used by Simon National Carriers, which limits all its trucks to 90km/h to improve safety and efficiency.

The highway’s speed limit was recently cut from 110km/h to 100km/h.

Although a spokesperson for the RTA says the roads department has received some complaints about truck drivers using the highway, there are no plans to reduce the speed limit to 90km/h.

However, the RTA spokesperson says enforcement numbers will be increased during the next three years and regular RTA inspections will continue.

“They are lawless out there. It’s the only way you can describe them,” Moore says of truck drivers.

“The speed these guys are travelling at on the Newell Highway is mind boggling.”

According to Moore, an elderly man was harassed to the point where he refused to get back on the road because he was a “nervous wreck”.

“The truck driver came up and tormented the hell out of him,” Moore says.

“He was there for six days too frightened to move.”

Moore says he has in the past attempted to help truck drivers while on the road and that he grew up in a family that respected the profession.

But since packing up and driving around Australia, Moore says he has lost all respect for them.

“It’s not just me it’s the whole caravan and mobile home community,” he says.

While saying the speed restriction works for his company, Simon National Carriers Managing Director David Simon says applying it to the industry may cause more problems between truckies and motorists.

“Whilst we believe it is good for us, I wouldn’t suggest the whole industry slow down to that speed,” he says.

The chairman of the Australian Caravan Club, Lionel Musell, says there have been issues between travellers and truck drivers for a few years.

But he says the group educates its members to help truck drivers by not getting in their way.

He says trucking safety advocate Rod Hannifey has a done a lot of work to improve relations between both parties.

“He has done a lot of good bringing the two together,” Mussell says.

Rather than calling for speed limits to be cut, the manager of the NSW branch of the Australian Trucking Association (ATA NSW), Jill Lewis, says there should be a focus on educating drivers.

Lewis says she is unaware of significant incidents between truckies and grey nomads on the Newell.

“Most truck drivers are professional and drive to the conditions of the road,” she says.

“I don’t know reducing the speed another 10km/h will make a lot of difference.”

The spokesperson for the RTA says the NSW Government has invested more than $50 million this financial year to improve safety on the Newell, following a $30 million safety investment announced lat year.

“The NSW Government has invested more than $250 million on safety and maintenance upgrades on the Newell in the past five years,” the spokesperson says.

The upgrades include improved signposting, dedicated turning lanes, sealed side roads and safety barriers.


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COMMENTS (9)
Comment by 16628626
posted 2 years ago
The point here is that that the speed LIMIT for all vehicles on this road is 100 klm per hour. That does not mean that everyone has to travel at 100klm, it means it is the LIMIT.
If any vehicle wants to travel above that limit it runs a heightened risk of an accident or of being intercepted, that is their choice. The issue of tailgating is where many motorists become concerned. The laws relating to tailgating are hard to police because you have to be caught in the act. It is a big issue for the general motoring public and the application of a bit more common sense by truck drivers in this area would go a long way to improving the image of the industry. At the end of the day it comes back to better on road policing, (or more of it) but don't hold your breath on that one, so it is back to commom courtesy and a bit of common sense for all concerned. Mark Williams.
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
To all car drivers out there... if you don't know the road, and need to travel slower at least have some consideration for those of us driving trucks and let us come around you instead of holding us back... those that speed up on overtaking lanes and then back off are the ones who get harrassed by us. We have laws limiting us to 12 or 14 hours driving/work time within any 24 hour period, and our trips are planned accordingly, and idiots playing games cost us time and money. We're just trying to make a living.
Comment by Greg
posted 2 years ago
Good thoughts, Rod; it would be handy if the Brain Dead gutless Idiot who made the "p#ss Funny" comment would come forward and be counted.
I dont like our chances, but he is representative of the few we hear on the highways, who are making it difficult to raise the professionalism of the industry! Greg H
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
six days at the side of the road.i dont belive that!!!!
Comment by Jerry
posted 2 years ago
overpolicing of trucks which according to the RTRA is coming ,and or reducing the speed limit might just be the straw to unite truck drivers to take a stand against the police RTA and droconian laws we drive under , one point i will demand is articulated or heavy licences for all people who tow caravans or moblile homes.
that should take most of them of the road
the current laws in place if policed properly would remove all drivers who play with speed limiters (there are a more than few and we all know who they are ) i can do a list it would take a couple of days to write them all down
jerry brown sarre
Comment by Paul & Cathi
posted 2 years ago
Unfortunately every profession has a minority of cowboys within it who think they are too good to follow the rules. Our industry requires (and generally has) a real committment to safety, because our tolerances are so small that our risks are much higher than most other industries.

We need to continue to educate our drivers, whether they are employees or owner-drivers, and encourage our mates on the road to display the professionalism the industry requires. Where we can, we should also support people like Rod, who do so much to help improve the image of the industry (and not just the image, either).

What we also need to see is professionalism in the media, and a little bit of fact-checking before putting sensationalist stories to print. Exactly how did a driver towing a caravan or mobile home measure the speed of a heavy vehicle as being 130 km / hour?

Perhaps there are some idiots out there trying to kill themselves, but I think it highly unlikely that any statistically reportable number of heavy vehicles could travel at this speed regularly without increasing accidents or enforcement repercussions. Be that as it may, unless there is verifiable proof that the vehicle was travelling at that speed, it SHOULD NOT be reported in the media. This reeks of headline grabbing, not journalism.

Cathi Payne
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
Firstly to the idiot who wrote the first comment about it being funny. Will he think it funny if because of the actions of the few idiot mates that behave this way, that the whole industry will cop another flogging, lower speeds, more laws and heavier fines? How funny will that be? Would it be as funny if it was his father or wife or daughter treated the way it has been described? Let us all hope it was not as bad as it is portrayed, because there are always two sides to a story.

I have had other drivers raise concern for the new speedlimit causing more frustration and possibly leading to more and or bigger crashes. TRUCKIES MOSTLY GO TO WORK TO GET HOME SAFELY. Those who think they own the road, or who abuse others who may not understand trucks, will see us all driving for 40 hours, getting paid less and monitored to within seconds and metres and that will spell the end of the on road professionals, some of whom still love the job and aim and try to do it safely and professionally.

The new 100 speed limit is causing lines of cars travelling at or below the 100limit and too scared to pass one another, with no safe travelling distance between them and leaving no chance for trucks to overtake with some of the too few overtaking lanes on inclines. This leads to even bigger ques of traffic, with more drivers getting frustrated and will I fear eventually lead to a major pile up involving far more than the one frustrated overtaker.

I will continue to work with caravanners for them to better understand truckies and believe most will try and do the right thing when they understand our side of things, but when the actions of the few screw it for all the others, it will be no wonder if we have more of them as enemies instead of friends. They do not all understand trucks and whilst they may sometimes frustrate us because of that lack of understanding, we would be better off calling them up and saying "hello" and explaining things sensibly, instead of abusing them on the UHF.

Caravanners will unite and have many people with access to computers and pollies and where we cannot work together as a group, if they do, we have much to fear. Rod Hannifey.
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
“He was there for six days too frightened to move.”
That is p#ss funny!
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
changing the speed limit has to go both ways...Those person who travel on a highway at a top speed of 70 or 80 are also a danger..I am not saying that some big ones speed excessively..Yes they do, but those who travel too slowly and don't move an inch are a danger as well..In fact I recall being in a truck with my partner and our children and wen we would get to an overtaking lane these slow ones would speed up and by the time we got the truck moving,(no you cant just plant the foot and get instant results,they take a while to wind up) the overtaking lane was finished and bugger me dead they slow down again..Who is torrmenting whom?
So before you go on a tirade about all the truckies think about your own driving..And no I am not referring to ALL drivers,Either little ones or big ones..Just the 'select few"

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