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By Brad Gardner | August 12, 2009

Queensland’s government may face legal action from a trucking company over claims the state’s road department is failing its duty of care to truck drivers.

Mineral and Mine Movers Transport owner Peter Schuback says the Department of Transport and Main Roads has an obligation to improve road safety or face criminal and civil charges.

The industry veteran, whose company is based in Hervey Bay in northern Queensland, claims the road network is unsafe and has urged the department to take immediate action to resolve the issue.

Unless it does so, Schuback says Transport and Main Roads can be prosecuted under the Civil Liability Act , which puts the onus on an individual or public authority to rectify a danger once notified of it if it falls within their responsibilities.

Those who do not resolve the problem after being notified can be brought before a court.

“I’ve put them on notice that the roads are unsafe,” Schuback says.

“If they don’t take notice, they become liable. If we can be charged under the law so can they.”

In a letter written to the department, Schuback says Queensland highways are plagued by uneven surfaces, broken edges, potholes, “excessive drop offs” and are unfit for wet weather conditions.

“It is now your duty of care responsibility to have all roads brought up to a safe condition and to reduce the speed limits on all main roads and highways in Queensland until such work is carried out,” he writes to the department.

Schuback cites the federally-funded Warrego Highway as one of the worst stretches of road in Queensland, saying too many motorists and truck drivers are dying.

But while the Act puts the onus on parties to take action, it also has a clause stating road authorities cannot be held liable if they are unaware of the danger.

“Whether or not the Department of Transport and Main Roads is liable for damage or otherwise depends upon the particular facts and circumstances of any alleged incident,” a government spokesperson says.

The clause is meant to recognise a road department’s large maintenance obligations and that funds are not always available to finance repairs or upgrades.

Schuback, however, claims he has contacted the department on numerous occasions about the state of the road network. The letter sent to Transport and Main Roads and obtained by ATN is dated June 23, 2009.

WARREGO NOT GOOD ENOUGH, CORONER SAYS
A coroner earlier this year also recommended greater efforts to improve the Warrego Highway.

An inquest into a fatal collision between a truck and a car on the highway heard evidence that maintenance could have averted the accident.

Vanessa Louise Kingston died on March 29, 2006 when her car collided with the front bull bar of a rigid truck at Dalby north west of Brisbane.

“Truck drivers who gave evidence at the inquest all remarked on the poor state of the roadway in this area. All believe the roadway is unsafe and poorly maintained,” Coroner Sheryl Cornack wrote in her report.

Cornack wrote there was “significant erosion at the edges of the road” due to heavy vehicle traffic and found that the edge of lane Kingston was driving in was eroded and had a 70mm drop off.

“These factors cause danger to motorists. The width of the roadway appears inadequate for heavy vehicles with protruding mirrors,” Cornack’s report states.

Cornack recommended a review be conducted to determine if widening was needed to accommodate heavy vehicle traffic and also recommended the route be monitored and necessary maintenance carried out.

The Queensland Opposition used the findings to call for upgrades to large sections of the highway, with the Liberal-National Party’s Ray Hopper calling the road “a highway to hell”.

"The coroner has confirmed what everyone who uses the Warrego knows – the pavement is far too narrow, the edges are deep and dangerous, and a lot of the roadway is so badly rutted that keeping control of a vehicle is often very difficult,” he says.

Hopper accused the Bligh Government of ignoring “the death trap” and urged Main Roads Minister Craig Wallace and Transport Minister Rachel Nolan to pay more attention to the route.

WE’RE TAKING ACTION: MAIN ROADS
A spokesperson for Transport and Main Roads says the department is improving sections of the highway as part of a federally funded program.

The spokesperson says $10 million is being spent resurfacing the road between Tivoli and Blacksoil near Ipswich, with another $7.5 million being used to bankroll road resurfacing and a guardrail on the Marburg and Minden ranges.

The department is also planning to widen the road shoulder at Minden and is currently holding community consultations on proposed safety works on the Villis Road intersection west of Brisbane, the spokesperson says.

This follows an $800,000 cash injection from the Federal Government for routine maintenance the past two years, which the spokesperson says has been used on various locations on the highway.

The spokesperson says the Rudd Government has also committed $55 million to the highway between now and 2014 to widen and strengthen the route as part of the Nation Building Program.

Of this, $5 million will also be spent on rest areas and $10 million spent on overtaking lanes between Oakey and Dalby.

In responding to Schuback’s claims, Transport and Main Roads also says it regularly monitors speed limits on the highway.

“Reductions in speed limits have been introduced along some sections of the Warrego Highway for the safety of motorists,” the spokesperson says.

According to the department, speed limits have been reduced on sections that run through Ipswich, Toowoomba and Oakey.

Active speed signs will also be trialled this month at Minden, Blacksoil and Haigslea-Amberley Road to determine if they will influence driver behaviour.

“Using radar, the signs are able to determine the speed of an approaching vehicle and display a warning message if the vehicle is exceeding the speed limit,” the spokesperson says.

ROAD TOLL INCREASES
Despite the department’s efforts to improve road safety, however, Queensland is set to eclipse last year's road toll.

The latest statistics released on August 9 show 22 more people have died compared to the same time last year. The road toll is currently 223, with 31 of those fatalities due to crashes involving heavy vehicles.

The weekly report says 45 truck drivers had died this time last year. The latest statistics stem a growing trend in heavy vehicle fatalities, which rose steadily from 20 to 26 between 2004 and 2006 before hitting 38 in 2007.

The Warrego Highway is a main freight route in Queensland, with Cornack noting the number of trucks using the network more than doubled between 2004 and 2006.
COMMENTS (10)
Comment by Unknown
posted 1 year ago
We need action on the Warrego Hwy between Toowoomba & Chinchilla now. What does it take for this govt to wake up. We need 4 lane hwy with overtake lanes. Brisbane can have them, why not out here? If govt family died out here the hwy would be done straght way. Help us all now, not in 10 years.
Signed, M Compton, Chinchilla, Qld
Comment by Unknown
posted 1 year ago
It seems obvious to me that since the introduction of the new work diaries, the increased penalties are so severe that for being late is a big fine of around $400 and up to thousands. Therefore, these laws don't allow drivers time to take it easy and drive to suit road conditions for fear of running late and copping big fines. Surely it would be a safer practice if the law gave drivers an hour's grace without penalty to be able to slow down without fear of big fines or even allowing a driver to go home if within an hour. Surely sleeping at home is a better way to manage fatigue! How many times have you heard someone say over the UHF that they can't stop till they get past a safetycam camera!
Comment by Unknown
posted 1 year ago
If the powers that be gave a stuff, the roads of all states would be fine. However, those in the game know they don't give a toss about us truckies. I've been in the game 20 years, soon to give it up. Too much crap involved, too manny have died for government lack of action.
Comment by Unknown
posted 1 year ago
The QLD government should be brought to face negligence charges over the state of the laughable Bruce (Swiss cheese) Hwy from Gympie to Cairns. $10 million of federal funds to patch a goat track while Brisbanites get how much North Queensland-generated revenue spent buying their votes around south-east Queensland. Not only truck drivers are having their lives gambled away but every other road user as well. Bring in road engineers from the NT to show these amateurs how to build roads, not patch them and place up reduced speed limit signs and hope that works. Another bull shit bandaid attempted fix.
Marcus, Townsville.
Comment by Unknown
posted 1 year ago
It's not just Qld roads (or just the section mentioned) that the powers-that-be have to answer for. My husband was killed in our semi trailer at Tyndale, NSW in 1998, with the state of that piece of road playing a major part in his death. Funnily enough, this section of the highway, although not mentioned initially on the 'Pacific Hwy Upgrade' proposal, was totally bypassed some 4 months later. It's about time somebody in the transport industry threatens to hold those responsible to task.
Comment by Unknown
posted 1 year ago
Ellis Consolidated specialise in profiling and road shoulder paving. I believe the service Ellis can provide Main Roads & Councils is the way of the future for road shoulder widening. The process is quick, tidy and cost effective. A cost effective way of upgrading rural roads is to shoulder widen the road and then to do a total width reseal. Food for thought!
Comment by Unknown
posted 1 year ago
As an Auxiliary Firefighter on the Warrego Hwy, I have attended many a road traffic crash (RTC), as they are known in our game. I have to agree that some of the worst sections of the Warrego are on the other side of Dalby, specifically between Dalby and Chinchilla. It is frightening how narrow the road is between Macalister and Warra. I would hate to be towing a caravan along there and pass a road train. But of course, nothing exists this side of the range, therefore all the money is spent on the lower sections of the Warrego, such as in the Brisbane Valley.
A section between Drillham and Dulacca is dangerously uneven as well as a dangerous section in the first 6km west of Wallumbilla that has also been unattended to in 15 years.
Another dreadful stretch of road that comes to mind is between Taroom and Wandoan, on the Leichardt Hwy. We travelled that section coming home from a 2 week caravan holiday in Sept 2009 and it was literally 3 days before I could walk without pain again.
I have to wonder where the registration fees are going that I pay for two trucks and three cars. It certainly isn't towards the road that I drive on.
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
The worrego has been a mess for more than 15 years why does it take so many deaths to get some ACTION becouse they dont have to use that HWY.
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
Well said Wellsy, You would wonder how or why the Qld Gov could/would/should allow bab triples and/or abb quads on the roads anywhere in Qld with the death toll being as it is and the roads being so far under standard already, surely they can see the obvious death and carnage that is about to unfold in Qld ?
Comment by Unknown
posted 2 years ago
Guard rails at marburg? hows about fixing the black stuff we drive on so there is less of a chance that the guard railes will need to catch a car that has been shaken off the road or replaiced after a truck has gone straight through it. Well I guess there getting closer to Dalby where the fatal happened, but how many more lives will be lost by 2014. As for the heavy vehicle death toll, how many more of our brothers have to die before the goverment wakes up and realises that they are beating the wrong bush with over the top fines and regulations. What they don't understand (goverment and professors) is that just cause you can tie off a rope doesn't mean you should be a truckie, and just cause your log book says you can drive/rest a 12 or 14 hour stint doesn't mean you should or can. This is a specialised industry with little room for error.

Wellsy, Marburg

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