Local Ipswich NewsLocal Ipswich NewsLocal Ipswich News
  • Home
  • News & Editorials
    • Community
    • Ipswich Arts
    • Local Seniors
    • Local Defence
    • Sport
    • Business
  • Ipswich Events
  • Read Online
  • Pickup Locations
  • Contact Us
Search
Reading: Change in strategy needed as road fatalities go up, not down
Share
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Local Ipswich NewsLocal Ipswich News
  • News & Editorial
  • Community News
  • Local Seniors
  • Local Business
  • Ipswich Events & Arts
  • Sport
  • Local Defence
Search
  • Home
  • Read Online
  • Pickup Locations
  • Get Home Delivery
  • Home
  • News & Editorial
Copyright © 2023 Local News Group | Local Ipswich News | Ipswich Local Magazine | Logan Local Magazine
Website by Local News Group Digital
Local Ipswich News > Blog > Ipswich Motoring > Change in strategy needed as road fatalities go up, not down
Ipswich Motoring

Change in strategy needed as road fatalities go up, not down

Local Ipswich News
Local Ipswich News
Published: August 10, 2023
Share
TAKE CARE: Despite continual warnings for drivers to pay attention whilst driving, many still find themselves in accidents that could have been avoided.
TAKE CARE: Despite continual warnings for drivers to pay attention whilst driving, many still find themselves in accidents that could have been avoided.
SHARE

THE latest quarterly Benchmarking of the National Road Safety Strategy shows governments remain unable to track most of their agreed targets, and road deaths are now increasing, rather than declining as intended.

Published by the nation’s peak motoring body, the new report shows Australia is far from on course to meet the Strategy’s targets of halving road deaths through the decade to 2030 and reducing serious injuries by 30 per cent over that period.

The report shows 1,205 people died on Australian roads in the 12 months to 30 June 2023 – a 3.2 per cent rise on the previous corresponding period.

It shows no Australian jurisdiction is on track to meet fatality reduction targets, while death rates for drivers, passengers, pedestrians, cyclists, and motorcyclists are all above the Strategy’s agreed targets.

- Advertisement -

We know this target is badly off-track, but progress on three of the Strategy’s other headline targets cannot even be quantified because the necessary data is either not collected or not reported.

AAA Managing Director Michael Bradley said you can’t improve what you don’t measure, and when it comes to road trauma, the Australian Government was measuring very little.

“In 2023, Australia is unable to adequately quantify the extent of road trauma, or the effectiveness of interventions being deployed to reduce it,” he said.

Cars have never been safer and road funding never higher, and yet road fatalities are climbing.

“A new approach is needed, starting with national statistics to guide law enforcement, road investment, and policy change.”

The AAA’s report finds that Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, and Western Australia continue to have road fatality rates well over the national average.

The Strategy’s targets of halving road deaths by 2030 and of eliminating all road deaths of children seven years and under are not on track to be met. But at least they can be measured.

Progress on the Strategy’s three other headline targets cannot yet even be quantified because the necessary data is either not collected or not reported. These three targets are:

  • reducing serious injuries by 30 per cent.
  • eliminating road deaths in city CBDs; and
  • eliminating deaths on all national highways and on high-speed roads covering 80 per cent of travel across the network.

The AAA is calling for Australia’s next National Partnership Agreement on Land Transport Infrastructure Projects (to come into effect July 2024) to require states and territories to provide relevant road safety data to the Commonwealth as a condition of Commonwealth funding.

Matchbox keeps on rolling
Hot weather prompts a warning
Record turnout and high-speed action at Queensland Raceway
Review of third party insurance
Dual-Ghia convertible hand-picked for stars
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Previous Article Artist Deborah Baronas from Rhode Island, USA Ipswich Threads
Next Article ON TRACK: West Moreton Health Chair, Michael Willis, Minister for Health, Shannon Fentiman and West Moreton Health CEO, Hannah Bloch, during a recent inspection of the Ripley Satellite Hospital. x-ray room. Ipswich doesn’t get a fair deal
Copyright © 2024 Local News Group - Website by LNG Digital
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?