Aussie vehicle drivers are being advised that âwe all need spaceâ when traveling with truckies prompting vehicle drivers not to make a ridiculous and deadly error.
Video recorded on dashboard webcam this month is a best instance of a lethal trouble on our roadways, with an excitable vehicle driver taking a danger that nearly finished their life.
The video footage recorded by an additional vehicle driver on the Frankford Road freeway in Tasmania reveals the vehicle driver of a 4WD Ford Everest surpassing an 18-wheeler on a solitary lane roadway while occurring a small bendâ extremely directly missing out on an additional semi-trailer vehicle taking a trip in the contrary instructions.
It was shared today by Dashcams Tasmania, which explained it as âprobably the closest we have seen to a fatal head-on in a videoâ.
âHow they avoided being removed from the living I do not know. Whoever was driving that oncoming truck deserves a medal for saving a life.. or many lives,â the team created.
Speaking to Yahoo News Australia, the Executive Director of the National Heavy Vehicle Regulator (NHVR), Michelle Tayler, stated when speaking with vehicle vehicle drivers regarding the behavior they see when driving, they wish to communicate a message for all vehicle drivers to stay considerate and understand the extremely actual risks.
âWeâve got more than 200,000 truck drivers across the country âĤ and theyâre on the road all the time,â she stated.
âItâs a two way streetâĤ As a truck driver they need to respect the fact that theyâre in a much larger vehicle and it can be quite intimidating to smaller cars.
âBut likewise as a smaller sized car, if youâre placing on your own at risk, youâre truly leaving your life in the hands of that vehicle vehicle driver,â she warned.
Reacting to the viral clip on social media, some Aussies labelled the 4WD motorist an â boneheadâ for making the daring overtaking decision.
Nearly 200 road deaths last year involved trucks
According to Tayler, itâs not uncommon for trucks to feature heavily in the statistics of road fatalities.
âWe had actually 59 lives shed in Queensland and nearly 200 throughout the nation in 2015 entailing a vehicle,â she told Yahoo News.
In total, 1,300 people died on Australian roads in 2024 â up from 1,258 in 2023.
On Thursday, the NHVR along with the Queensland Minister for Transport and Main Roads, Brent Mickelberg, launched a road safety campaign dubbed âA Truckie Knowsâ in an attempt to help share the industryâs knowledge and experience to make our roads a safer place.
In a recent survey conducted by the NHVR, nearly nine in 10 truck drivers reported experiencing a dangerous situation with a light vehicle over a four-week period.
âWe truly intended to deal with the trucking sector to comprehend what theyâre seeing and what we can do to make their officeâ which are the roadwaysâ more secure,â Tayler told Yahoo.
As part of the campaign, authorities are reminding all drivers to be aware, to stay out of a truckâs blind spots, to leave adequate space for others on the road and to refrain from tailgating.
âOne of one of the most crucial components of roadway security is providing every car the area it requires,â Minister Mickelberg said. âAs this project calls out, we can all affect the means we engage with various other roadway customers.â
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