Col.Coleman
13th May 2008, 10:17 PM
In an upcoming trip I posted about traveling the old coach road and 7 mile diggings it seems some of you guys have been informed that the road is closed. Myself and several others who frequent the area on a regular basis travel this road and area quite often and not encounter such problems. Now for the fun bit.
As I do when presented with information contrary to what i hold as true, I investigated by checking web pages and phoned the information centre at Nanango. I do not like to make a statement unless I know it is correct. Upon talking to the visitor centre the information was that indead the road has officially been closed, but, the only place you can get this information is if you read the first web page of the nanango shire web page and scroll to the bottom or if you phone to inquire about a permit.The other web pages actively promote the area as a tourist activity.
On the road itself there are no signs, the permits have been in place for 3 years and the road has been closed for 6 months. But, everybody still goes through there anyway. Hell the farmer even waved hello last time through earlier this year. The road is gazetted as a public road and with the council amalgamations it has not been maintained and is now considered dangerous and that is why it is closed. To get it open the council needs to be lobbied as they have no interest in spending money on it at this stage.
So being officially closed but not signed as such, what happens now? Now I know it is closed, intentionally travelling the road what position would I be in? I don't think it would be tresspassing as it is not on private property being gazetted a public road. Even being closed, not being signed as such how are you supposed to know, and who can fine you and how much? The farmer still uses it to access his property and everyone else seems to use it too. I much preferred it when I didn't know and thought it was open. We have still driven it and don't consider it dangerous so what do we do now? If once you pass a sign (if it was there) what laws are you breaking and what has to be posted to make sure people are informed? If you stumble in and damage yourself or vehicle, what then. This is one big headache.
It is not officially open but it is still used anyway.
Yes we need to lobby the new South Burnett Council to open it, but fixing it will probably take all the fun out of it anyway.
Where to from here?
CC
As I do when presented with information contrary to what i hold as true, I investigated by checking web pages and phoned the information centre at Nanango. I do not like to make a statement unless I know it is correct. Upon talking to the visitor centre the information was that indead the road has officially been closed, but, the only place you can get this information is if you read the first web page of the nanango shire web page and scroll to the bottom or if you phone to inquire about a permit.The other web pages actively promote the area as a tourist activity.
On the road itself there are no signs, the permits have been in place for 3 years and the road has been closed for 6 months. But, everybody still goes through there anyway. Hell the farmer even waved hello last time through earlier this year. The road is gazetted as a public road and with the council amalgamations it has not been maintained and is now considered dangerous and that is why it is closed. To get it open the council needs to be lobbied as they have no interest in spending money on it at this stage.
So being officially closed but not signed as such, what happens now? Now I know it is closed, intentionally travelling the road what position would I be in? I don't think it would be tresspassing as it is not on private property being gazetted a public road. Even being closed, not being signed as such how are you supposed to know, and who can fine you and how much? The farmer still uses it to access his property and everyone else seems to use it too. I much preferred it when I didn't know and thought it was open. We have still driven it and don't consider it dangerous so what do we do now? If once you pass a sign (if it was there) what laws are you breaking and what has to be posted to make sure people are informed? If you stumble in and damage yourself or vehicle, what then. This is one big headache.
It is not officially open but it is still used anyway.
Yes we need to lobby the new South Burnett Council to open it, but fixing it will probably take all the fun out of it anyway.
Where to from here?
CC