I would reiterate a couple of points mentioned in this thread.
1. In NSW (I think alone among states and territories) learners are not permitted to drive above 80, and red Ps above 90 (they dropped the restriction of trailers above 750kg to 80 about ten years ago). Given a state where the majority of state highways are two lane roads with limited passing opportunities, can you think of a better recipe for accidents or for teaching young drivers to ignore speed limits? (after a few tens of kilometres at his reduced speed limit with the bumper of a B-double a metre from his rear bumper, how many L or P drivers have the mental ability to stay at their limit?)
2. Although there are occasional blips, such as currently in a couple of states, road deaths in Australia are at record lows, so talk of a road safety crisis is simply media hype. There is no doubt that on average, driving is safer than it has ever been, mainly due to better roads, better attitudes towards driving and seat belts.
3. There is not the slightest doubt as to the main causes of road fatalities - according to very good statistical records, close to half of drivers involved in fatal accidents are above the legal alcohol limit. Compare this to the results of random breath tests, where it is rare for the percentage of drivers over the limit of those tested to come anywhere near 1%. This means that alcohol affected drivers are over represented in the fatality statistics by around a factor of fifty. That is, they are fifty times more likely to be involved in a fatal accident. No other contributory factor comes anywhere near this figure!
4. Data does not support mobile phone use as a danger - in the USA only some states ban mobile phone use while driving, but the trend in accident statistics over the period that mobile phones went from rare to almost universal is no different in the states with and without a ban. Even if we assume that everyone uses them just as much in those states where the ban exists, this does not explain that the trend is still down since mobile phones became common.
5. Looking at the disastrous day Tasmania had yesterday, I am reminded that one of my memories from driving around Tasmania is that local drivers very obviously regards double lines as purely advisory - and two of the accidents were head-on collisions!
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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