News

April 21st 2018: Princes Highway

The Princes Highway between Nowra and Narooma is a death trap. I have cautiously driven the highway for 30 years and while there have been some welcome improvements I am very concerned every time my family and friends drive this narrow second rate road.

I am the manager of Teensafe which has been running a safe driver training program for L and P plate teenagers at Moruya for over 20 years. A dedicated team of volunteers has provided behind-the-wheel driving skills to teens mainly from Eurobodalla Shire but also as far as Nowra, Bega and Queanbeyan.

We do this because the area has minimal public transport other than school buses so car travel is essential and it is mostly on the highway . Our aim is to give teenagers better skills to safely navigate this bloody highway.

In my opinion, speed is not the problem, it is a combination of driver fatigue or distraction and a lack of overtaking lanes and centre barriers on the highway.

The traffic is much busier now with bigger trucks and caravans than the highway was designed for. It is very frustrating to be stuck behind a slow vehicle knowing there are too few overtaking lanes. For example, I regularly drive a busy 15km stretch of the highway between Moruya and Tuross and there is only one overtaking lane. That seems to be typical between Narooma and Nowra.

The poor quality of the Princes Highway costs us all in wasted time, car smashes, injuries and in slowing economic growth and reducing the number of people visiting or moving to this very desirable place to holiday, live and work.

Funding – A Question of Priorities. There is obviously delay due to the great cost in building a four lane highway between Nowra and Narooma .

So it is difficult for us locals to justify why billions can be spent in Sydney for tunnels and roads to move endless traffic a few minutes closer to a traffic jam, let alone more than $2 billion for another stadium while people die on our bloody highway.

There is also a total of half a billion dollars earmarked for new bridges at Nowra and Batemans Bay . Well, we want new bridges but they are not killing people, the highway is. Choose your priority. Revenue.

Drivers on the coast have little choice but to drive yet pay up to 20 cents per litre more for petrol than city drivers who have far more public transport. How about increasing petrol excise tax in the city and reducing it by 20 cents litre in country areas for a huge increase in revenue ? How about reducing the outrageous annual car registration fees in country areas and increasing it for city registered cars, especially big thirsty 4WD cars in the city.

Nobody here wants to wait another 30 years for a safer four lane highway between Nowra and Narooma, but in the meantime, how about the immediate fast tracking of more overtaking lanes and centre barriers to give us drivers and passengers a chance to survive.

Have we got to go to the trouble of getting thousands of signatures on a petition to Fix The Bloody Highway ?

Safe Driving, Gary Smith. Teensafe manager.
TEENSAFE – A historyTeenSafe has been providing safe-driver training courses for teenagers since 1999 at the Surfair Motor Sport Complex, Moruya.

Hundreds of our local Shire teenagers have sucessfully completed the course.

We hope the courses have contributed to behavioural change and safer driving in our local teenage population and therefore safer roads for all of us.

There is limited public transport in our shire and cars are the major form of transport. That is why TeenSafe has a philosophy of getting teenage drivers behind-the-wheel with a trained instructor in a safe environment to practice safe driving techniques and vehicle awareness.
TeenSafe hopes to enter a second decade with a fine-tuned course, an updated fleet of vehicles and further support of our community.

The first ten years would not have been possible without a dedicated band of volunteers and support from sectors of our community. So, a big thank you to supporters over the years such as Eurobodalla Shire Council, Surfair Motor Sport Club, Lions Club, Moruya Markets, Bay Beginners and to Teensafe volunteers past & present.Special thanks to Rick & Raelene Meyer who have looked after administration for years, to Tony Payne, Jim Jones and to the stalwart instructor Jeff Murphy. Jeff brought skills in motor vehicle dynamics to the course as he has had decades of experience in motor sport events. ( There is a rumour that Jeff could be a contender for the record for the world’s longest serving race car driver – go Jeff ! ).
Request for Support – as a volunteer organisation, to continue and to improve, Teensafe would appreciate some assistance –
>> Instructors – if you would like to become a volunteer Instructor, we are looking for mature experienced drivers, we will train you.
>> Cars – to upgrade our fleet a few more 4 cylinder mechanically sound vehicles welcome. Donation or reasonable price. Unregistered ok if delivered.
>> Helpers – if you don’t want to be an instructor, you may be able to help maintain or clean 8 cars, or assist with mountains of paperwork.
TeenSafe courses are conducted over one day, 10am – 3pm, at the Surfair Motor Sport Complex, opposite the Moruya Airport. Courses generally operate in school holidays but may be at other times if numbers and volunteers permit.To enrol in a TeenSafe Course – complete a registration form, fee $80.We can email you a rego form or you can find it here

For further information on any of the above, contact us write to
Teensafe
PO Box 3052
Tuross Head
2537


or emailgarys.home@bigpond.comClick here for the TeenSafe Registration form