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Making sure drivers know the road rules before renewing their licence and reviewing the impact of wearing headphones while driving are among key recommendations to come out of a Road Safety Roundtable.
Ahead of National Road Safety Week earlier this year, RAA convened a Road Safety Roundtable which brought together industry experts and decision makers – including the Minister for Road Safety, representatives from the emergency services, road safety experts and industry associations – to analyse how South Australia can reach the targets set out in the SA Road Safety Strategy.
The state’s 10-year Road Safety Strategy and Action Plan targets a 50% reduction in lives lost and 30% reduction in serious injuries by 2031.
The impact of drivers wearing headphones should be reviewed, according to RAA’s Road Safety Roundtable recommendations
SA Police data shows SA is not on track to meet these targets – with 99 lives lost and 807 serious injuries on our roads in the 12 months to the end of March 2024 – putting SA 18% and 23% above the targets respectively.
The roundtable focussed on three critical areas where significant improvement is needed, specifically vulnerable road users, regional road safety and road user behaviour.
The state’s peak motoring group has released some of the recommendations for discussion and further exploration, including:
- All licence holders to undertake and pass an online road rules test prior to licence renewal every 10 years.
- Investigate options to provide regional road safety education programs that could be delivered in conjunction with local community organisations.
- The impact of wearing earphones and headphones while driving or riding should be reviewed and if necessary, restrictions placed on their use while driving or riding.
- RAA and key stakeholders continue to advocate for increased investment in road network maintenance to address the backlog.
- Explore ways to educate the community and increase level of understanding about the wide-ranging negative impacts of alcohol consumption on driving capability.
- Continue to explore and implement lower speed limits in local streets and inform communities on the corresponding improvements to safety and amenity in lower speed environments.
- Release crash data every six months rather than annually.
“We’ll now work with the relevant stakeholders to investigate and prioritise some of the key recommendations to determine if they’ll have a positive impact on reducing road trauma and improving road safety,” Mr Mountain said.
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