ROAD SAFETY AMENDMENT BILL 2014
Mr PALLAS (Tarneit) — It gives me — It gives me great pleasure to rise to support this bill.
The opposition’s view is that measures designed to address the safety of our roads, to reduce our road toll and to reduce the insidious impact of serious trauma and loss of life on our roads are commendable and should be applauded. We will not be opposing the bill, and there are many aspects of the bill that commend themselves to this house. It gives me great pleasure to speak in support of them.
The bill has a number of features that demonstrate a continuing commitment to road safety that is bipartisan, long ranging and in many ways has set the state of Victoria apart from many other jurisdictions. We are one of the best performing jurisdictions in the world when it comes to the issue of road safety. We have come so far largely because we have built this sense of consensus around the need to address community attitudes, the state of our roads and the quality of our vehicles. It is called the safe system, where a commitment to better drivers, better roads and better infrastructure is key to the entire package.
This bill, which creates a new combined offence of drink and drug driving also seeks to expand when an alcohol interlock condition can be applied and allows for new technology to be used. Furthermore it allows for immediate impoundment of a vehicle when a blood alcohol reading of .10 or more is detected. Finally it introduces measures for newly licensed motorcycle riders.
The alcohol interlock device has had a profound effect on safety on our roads. It has also been a critical measure by which Victorians have come to appreciate that their responsibilities to other road users go beyond their immediate command of the vehicle to their state of health and their capacity when they get behind the wheel. Alcohol consumption is a critical part of that. One of the things that is important in the increasing and genuine belief of Victorians that much more needs to be done in terms of road safety is this acknowledgement that alcohol usage has a profound impact on road trauma and road deaths.
In fact the broad rule of thumb is that about a third of road deaths are due to speed, about a third due to fatigue and about a third due to drugs and alcohol.
The measures in this legislation go towards enforcement of the drug and alcohol provisions and introducing stronger penalties. We are putting in place measures that will not only improve people’s understanding and appreciation of their responsibilities when in command of vehicles but that will also continue to educate people about their responsibilities to other road users in a broader sense.
Currently only drivers over .15, repeat offenders and those under the age of 26 who record blood alcohol levels of .07 or above are required to have alcohol interlock devices fitted to their vehicles in order to regain their drivers licences after serving their disqualification periods.
In February 2013 the government announced that it would toughen the laws so any driver caught over the legal limit would be required to have an interlock device fitted except in exceptional circumstances.
The government has said it expects that interlock devices could eventually become standard in all new vehicles. With the way the technology is evolving in this area, it is increasingly accepted that interlock devices are becoming a feature of Victorian road safety. They are a significant and massively important tool in the fight against road trauma. In saying that in the long term interlock devices may be fitted to every vehicle, a couple of observations need to be made. Most notably, the calibration issues will need to be addressed. The costs associated with constant calibration will be a barrier to standardised fitting for the broader community. When and if that technical problem is overcome, it will open up this technology to broad application in the community.
In the broader sense the effect of the bill is to create a new combined drink and drug driving offence. Presently these are two separate offences. The offence will be made out when a driver is tested and shown to have exceeded the prescribed concentration of alcohol and the prescribed concentration of a prescribed illicit drug. The testing currently applies to cannabis, methamphetamine and ecstasy. It will be interesting to see where these measures move into the future. The capacity to test for a broader range of affecting drugs will ultimately be necessary, but with it will come a cost. There must also be a greater willingness to engage the community about the impact of drugs, both illicit and prescription, upon a person’s capacity to drive. The penalty for the combined offence will be a mandatory 12-month licence cancellation and a fine of up to $4500 for a first offence, with a more serious penalty for repeat offenders.
I want to concentrate on the emphasis that governments of both persuasions have put on road safety and the valuable contribution parliamentary road safety committees have made over the years towards the task that we as a Parliament have seen as being critically important. For example, we know that we have progressively been reducing the road toll. Perhaps increasingly we need to look at the impact of road trauma as opposed to exclusively looking at road fatalities. During the time of the previous government VicRoads kept a running analysis of the Road Safety Committee’s recommendations.
Between May 2000 and the end of the Brumby government in 2010 there were 10 road safety inquiries.
VicRoads kept a running total of how many those inquiries’ recommendations had been monitored, managed and implemented. It was around 80 per cent, and that is a demonstration of a pretty diligent and serious engagement by Parliament around the concerns that the parliamentary committees were bringing forward. It is a commendation both of the Parliament for its bipartisan approach and also of VicRoads and the bureaucracy more generally for their commitment to an integrated approach to managing road safety.
The legislation continues that effort and, as I said, any measures aimed at reducing the road toll, reducing road trauma and addressing road safety should be supported by this Parliament in a collective sense.
Speaker after speaker in this place has talked about the insidious impact that road trauma has on the lives of so many people. How much more complicated the problem is when we look at the insidious effect that drugs, particularly the new scourge of ice, are having on our community. When those problems are compounded with the difficulties of people whose judgement is impaired while driving a vehicle that can cause considerable harm to others, that demands action from government, and I am pleased to see the government has taken the action it has taken. The bill commends itself, and I commend the government for its actions.