Tony Hadlow visits a memorial at the Tree Trust for his parents, Gerry and Sheila Hadlow, who were killed in a crash in 2006. Photo / NZME
Tony Hadlow remembers the day 15 years ago his parents were killed in a road smash. It was a day that changed his life forever, and he hopes reading this story may help change yours. Kelly Makiha reports.
Cars are weapons and dying in crashes is no different to anyother violent death. It's sudden, it's cruel and no one gets a chance to say goodbye.
That's how Tony Hadlow still feels 15 years after losing his parents in a crash.
He warns Tauranga is surrounded by holiday destination highways that often see drivers becoming "morons" and he wants those behind the wheel to always remember "people's lives are at stake".
Fifteen people died on Western Bay of Plenty roads in 2021, just a little less than the 17 who died in 2020.
He said take his advice and you could prevent living like him - with a chip out of your armour caused from the grief of losing someone precious in a road crash.
Canon Gerry and Sheila Hadlow were community icons. Their instant death after their car crossed the centreline into the path of a bus filled with Korean tourists on State Highway 5 north of Rotorua sent shock waves through the Bay of Plenty.
It's not known why Gerry crossed the centreline as they headed out of town. No one even knew where they were going. A coroner later ruled Gerry could have experienced a blackout similar to one he had mentioned to family a few weeks earlier.
Gerry, 79, was a priest who became the Rotorua police chaplain. Sheila, 84, was a stalwart in several community groups.
The outpouring of grief was huge. More than 3500 people attended the joint funeral, including 300 clergy and 300 police staff. Police staff from Tauranga had to cover Rotorua.
The initial moments of learning his parents were gone was "so awful", Tony said.
"It was so sudden and I didn't get to say goodbye."
He learned while he was on business in Auckland and had to pull over on the side of the motorway. He had to drive to Morrinsville to tell his sister, then to Rotorua to identify their bodies in the morgue.
"You go along in your life and feel comfortable and then something like this happens and it changes everything forever. I'm okay with it now but for a long time I wasn't. I had to get help to work it all out."
Tony said it felt like everyone knew his father and, as he came to grips with his death, well-meaning supporters made his recovery harder.
"Everyone knew Dad and everyone knew what happened. I used to go to the post office box at 6.30am just to avoid seeing people. Dying in a car crash defines your life. Instead of people knowing my Dad as a priest or a police chaplain who did great work it is 'your mum and dad died in that crash'."
Losing both at once made him feel empty.
"You don't know how it feels until it happens to you."
He had a boat in Tauranga and often used State Highway 36 through the Mangorewa Gorge to travel from Rotorua.
"It's so windy but people drive like a bat out of hell, have a near-death experience and hello, they've saved themselves four minutes."
He said the road from Tauranga to Katikati and Waihī was a "nightmare" because people got into queues of traffic at this time of year and turned into "morons".
"You see these people flying past you and then you look up and they are only two cars ahead after half an hour. You feel like driving past and saying 'what happened there mate?'."
He said the road between Tauranga and Whakatāne was narrow with not a lot of spots to pass, but that didn't stop the "munters" again pushing their luck and creating anxiety by tailgating waiting for their "opportunity to risk their lives".
He said cars were now like extensions of people's lounges or offices - you can "ask Siri", receive emails, play music and movies, look up directions and talk on the phone.
"People get into cars now and they don't give it a second thought. When you're driving, you're not in your lounge with your devices, get off your phone and pay attention.
"Basically people are doing more s*** in their cars when they should be driving."
He said people felt the road belonged to them when in fact patience and kindness was needed to stay alive.
"People's lives are at stake ... If someone's driving too slow, don't go up their a*** and toot the horn. Pull back. It's only another five minutes."
Driving should be enjoyed as part of the holiday.
"Don't balance your milkshake and burger on the dash, stop and have a meal with your family."
Tony hasn't talked publicly about his parents' death over the years but felt strongly about road safety and hoped his words can make a difference.
"I don't know many people who have had my experience but when you meet them you know because there's a chip out of their armour. You can't undo it, it's there for the rest of your life. I didn't think anything like this would happen to me and it doesn't go away."
Strong message from police
If history repeats, there will be people starting off this New Year in Tauranga who won't be with us next year.
That's the cold, hard facts from Bay of Plenty road policing manager Inspector Brent Crowe who says the same things were killing our loved ones on the roads despite constant warnings.
He said while the country had rightly focused on a response to Covid-19 in the past year, more than 300 people had died on New Zealand roads - 41 in the Bay of Plenty.
He said those people saw in 2021 not knowing it was going to be their last.
"It left family and friends to grapple with the why, grieve the loss and then attempt to pick up the pieces and live with the huge void that the death of a loved one leaves."
He said police and road safety partner agencies had for many years been pushing the same messages, because it was the same stuff to blame for road deaths.
In the Bay of Plenty, there are eight main causes of deaths and serious injuries.
These include 20 from alcohol-related crashes, 19 from excessive speed, 14 from distracted drivers, 11 from inexperienced drivers, eight from fatigued drivers, eight from not driving to the conditions, seven from failing to wear a seatbelt and five from bad driving.
He said police checkpoints in the Bay of Plenty consistently detected up to 1 in every 80 drivers stopped over the alcohol limit.
"Anecdotally since the first pandemic lockdown police had also noticed a disturbing increase in drivers travelling at ridiculous speeds, in some cases over twice the posted limit."
"Tragically, if history is anything to go by, failure to alter our behaviours on the road means some who celebrated New Year's Eve just gone won't be here to see in 2023."
By the numbers
Region - Number of deaths 2021 - (Comparison to 2020) Rotorua - 7 (4) Western Bay of Plenty - 15 (17) Taupō - 9 (12) Eastern Bay of Plenty - 10 (6)
Total: Bay of Plenty total - 41 (39)
Deaths on Western Bay roads 2021 January 4: Kevin Erskine-Shaw, 46, car vs truck, SH29, Lower Kaimais January 17: Uthai Phonphong, 38, car vs SUV on SH2, Pāpāmoa near Bruce Rd January 19: Hugo Shaw, 14, cyclist vs truck, Sandhurst Dr, Pāpāmoa February 21: Donald Whare, 32, car vs motorcycle, Eversham Rd and Exeter St, Mt Maunganui March 5: Tiaki Love, 33, motorcycle vs SUV, No3 Rd, Te Puke March 10: Shae Dixon, 43, truck vs ute on SH29, Kaimai March 13: Mitchell Townsend, 19, single-vehicle crash, Work Rd, Aongatete April 18: Nicholas Wehner, 29, car vs motorcycle, Te Matai Rd, Te Puke June 18: Timothy Webb, 39, all-terrain vehicle vs tractor, Maungarangi Rd June 21: Kimberly Sutton, 35, car vs car, SH2 near Te Puna Quarry Rd July 30: Lawrence Bennett, 40, single-vehicle crash, Pukehina Beach Rd August 17: Dallin Loibl, 17, car vs car, Millers Rd, Bellevue August 19: Brian Martin, 76, car vs cyclist, Park Rd, Katikati December 8: Maree Geary, 65, three-car crash, Chapel St, Tauranga December 21: Shannon Joseph Wheoki, 31, car vs car, SH2, Tahawai