The Napier-Taupo Rd's condition is contributing to a spike in serious crashes, the Road Transport Forum says. Photo / File
COMMENT
In the past 12 months, eight people have died on State Highway 5, the Napier-Taupō Rd. After a weekend crash a truck driver is fighting for his life.
It is frankly, a national disgrace.
This is a national issue, as that road connects the central North Island with theeast coast and importantly, Napier Port. And it's deadly dangerous.
Last week, I took a look for myself and I was disturbed by what I saw. With Hastings mayor Sandra Hazlehurst, deputy mayor Tania Kerr, and truck driver Antony Alexander, we drove some of the parts of the road where there have been fatal accidents.
We stopped and observed how vehicles handled potholes and the uneven surface.
Hastings District Council has been beating the drum locally to try to get Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency (NZTA) to do something about this incredibly dangerous road.
Kerr lives just off the road and had some horror stories to tell.
Antony Alexander drives it 12 times a week and he believes the Government could take the cost of those eight lives and spend it on the Napier to Taupō road to help prevent crashes.
According to the Social Cost of Road Crashes and Injuries report, a fatal crash costs $5,071,600. Eight times that could surely reseal the road completely.
The RTF has also tried to take the unsafe state of the road surface up with NZTA, because truck drivers are constantly telling us how uncomfortable the road makes them feel.
NZTA's response was so unsatisfactory, we wrote to the Transport Minister – a detailed letter that was very specific about our concerns. Unfortunately, that letter is dancing its way around politicians and officials like a hot potato.
To not put too fine a point on it, the surface is rubbish, both in summer and in winter. It lacks traction, making it like an ice rink for cars and trucks.
This is down to the engineering and design of the road surface. It has been so patched up it looks like a patchwork quilt, and this makes the surface even more dangerous as vehicles bounce around and drivers lose control.
The type of seal used is subject to the temperature variations the area experiences and this has been drawn to the local NZTA representatives' attention on many occasions.
Using the inappropriate bitumen mix leaves the road sensitive to temperature variations, which is a primary contributor to flushing and the chip seal not sticking to the base.
When a truck comes into the path of an accident situation, by taking evasive action the lack of adequate run-off areas on the road, poor shoulder designs, and steep shoulder gradients often mean the truck cannot avoid spinning out of control.
Without wanting to speculate on the cause of the weekend's crash, media reports suggest that it was icy up there at the time. Sadly, the crash only reinforces what everyone has been saying.
We don't believe our concerns can fall on deaf ears any longer. People are dying.
This Government has spoken at length about how much it cares about road safety and reducing the road toll. This is not a road where wire rope barriers and median separations are going to improve safety.
We are calling for NZTA, as a priority, to concentrate on resealing State Highway 5 – and where required, redesigning dangerous parts of the road.
We believe it must provide a quality road surface that can tolerate the temperature variability in this region, as well as rehabilitating the road shoulders and shoulder gradients, and attending to the vegetation impacting the safety of this important section of the state highway network.
Hearing from road transport operators and drivers across the country, we know the Napier-Taupo isn't an isolated case.
The RTF is collecting information on other dangerous routes so we can highlight the risks posed and the costs borne by our industry. We hope officials and politicians will be listening before there are more deaths and injuries.
* Nick Leggett is the CEO of the Road Transport Forum.