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  1. Labour should aggressively push for freight to return to rail as a way to make the roads far more safe again.

    1. Trucks would no doubt contribute to the wear and tear on our roads and I’m sure there would be a few roads around that were never intended for heavy haulage, otherwise I have found truckies to be better drivers than most.
      To help make our roads safer I would suggest, apart from motorcycle awareness that some focus is aimed at the use of passing lanes on our highways. How extremely frustrating it is to be continually stuck behind a vehicle doing say 70 – 80ks and to then have that vehicle speed up to 100ks or more when using a passing lane. Most people I know have experienced this frustration.
      It would also help if those towing caravans, trailers and horse floats etc considered the idea of pulling over when they have half a dozen or so + cars behind them rather than wait for a kilometer of traffic to build up behind them or to arrive at the next passing lane where people are now desperate to pass, most can’t and those left at the front break heavily etc to avoid the impending bottle neck.
      Note: I ride a motorcycle, have never driven a truck, have never towed a caravan but towed a few trailers and horse floats.

    2. OK, a little off topic, but yes, please shift as much as poss onto rail. I suffer minor (well, very minor, I cope OK) terror attacks every time a log truck passes in the other direction. And yet, a few metres over there beside the road, there’s a railway line. That where the logs should be on! The carnage a load of logs flying through the air at 80-100 kph could wreak upon on-coming/bystanders, if the load detached, is terrible to imagine.

      And, as for slow traffic, I do like those road signs that say “Traffic behind? Let is pass”.

      Btw, I write as one who had major fractures, as a young fellow, riding a motor-bike (a BSA Bantam, hardly a speed machine) into a car that did a U-turn without looking. Of course the driver was unscathed. That gave me the view ever since that I would prefer to go along a road protected by a metal carapace, rather than limbly openly vulnerable.

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