Are you speeding? This massive change in speed cameras could cost you a fortune!

As we know, staying within the speed limit isn't just about avoiding fines—it's about safety.

However, for those who might occasionally let the speedometer creep up, there's a significant change on the horizon that could have a hefty impact on your wallets and driving records.


In a move that's set to shake up the way speed is monitored on New South Wales roads, the state is trialling a new approach to speed cameras that will affect not just the truckies who have traditionally been the focus of average-speed camera zones.

Australia’s largest jurisdiction has announced it will end its unique approach to point-to-point speed detection and its policy limiting enforcement to heavy vehicles only.

Instead, a new trial will cover all drivers along two highways where six fatalities have occurred in recent years.


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NSW will be trialling average-speed cameras for all drivers, not just trucks. Credit: Shutterstock


This major shift means that the speed of every vehicle will be tracked through these zones, and while there's a grace period at first, penalties will soon follow.

For the first 60 days of the trial, drivers who exceed the speed limit will receive written warnings.

However, after that, it's time to brace for the possibility of fines and points off your licence.


Roads Minister John Graham noted that all other mainland Australian states, as well as countries such as the United Kingdom, Norway, Italy, and the Netherlands, have found average speed cameras to be effective.

‘We aim to be as rigorous as possible to be sure they will also reduce road trauma in NSW,’ he stated on Sunday, September 8.

The stretches in question include a 15-kilometre section of the Pacific Highway between Kew and Lake Innes on the mid-north coast and a similar length on the Hume Highway north of Gundagai.

These areas have not only seen deaths but also a significant number of serious injuries, with 33 people seriously hurt in the five years leading up to 2022.


Speeding has been a major issue in NSW, contributing to 44 per cent of road deaths in the state in 2023, with a staggering three-quarters of these occurring in regional areas.

It's clear that something needs to be done, and the NSW government is taking action.

To ensure that drivers are aware of the new trial, a comprehensive communications campaign will be rolled out. This is crucial, as understanding the rules is the first step to compliance.

This measure was among several recommended by a road safety forum held in Sydney in April, which included 155 experts.

The trial's outcomes will be closely monitored, and any decision to make it permanent or extend it to other average-speed zones in NSW will require parliamentary approval.

This is a cautious approach, but one that could lead to a significant change in how we drive.


Safety advocates, like Peter Frazer, the Founder of Safer Australian Roads and Highways, have long lobbied NSW to change its approach.

After his daughter Sarah's tragic death on the road on her way to university in 2012, Mr Frazer has been a vocal proponent of measures that encourage drivers to maintain safe speeds.

‘These cameras promote safer driving habits by encouraging drivers and riders to stick to the speed limit,’ he said.


Despite the changes, NSW will still stand out for its approach to road speed enforcement.

Unlike other regions, NSW drivers receive multiple warnings when approaching fixed and mobile speed cameras.

This approach, supported by both the government and motoring groups, has been criticised by the head of the Australasian College of Road Safety as being ‘completely lacking any evidence base’.


As New South Wales gears up for significant changes in speed camera enforcement, drivers are also facing new safety measures aimed at enhancing road safety.

Just as the state prepares to overhaul its approach to point-to-point speed detection, recent efforts to tackle rising road toll incidents have introduced advanced seatbelt detection cameras.

These cameras are part of a broader strategy to ensure safer driving practices and reduce road fatalities.

Together, these initiatives underscore a comprehensive push towards improving road safety across the state.
Key Takeaways
  • New South Wales is trialling an all-driver approach for average-speed camera zones, which were previously used only for tracking trucks.
  • Speeding drivers will first receive written warnings for 60 days before penalties apply to align with practices in other Australian states and countries.
  • The trial will begin along two stretches of highway where significant road trauma has been recorded.
  • Legislation will be required for the trial and any permanent implementation, with decisions to be informed by the outcomes of a recent road safety forum involving 155 experts.
What are your thoughts on this new trial? Do you think it will make a difference in road safety, or do you have concerns about its implementation? Share your views in the comments below, and let's discuss the best ways to stay safe and compliant on the roads.
 
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There will be more fatalities on the roads with all the vaccines people have had.
Just think of all the road fatalities caused by MMR vaccine induced autism. Sabin causes an inability to read a speedometer properly. Moderna, Astra-Veneca and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine result in lower leg spasms, causing the driver to extent their foot to flatten the accelerator.

Watch out for low flying pink pigs and cows coming back to earth after jumping over the moon!

So many hazards on our roads these days!
 
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Just think of all the road fatalities caused by MMR vaccine induced autism. Sabin causes an inability to read a speedometer properly. Moderna, Astra-Veneca and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine result in lower leg spasms, causing the driver to extent their foot to flatten the accelerator.

Watch out for low flying pink pigs and cows coming back to earth after jumping over the moon!

So many hazards on our roads these days!
Will people please stop pouring horse poo mixed with viagra, speed and LSD on the Veggiepatch?
 
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So NSW is having to play catch up again? 🙄

The UK have had average speed cameras for about 25 years and have about 2,500 of them round the country.
The amount of motorways in the state, and drivers going faster than they should on them, they certainly need them.
 
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There will be more fatalities on the roads with all the vaccines people have had.
Oh Tracy what have you done! Although l agree with what your saying you have opened a can of worms l am an anti Covid vaccine person myself and l coped it right left and centre not long so expect to be degraded by those who think it smart and clever to be insulting.Take no notice you are right there are more heart attacks etc since people were Covid vaccinated.
 
Oh Tracy what have you done! Although l agree with what your saying you have opened a can of worms l am an anti Covid vaccine person myself and l coped it right left and centre not long so expect to be degraded by those who think it smart and clever to be insulting.Take no notice you are right there are more heart attacks etc since people were Covid vaccinated.
You have verifiable evidence of this or just a statement you found on a YouTube video or stoner's blog?
 
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Oh Veggie l am not getting into an argument with you about this.l said enough before in my long conversation with Rob.Have a nice day.
In a nutshell, the incidence of major adverse cardiac events increases in those who have been exposed to the COVID-19 virus in a study of 1.9 million subjects aged 19 to 90.

SARS-CoV-2 infection increases the risk of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) and long-term cardiovascular sequelae after recovery.1 However, the association of vaccination on cardiovascular outcomes following infection has not been elucidated in the United States. We investigate association between vaccination and MACE among patients with prior SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Joy Jiang, Lili Chan, Justin Kauffman, Jagat Narula, Alexander W. Charney, Wonsuk Oh and Girish Nadkarni, Impact of Vaccination on Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events in Patients With COVID-19 Infection, J Am Coll Cardiol. 2023 Mar 7; 81(9): 928–930.

Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9939951/
 
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In a nutshell, the incidence of major adverse cardiac events increases in those who have been exposed to the COVID-19 virus in a study of 1.9 million subjects aged 19 to 90.

SARS-CoV-2 infection increases the risk of major adverse cardiac events (MACE) and long-term cardiovascular sequelae after recovery.1 However, the association of vaccination on cardiovascular outcomes following infection has not been elucidated in the United States. We investigate association between vaccination and MACE among patients with prior SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Joy Jiang, Lili Chan, Justin Kauffman, Jagat Narula, Alexander W. Charney, Wonsuk Oh and Girish Nadkarni, Impact of Vaccination on Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events in Patients With COVID-19 Infection, J Am Coll Cardiol. 2023 Mar 7; 81(9): 928–930.

Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9939951/
Whatever you want to believe is your choice.
 
Whatever you want to believe is your choice.
Where are all these dead people?
When you count all my relatives, friends, neighbours, acquaintances and THEIR friends, and acquaintances I know of ZERO deaths from the vaccine. Many have had 4 or 5 doses, many of those are elderly, NONE with problems, only some with sore arms for a couple of days.

Why aren't the funeral directors overwhelmed?

Why is the traffic worse than ever?

Why, when I go to a large shopping centre it's still very busy, still hard to find a parking spot sometimes?

Why is the small decrease in life expectancy that we saw since Covid now increasing again?

Why is the population still increasing?

Come one, I ask this of all the nutters, not one can answer me. So show us some evidence, factual evidence that can be verified, not some You Tube, Facebook, Tic Tok nutters who make up rubbish.

Also, you do realise that the report systems used to show vaccine adverse effects are not maintained to a high standard. Anyone can report, anyone can say whatever they want, no one checks them, no one verifies the statements made there are correct. Also those reports often have things like a broken leg, yeah the vaccine caused a broken leg. NO, the person may have gone to hospital with a broken leg, they were asked if they were vaccinated and so appear on the report, this was happening often.

Of course there are some adverse effects of the vaccine, ANY medicine is the same, ANY. But the numbers are extremely small, the numbers have had no material effect on the normal death numbers. Yes it's sad for those people, but for the greater good the vaccines have helped open up the world again, without them the virus would have been far, far worse and millions more would have died, instead of the very small numbers that "may" have died because of the vaccine.
 
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The street I live in used to be 60k it is now 50k, a lot of cars travel up and down the street in excess of 60k. I am also two houses from a junior school and have seen cars speeding through the crossing when 40k zone is on.
Spoke to a traffic cop about it and was told that the police station doesn't decide where to put speed traps, that comes from above. BUT one always sees camera vans and bikes on streets where there is always minimal traffic.
When our street was 60k life was pleasant (traffic wise)
SA school zones are 25km whether zigzags, signs, lights, flashing school zone lights, monitors.
 

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