Thank you for the support and positive comments generated by our last newsletter in the Paterson PSST. Our website is now operational as is our facebook and twitter pages. We would commend viewing the facebook photos as they say a picture says it all and some of the pictures demonstrate the madness of putting such large number of trucks amongst our community and using our roads as a haul road
Many people have been saying that the dramatic increase in truck and dog movements would lead to an accident. It was not a matter of IF but WHEN.
Well the 8th of January 2015 was the fateful day and thank goodness no one was injured. The potential for injury was great given the location.
An empty truck and dog travelling to the quarry ran out of diesel on the hill leading to the dog leg bend on the Prince St intersection. The driver decided to reverse down the hill in an attempt to put the vehicle off the road on a pull off at the bottom of the hill. Applying the brakes as it rolled down the hill the truck’s air supply was soon exhausted and as a result the truck’s brake system was engaged.
As a result the truck jack knifed across both lanes. It was lucky there was no on coming traffic. These actions would indicate that the driver was extremely unprofessional, inexperienced or just a cowboy. In any case the traffic was thrown into chaos for two hours with traffic travelling through back streets as well as Tucker Park using an unformed track and ignoring load limits. If this happened several hundred meters along the road there would have been no detours and no vehicle traffic would have been able to move for two hours
The residents of Paterson enjoyed a respite from the daily truck onslaught through the town during the Christmas shut down of the quarry, however things returned with a vengeance on the 5th of January culminating in the above incident on the 8th of January. MCQAG continue to monitor the truck movements between 5.00am and 5.00pm, and the members of the committee have made representation to the Council highlighting the multiple hundreds of truck movements still occurring September-14 through to present.
As previously advised the number of truck movements allowable under Dungog Council’s DA consent conditions is just 24 per day calculated as an average to equate to the allowable annual tonnage under the DA.