Archive for August, 2013

Expressways for a trucking cowboy industry

Saturday, August 24th, 2013
Great Western Highway Bullaburra
Native woodland at Bullaburra alongside the Great Western Highway
Bulldozed for a trucking expressway
[Photo by Editor 20130630,© under  ^Creative Commons]
Click image to enlarge
 
 

The Great Western Highway across the Blue Mountains continues to be transformed from a regional highway through town and villages into an ugly concrete 4-laned trucking expressway.

Everything in the path of the road legions is being destroyed.  Forests, hillsides, communities all are cast aside for more, bigger and faster trucks.

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SlaughterThe moral relativism of killing

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It is along these faster wider sections of the expressway, like the M4 that the road collisions and deaths are manifesting.  Speed kills, but the RTA-come-RMS adopts the gun lobby attitude that it is not speed that kills but the people behind the wheels that kill.

Bullaburra Blue Skies Village
The same native woodland before the dozers
[Photo by Editor 20110610,© under  ^Creative Commons]
Click image to enlarge

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Bullaburra's remnant Angophora woodlandThe woodland that has been lost:  Bullaburra’s remnant Angophora woodland
Few people were aware of  its existence below the highway
[Photo by Editor 20110610,© under  ^Creative Commons]
Click image to enlarge

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Urunga protest againts speeding trucksThe trucks keep speeding
and the RTA-come-RMS keeps building larger and faster highways to encourage them.
[Source:  locals protest against speeding trucks at Urunga on the New South Wales north coast, ‘
RMS hears rally message’ (but ignores it as usual), by Ute Schulenberg, 20120216, Coffs Harbour Advocate,
^http://www.coffscoastadvocate.com.au/news/rms-hears-rally-message/1274282/]

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Great Western Highway increasingly one of Australia’s riskiest roads

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<< Four people were killed in four separate local highway smashes over just 44 days earlier this year (2010) — three of those smashes involved trucks. Stark proof of why our Great Western Highway has been rated among Australia’s riskiest roads.

The Australian Roads Assessment Programme – AusRAP – gave the GWH only two stars out of five for safety in 2007, using data from 2000-2004. A poor result after so many millions had been poured into its improvement.  AusRAP is an initiative of the Australian Automobile Association, the state motoring associations’ peak body. It says the degree of risk, or just how safe a road is, depends to an extent on whether safety has been built-in to it with elements such as wide lanes and shoulders and safety barriers, which are known to have an impact on the likelihood of a crash and its severity.

Perhaps the GWH will score better than two stars out of five next time – if AusRAP ever gets the money to re-rate it.

As any road safety expert will tell you, getting the toll down depends on three essential goals: safer roads, safer vehicles and safer drivers.

It’s for accident investigators and the Coroner to apportion blame in those four recent GWH smashes; however, we can use them as a warning about what needs to be done to reduce deaths and injuries on the GWH.

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Safer Roads?

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The GWH scores so poorly on AusRAP’s safety scale for three key deficiencies:

  • not enough overtaking lanes
  • not enough divided carriageway
  • not enough barriers between carriageways

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No median crash barrier No Median Crash Barrier
Three killed in a horror head-on crash on country highway near Yunta, South Australia
[Source:  Sunday Mail (SA), 20120812,
^http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-australia/three-confirmed-dead-after-head-on-crash-on-country-highway-near-yunta/story-e6frea83-1226448085377]

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Not surprising then that three of those four recent smashes were head-on collisions where one vehicle crossed onto the wrong side of the road into the path of an oncoming vehicle. The fourth involved a truck doing the same thing, but fortunately no oncoming vehicle was in its path and the truck ended up embedded in a residental property.

Two of those smashes occurred on an improved section of the highway where there was no barrier between carriageways.

About 14,000 vehicles a day travel on the Blue Mountains section of the GWH. Heavy vehicles make up about 15 per cent of this traffic with more than half the road freight transport between the central west and Sydney using the highway.

The upgrade of the GWH in the Blue Mountains involves widening it to four lanes between Emu Plains and Katoomba and to mostly three lanes between Katoomba and Mount Victoria at a cost of many hundreds of millions.

There’s a limit to how fast it can be done, but it’s sad to reflect on how many innocent lives may be lost over the next decade simply due to the absence of a crash barrier between carriageways.

Narrow Highway ShouldersNarrow highway shoulders
making breakdowns a death trap
 

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Safer Vehicles?

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Each year in Australia around 200 people are killed in ‘under-run’ crashes. Most of the victims are the occupants of the cars involved.

Front Under-run Protection Systems [FUPS] can reduce this carnage, as the NRMA emphasised in its recent report on The Safety Needs of Heavy Vehicles in Australia[Ed: see details below at end]

These systems prevent a car from becoming trapped under the front of a truck in the event of a collision between the two, thereby ensuring the car’s safety features such as seatbelts, airbags and crumple zones remain fully effective. Some trucks already have FUPS.

FUPS must now be fitted to all new models of heavy vehicles (over 12 tonnes) from January 2011 and to all existing models from January 2012.

Head on crash with Truck

The NRMA report also called for side and rear under-run barriers on trucks. “Rigid trucks are particulartly dangerous in regard to rear under-run,” it said, “as there is generally a long overhang on the tray, which leads to a substantial under-run distance for impacting cars with consequent serious injuries for occupants, including decapitation.”

It also called for stability control on prime-movers and trailers, improved brakes, tamper-proof electronic on-board monitors, Advanced Emergency Braking Systems and a timeline for their implementation.

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The predicted result:  more and bigger trucks on the road with an increasing trend towards articulated vehicles with multiple trailers.

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“The manual log-book system for monitoring driving hours and driver behaviour has long since lost any vestige of credibility,” the NRMA reported. “Widespread abuse of the system and difficulties in enforcing requirements, along with high levels of fatigue related crashes mean that urgent action must be taken.”

Australia’s freight task in 2020 is expected to be double that of 2006, according to research cited by the NRMA, and by 2050 to be triple its current size. “Given that the rail system cannot cater, or is unsuitable, for accommodating this increase,” the NRMA says, “it is the road system that will bear the brunt.”  [Ed:  The NRMA derives its revenue from road users, so it is inherently biased towards advocating for more roads and opposed to freight rail, and wil not even consider rail, because it has no potential revenue to gain].

The predicted result is more and bigger trucks on the road with an increasing trend towards articulated vehicles with multiple trailers. >>

[Source:  ‘Surviving the Highway with Trucks’, Edn #1,  June 2010, Whistler, ^http://www.bloogle.com.au/whistler/trucks_story.php]

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Cowboy Truckers speed tampering, falsifying logbooks, doing drugs

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Truck rollover
Speeding B-Double on the Pacific Highway – driver pushed to the limit 24/7?
[Source:  ‘Pacific Highway delays to continue’, by  Dominic Feain, 20120511, photo by Mireille Merlet-Shaw
^http://www.northernstar.com.au/news/pacific-highway-delays-too-continue/1377202/]

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<< Bobbin South Coast operations manager Brendon Bobbin is behind bars and the fleet of 30 trucks and 50 trailers under investigation after a Police raid swept the highways to target alleged drug use, fatigue and speed compliance yesterday (Thursday).

Mr Bobbin, 41, has been under investigation about the alleged use and supply of prohibited drugs during the operation of heavy vehicles as part of Operation Felled, formed to investigate the 40-year-old family company’s operations and compliance with road transport legislation.

The operation hit the ground in force today targeting speed tampering, fatigue offences and vehicle compliance, including workbook and system breaches, and involved Engine Control Modules (ECM) downloads and drug and alcohol testing.

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“All heavy vehicles should have tamper-proof on board monitoring to ensure drivers comply with the law and electronic stability control to help protect motorists from truck mass and momentum.”

~ NRMA, July 2007.

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Mr Bobbin was arrested at South Pambula at 7.55am with Police allegedly seizing an amount of prohibited drugs and drug paraphernalia in a vehicle and prohibited drugs inside the premise.

Bobbins ArrestedBrendon Bobbin is led away after being arrested at South Coast Bobbins depot on Thursday.
With him are Eden police officers Constable Andrew Kuzmins and Sergeant Scott Blanch (right).

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He was charged at Eden Police Station with supplying a commercial quantity of prohibited drugs, supply prohibited drugs (two counts) and possess prohibited drugs (two counts) and later appeared at Batemans Bay Local Court.

Mr Bobbin will next appear in court via video link on August 26.   Bobbins South Coast Transport’s faces penalties in excess of $43,000 as Police investigate speed and fatigue management.

Police seized company computer records and documents from the South Pambula site and a company depot in Ingleburn this morning.

Bobbins Transport inspected by poilice

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Fleet drivers were also targeted across the state with Police intercepting trucks for vehicle and driver checks on major highways across Sydney.  Five drivers will appear in court facing fatigue related offences and a further two were dealt infringement notices of $2092 for speed tampering and compliance issues.

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No Doze

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Sixteen defect notices were issued by RMS for a range of minor and major defects including brakes, tyres, oil and fuel issues, and suspension, body/chassis, and tow couplings.

A further 10 infringements have been issued for other defects, fatigue, and ECM offences.

Police Superintendent Stuart Smith, Traffic and Highway Patrol Command, said today’s operation is only the start for truckies and operators who are not compliant with legislation.

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Police Superintendent Stuart Smith:

“This operation is part of our ongoing commitment to stamping out rogue operators on our major highways and roads,” he said.  “There is no place in the trucking industry for alleged speed and fatigue enhancing, by tampering with equipment or taking illegal drugs. 

Fatigued drivers or those under the influence behind the wheel of a heavy vehicle put motorists at serious risk on our roads.  Every year for the last three years, there have been in excess of 80 fatalities on our roads involving heavy vehicles.  Our message is clear to operators and drivers, clean up your act before we do it for you.”

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RMS General Manager of Compliance Operation, Mr Paul Endycott, said today’s operation by the Joint Heavy Vehicle Taskforce highlights the important work this group carry out to keep roads safe for all motorists.

“The fatigue issues and speed limiter tampering identified is deeply concerning and shows there is still work to be done to ensure the majority of honest, hard working truck drivers and operators are not unfairly associated with such dangerous and illegal behaviour,” Mr Endycott said. >>

.[Source:  ‘Drugs, speed and fatigue as police target Bobbins trucking’, 20130822, ^http://www.batemansbaypost.com.au/story/1724590/videophotos-drugs-speed-and-fatigue-as-police-target-bobbins-trucking/?cs=12]

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Police ‘Operation Felled’ – the official police version…

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<< NSW Police and Roads and Maritime Service (RMS) officers have executed search warrants and intercepted a company’s fleet of heavy vehicles as part of an investigation into alleged speed tampering and compliance.

Operation Felled was formed by Traffic and Highway Patrol and Far South Coast LAC, to investigate one company’s daily operations and compliance with road transport legislation.

The operation which is ongoing targeted speed tampering, fatigue offences and vehicle compliance, including workbook and system breaches, and involved engine control modules (ECM) downloads and drug and alcohol testing.

About 7.55am today, a 41-year-old Greigs Flat man was arrested at a South Pambula address. He has been charged with supplying a commercial quantity of prohibited drugs, supply prohibited drugs (x2) and possess prohibited drugs (x2). He was refused bail to appear in Batemans Bay Local Court today (Thursday 22 August 2013).

The man’s arrest relates to inquiries into the alleged use and supply of prohibited drugs during the operation of heavy vehicles.

About 8am today (Thursday 22 August 2013), police executed warrants at Pambula on the South Coast and Greigs Flat, as well as a company depot in Ingleburn. Officers also intercepted fleet trucks in transit on major highways across Sydney, checking compliance and drug and alcohol testing drivers.

At the Greigs Flat address, officers allegedly located an amount of prohibited drugs and drug paraphernalia in a vehicle and prohibited drugs inside the premise. These were seized by police.

During the warrants, investigators seized company computer records and documents allegedly relating to speed and fatigue management and responsibilities.

Two trucks were identified for speed tampering and compliance issues, resulting in two drivers receiving infringements for $2092. The RMS will now investigate these matters further in terms of the company’s compliance with speed requirements.

A company convicted of speed tampering faces penalties in excess of $16,000, while directors can also be held responsible. Company’s convicted of breaches of fatigue requirements can face penalties in excess of $27,000.

So far during the operation, 16 defects have been issued by RMS for a range of minor and major defects inclusive of brakes, tyres, oil and fuel issues, and suspension, body/chassis, and tow couplings.

Police and RMS have inspected 18 trucks in NSW, five were identified interstate, which resulted in five court attendance notices issued to drivers for fatigue-related offences. A further 10 infringements have been issued for other defects, fatigue, and ECM offences.

Superintendent Stuart Smith, Traffic and Highway Patrol Command, said today’s operation is only the start for truckies and operators who are not compliant with our legislation.

“This operation is part of our ongoing commitment to stamping out rogue operators on our major highways and roads.

“There is no place in the trucking industry for alleged speed and fatigue enhancing, by tampering with equipment or taking illegal drugs. Fatigued drivers or those under the influence behind the wheel of a heavy vehicle put motorists at serious risk on our roads.

“Every year for the last three years, there have been in excess of 80 fatalities on our roads involving heavy vehicles.

“Our message is clear to operators and drivers, clean up your act before we do it for you,” Superintendent Smith said.

RMS General Manager of Compliance Operation, Mr Paul Endycott, said today’s operation by the Joint Heavy Vehicle Taskforce highlights the important work this group carry out to keep our roads safe for all motorists.

“The fatigue issues and speed limiter tampering identified is deeply concerning and shows there is still work to be done to ensure the majority of honest, hard working truck drivers and operators are not unfairly associated with such dangerous and illegal behaviour,” Mr Endycott said.

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[Source:  ‘NSW Police and RMS intercept truck fleet targeting compliance – Operation Felled’, 20130822, ^http://www.police.nsw.gov.au…]

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Coles Freshness policy blamed for deliver truck speeding regime

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<< Transport Workers Union deputy secretary Michael Aird has called on Coles to take responsibility for rogue operators in its supply chain after police arrested one of its drivers on the NSW South Coast this week.

Thursday’s arrest (Bobbins Transport) was part of an operation targeting the alleged use and supply of prohibited drugs during the operation of heavy vehicles.

During the warrants, investigators also seized company computer records and documents allegedly relating to speed and fatigue management and responsibilities.

Mr Aird says the problem is a systemic one and people really need to understand that it is part of a bigger picture.

“When a giant retailer like Coles pushes down rates, drivers end up being forced into dangerous practices that will kill people on our roads,” Mr Aird said.

Coles FreshFresh to you thanks to No Doze

 

“Desperate companies unfortunately resort to outrageous and illegal practices just to stay in business because of the enormous pressures imposed on them by Coles.

“People need to understand that one of the real costs of Coles driving prices down to increase profits is putting dangerously unsafe trucking companies onto our public roads.”

Mr Aird said truck drivers being forced to work under enormous pressure from unrealistic deadlines imposed by large retail giants contributed to the more than 300 deaths on Australian roads each year.

“This is why the TWU continues to campaign for Safe Rates for our members and for all Australians using our roads: which mean fair pay for truck drivers and safe roads for drivers.

“The Coles business model is driving companies into unsafe practices and costing innocent people their lives,” Mr Aird said.

The trucking company, Bobbins, is in the Coles supply chain and contracting for Coles. It has previously been involved in serious accidents and had been found to be tampering with speed limiters.  >>
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[Source: ‘TWU slams Coles for driving trucking safety standards down’, 20130823, ^http://www.batemansbaypost.com.au/story/1725810/twu-slams-coles-for-driving-trucking-safety-standards-down/?cs=229]

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2012:  Cowboy Truckers discovered yet Duncan Gay makes no systemic overhaul

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<< Calls have grown for an overhaul of the trucking industry after the discovery of systemic safety breaches by (Lennons) transport company linked to a triple road fatality in Sydney.

The NSW government announced it would spring spot checks on heavy vehicles but says it will await the outcome of a police investigation into Lennons Transport Services before taking further action.

Police descended on the company early yesterday after one of their drivers was charged over the January 24 accident on the Hume Highway in Menangle.

They later said they had found safety breaches, including attempts to manipulate speed limiters, on eight Lennons trucks.

Operation Marshall was formed after Calvyn Logan, 59, and his elderly parents Donald and Patricia Logan, aged in their 80s, died on January 24 when a B-double truck careered onto the wrong side of the road.

On Tuesday police charged Vincent George, 33, with three counts of dangerous driving occasioning death.

He will appear in Campbelltown Local Court on May 16.

Yesterday, officers converged on the company’s headquarters at Enfield, in Sydney’s inner-west, and alerted authorities across NSW, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia.

They allegedly located 19 of 35 vehicles and found speed limiters on seven of the trucks had been altered so they could travel beyond the maximum 100km/h speed limit.

An eighth vehicle had its fuel system altered to deliver more fuel to the engine in order to achieve higher speeds, police said.

One driver was found with cannabis in his possession and another had exceeded fatigue restrictions by driving 17 hours in one day.

Police located another Lennons truck abandoned on a roadside in Victoria and the driver’s logbook in a nearby rubbish bin.

Traffic and Highway Patrol Commander John Hartley said police also located doctored logbooks and many devices used to manipulate speed limits at Lennons offices.

RMS regulatory services director, Peter Wells, said tampering with trucks to exceed maximum speeds was well known in the industry.

“There is a practice in the industry of modifying speed limiters,” Mr Wells told reporters in Sydney.

He would not comment on whether the RMS had been investigating Lennons before the crash but expected charges to be laid.

But the RMS did confirm that Lennons was slapped with a court supervisory intervention order in 2008 as a “systematic or persistent offender” of road laws.

NSW Opposition Leader John Robertson yesterday called on the state government to investigate the industry.

But when asked if a widespread review of the industry was needed, Premier Barry O’Farrell said “anything in that sense will be informed by what is discovered in this instance”.

NSW Roads Minister Duncan Gay said trucks would be subject to random checks to stop “cowboy” operators from illegally tampering with them.

“I certainly would describe it as a blitz, and it’s not the end,” Mr Gay said yesterday.

TWU National Secretary Tony Sheldon blamed retailers like Coles and Woolworths for putting “crazy” deadlines on drivers.

“The people that have been driving (with) these unsafe practices, and trucks being interfered with, has been as a result of the economic pressure from Coles and the other major retailers.”

Lennons has been a member of TruckSafe since 1999, a voluntary regulatory scheme administered by the Australian Trucking Association (ATA), which gives transport companies federal fuel tax credits.   Auditors contact members in advance of an inspection but only inspect maintenance records.  They were last inspected in June 2010 and no breaches were found.

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[Source:  ‘Truck fatalities spark overhaul calls’, 20120223, by Vincent Morello (AAP), ^http://www.couriermail.com.au/ipad/truck-fatalities-spark-overhaul-calls/story-fn6ck4a4-1226278707468]

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Give ’em an inch…

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B-Triple Truck

<< Modular B-triple truck configurations will now be allowed on the Newell Highway from Narrabri to Goondiwindi in NSW.

As part of national heavy vehicle reforms, modular B-triples are allowed to operate on the road train network west of the Newell under the same conditions as Type 1 road trains.

Transport operators travelling from far western NSW, e.g. on the Kamilaroi Highway, will now be able to access the Newell at Narrabri to use the 225 kilometre stretch of highway to Goondiwindi, and then beyond.

Even though they have an extra (third) trailer, modular B-triples are typically shorter than Type 1 road trains currently operating on this section of the Newell.

Modern modular B-triples are said to be safer than some of the older and heavier vehicle combinations using these routes, especially in terms of their manoeuvrability and handling performance. Being articulated they follow the road better.

Industry research has shown that a semi-trailer operating at a higher mass limit (HML) takes approximately 37 trips to transport 1,000 tonnes of freight, whereas for the same tonnage a modular B-triple operating at HML only requires about 17 trips.

The stretch of the Newell Highway between Narrabri and Goondiwindi has been determined as having suitable infrastructure to accommodate these types of trucks.

  • Type 1 Road Train Max length = 36.5 metres
  • Modular B-triple Max length = 35.0 metres

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B-triple-truck-and-road-train

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The roads west of the Newell, on which Type 1 road trains and modular B-triples currently operate, have significantly lower traffic volumes than the Newell itself.

For this reason, and to ensure consistency with the existing approach taken for routes on and east of the highway, modular B-triples using the Newell itself will be required to meet additional requirements including:

  •     Accreditation under the maintenance module of National Heavy Vehicle Accreditation Scheme (NHVAS);
  •     Road-friendly suspension; and
  •     Enrolment in the Intelligent Access Program (IAP)

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Consistent with requirements already in place for road trains and modular B-triples in this part of NSW, vehicles will need to comply with a maximum speed limit of 90 km/h.

In April this year, the NSW Government and Transport Certification Australia (TCA) announced a new entry options initiative and flexible pricing framework to help reduce the costs of transport operators implementing and using IAP.

The entry options arrangement recognises transport operators have existing in-vehicle GPS units and makes it easier for transport operators to have their existing in-vehicle units assessed and type-approved to comply with national IAP standards.

Modular B-triples are expected to start using the Newell Highway between Narrabri and Goondiwindi from late August, subject to permit approval.

Operators interested in applying for permits should contact iap@rms.nsw.gov.au.

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[Source:   ‘B-triple network expanded to Newell Highway’,  20130808, by Charles Pauka, Transport & Logistics News, ^http://www.tandlnews.com.au/2013/08/08/article/b-triple-network-expanded-to-newell-highway/]

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B Triple Cyclist KillerB-Triple Cyclist Killer

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Further Reading:

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[1]    ‘Bigger Trucks Mean More Dangerous Highways‘, Coalition against bigger trucks’,  ^http://cabt.org/assets/downloads/Safety_White_Paper_-_040711.pdf

>Download Document  (PDF, 2 pages, 120kb)

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[2]   ‘The Safety Needs of Heavy Vehicles in Australia‘, 2010, by NRMA, New South Wales, ^http://www.mynrma.com.au/media/Heavy_Vehicle_Safety_Report_March_2010.pdf

>Download Document (PDF, 11 pages, 230kb)

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[3]   ‘Chain of Responsibility- Heavy Vehicle Driver Fatigue‘, ^http://www.ntc.gov.au/filemedia/Publications/HVDF_ChainResponsibility_July08.pdf

>Download Document (PDF, 4 pages, 1.1 MB)

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[4]   ‘Truck Safety Alert:  The Rising Danger from Trucks, and How to Stop It‘, ^http://www.takejusticeback.com/sites/default/files/AAJ%20Truck%20Report%202013%20FINAL.pdf

>Download Document  (PDF, 18 pages, 870 kb)

Trucking Danger

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[5]   ‘Truck Driver Behaviour and Perceptions Study‘, 1991, by Monash University,   ^http://www.monash.edu.au/miri/research/reports/muarc018.pdf

>Download Document  (PDF,  105 pages, 4.5 MB)

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[6]   ‘Groups come together to keep freight on rail‘, ^http://freoroad2rail.org/sites/default/files/Groups%20come%20together%20to%20keep%20freight%20on%20rail.pdf

>Download Document  (PDF, 1 page, 96kb)

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[7]    ‘From Truck to Train – 12 Examples Of Successful Modal Shifts in Freight Transport‘, by Allianz pro Schiene, ^http://www.unife.org/uploads/From_Truck_to_Train.pdf

>Download Document  (PDF, 46 pages, 2.6 MB)

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Great Western Highway
Sign reads:  “Watch Out for Cyclists”
Another why bother RTA-come-RMS safety measure
on the Great Western Highway at Boddington Hill, Wentworth Falls
(Note: roadside native trees already chainsawed ahead of the impending expressway)
[Photo by Editor 20120201,© under  ^Creative Commons]
Click image to enlarge.

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Wildlife Photography from a respectful distance

Saturday, August 17th, 2013
Eastern Water Dragon (Physignathus lesueurii) Eastern Water Dragon
(Physignathus lesueurii)
Taken for the benefit of the photograph, not the dragon
Photo by Editor in Blue Mountains, Australia, 20061112, photo © under  ^Creative Commons]
Click image to enlarge

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Wildlife photography is not about humanising wildlife for entertainment.  It ought to be about awareness, wonder and respect for wildlife and their habitat.

Zoology may be about technical understanding of the structure and classification of the animal kingdom, but since Darwin we have realised that animals are so much more complex creatures of behaviour and integral to ecology than just being taxidermied museum specimens for public display.

Taxidermied Badger

Zoos are just an extension of museums for the benefit of public entertainment.  But they do not respect wildlife in their habitat.

Lion Languishing
[Source:  ^http://katialglobal2viceduau.global2.vic.edu.au/personal-learning/]

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In their habitat and ecological context, photographed wildlife may be better appreciated and valued for their integral role in Nature.  But at a respectful distance.

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Physignathus lesueurii in its habitat Not for the camera, but naturally obscured in its habitat
A more interpretative photo, but still too close.
Photo by Editor 20061112, photo © under  ^Creative Commons]

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“The two basic processes of education are knowing and valuing”

~ Robert J. Havighurst  (1900-1991).

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Empathy for Other Species is the Key to Ethical Wildlife Photography

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[Source:  “Empathy for Other Species is the Key to Ethical Wildlife Photography”, by Jim Robertson, ^http://www.wildwatch.org/Binocular/bino01/empathy.html]

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<< A deep admiration for Nature has led many to another level of appreciation–the craft of wildlife photography.

Unfortunately, not all who photograph wildlife do so out of caring and with respect for our fellow beings. In fact, the behavior of many photographers, both amateur and professional, can only be described as disrespectful, disruptive and sometimes dangerous to the animals they are photographing.

For example, every spring in Yellowstone you are sure to see a large group of photographers standing around–or even sitting on lawn chairs–talking loudly right outside some poor badger’s birthing den, waiting for the family to emerge. Though these folks may think nothing of the clamor of a rowdy bar or ball game, how would they like to live next door to that bar or ball field, or wake up to the racket of an expectant crowd of photojournalists right outside their bedroom window?

Wildlife Photography

In response to this kind of ill-behavior, which invariably results in the harassment or endangerment of wildlife, informal guidelines have been established to spell out just how close, in yards or feet, one should get to an individual animal, depending on that species’ tolerance zone.

 
Badger Den from a respectful distanceBadger Den
This mother and young badger were photographed across the road from their den using a 600mm telephoto lens and a 2X multiplier
Photo © Jim Robertson
^http://www.wildwatch.org/Binocular/bino01/empathy.html]

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But rather than memorizing numbers and gauging distances, perhaps it would be easier for photographers and wildlife observers to apply The Golden Rule in each and every situation.

However, instead of the old, oversimplified rule, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you,” why not adopt a revised golden rule that takes into account the differences between ourselves and other species? Maybe something like, “Do unto others as you think they would have you do unto them.” In other words, try to envision what the animals’ needs and self interests are and take into consideration how their lives in the wild are different from our own.

Empathy, the intellectual or emotional identification with another — or the ability to relate to others — is essential for maintaining ethical standards when photographing wildlife.

Last spring I watched from a distance as the annual gathering of noisy photographers was posted outside the entrance of a badger den. They were so deep in conversation and oblivious to their surroundings that none of them noticed as the mother badger finally made a break for it in hopes of procuring food for her young.

The day before, I had photographed the same badger den from across a road with a 600mm telephoto lens fitted with a 2X extender to bring the subject in closer without actually getting close. Because I remained on the opposite side of the road and well away from the den, quietly giving them the space they needed to engage in their activities and enjoy the sunny day, the badger and her young came and went freely, without paying me any notice.

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The Poor Man’s Super-Telephoto Lens:

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Extender-EF-2X-II-small.

<< The lens of choice among the serious pro wildlife photographers I know seems to be the 600mm ƒ/4 super-telephoto. It’s great for subjects that won’t let you get close, is incredibly sharp, and autofocuses quickly and accurately. However, it costs over $7,000.

That being just a bit beyond my budget, when I really need “reach,” I turn my $1,200 300mm ƒ/4 lens into a 600mm ƒ/8 by attaching a $300 2x teleconverter between the lens and camera body.Also known as tele-extenders, teleconverters are available from the major lens manufacturers for their long lenses, and offer three major benefits.

First, as just cited, they’re an economical way to get superlong focal lengths. And they’re not just for the budget-challenged. Pros use them, too—a 1.4x converter turns that monster 600mm into an 840mm; a 2x converter, into a 1200mm.

The second benefit of the teleconverter is that it doesn’t change the lens’ minimum focusing distance.
Add a 2x converter to a 300mm lens that focuses down to five feet, and you have a 600mm lens that focuses down to five feet. (For comparison, my camera manufacturer’s 600mm super-telephoto won’t focus closer than 18 feet unless you attach it to an extension tube; but then it won’t focus out to infinity.)

The third teleconverter benefit is lack of bulk. A 300mm lens with a 2x teleconverter is much more compact than a 600mm ƒ/4 super-telephoto lens. (A 600mm ƒ/8 prime lens also would be smaller than the 600mm ƒ/4, but currently no one makes a 600mm ƒ/8. >>

[Source:  ‘The Poor Man’s Super-Telephoto’, 20090421, by Mike Stensvold, ^http://www.outdoorphotographer.com/gear/lenses/the-poor-mans-super-telephoto.html]

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A national Park like Yellowstone can be the perfect place for photographing animals without causing them undue stress. Since they know they are safe from hunting within park boundaries, “game species” are not so distrustful of human presence.

Although many species are easily viewable from park roadways, they are much less concerned about vehicles than people approaching on foot. Staying in your car makes wildlife feel more comfortable, and your vehicle makes a great blind for photographing animals calmly going about their business. Some of my best photos have been taken out of the window of my rig.

Other examples of photographer misconduct include trimming away vegetation–that may conceal a nest or den from people and predators–to get a clearer photo, throwing food to attract animals, and the all-too-common habit of yelling or honking at an elk, a bison or a family of bears so they will look toward the camera.

By using empathy we can begin to recognize changes in behavior and respect the signals animals use to convey to us that we are irritating them or getting too close for their comfort.

Every year irresponsible photographers are gored by bison, trampled by moose, or charged by bears. When these animals are annoyed to the point that they feel the need to defend themselves, chances are they will suffer or die for it in the end. Thoughtless conduct can also force animals to leave their familiar surroundings, interrupt natural activities necessary for survival, or even separate mothers from their young.

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Bull Elk from a respectful distanceBull Elk 
This bull elk was photographed from my vehicle in Jasper National Park, Alberta, using a telephoto lens
Photo © Jim Robertson, ^http://www.wildwatch.org/Binocular/bino01/empathy.html]

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Outdoor Photographer magazine ran an article in January/February 2000 on “Tips for Photographing Eagles” with the sub-heading “A long lens, the right location and a sensitive approach can get you excellent images of these majestic birds”.

The author of the article, Bill Silliker, Jr. wrote, “If you don’t have a long lens, don’t push it. Ethical wildlife photography requires that we forego attempts to photograph wildlife when we’re not equipped for it or if the attempt might harass or somehow place the subject in jeopardy. Be satisfied with images that show an eagle in its habitat. Editors use those too.”

The other day a neighbour stopped by and, upon seeing the small herd of black-tailed deer who found refuge on my land, asked if I was a hunter. When I said, “No, I’m a wildlife photographer,” he shrugged and replied, “It’s all shooting.”

Well, yes and no.

The obvious, major difference is that the animals “shot” with a camera do not end up dead. But because there are similarities to hunting, many people approach wildlife photography with a similar mind-set. It’s laughable to see photographers in a national park camouflaged from head-to-toe, sometimes including face paint, photographing a bull elk as he calmly grazes alongside the road–fully aware of their presence. And I couldn’t count how many times I’ve seen tourists run right up to a bear, elk, bison, or moose with a tiny disposable camera to get their close-up “trophy” photo.

They seem to think it’s only fair–that they are entitled to get closer–since they don’t have a large telephoto for their camera. But if they were to examine their motives they would realize that their behaviour is not fair to the animal. Is their trophy more important than the well-being of the subject of their photo?

At the height of disregard, some photographers will use hounds fitted with radio collars to pursue and corner bears, bobcats, or cougars for close-up photos of these more elusive species. If they are “lucky”, they might even catch the animal snarling in response–just the way any number of hunting magazines like to portray them on their covers or in juicy, two-page fold-outs. But how would they feel if they had to flee for their lives, chased down by a pack of dogs until they were exhausted or treed, just so someone could get a picture of them?

Wildlife photography should not be thought of as a sport or challenge against nature, or against the animals who did not volunteer for the game.  Would it be considered ethical to make sport of photographing unwilling human subjects?

Unethical practices of those who photograph wildlife for self-serving purposes have given the whole field a bad name. Bill McKibben, author of “The End of Nature” has proposed a moratorium on new wildlife photos, to prevent further aggravation of endangered animals. He argues there are plenty of photos already out there for use in prints and publications. As more incidents of unethical behaviour by photographers occur, the privilege of photographing wild animals will become more and more restricted.

Still, no amount of  harassment or disruption of wildlife in any way justifies the increasingly popular use of game farms by so-called wildlife photographers.

Too often, the “wild” animal seen in a publication or promotional is actually a captive animal sentenced to life on a game farm. Game farms use high fences, costing upwards of $8,000.00 per mile, to keep their preferred, sometimes exotic species in. These fences also effectively keep the native migratory wildlife out, thereby taking up valuable habitat.

While many game farms profit directly from the hunting of animals in their enclosures, others appear relatively innocuous, charging only for public viewing and private photographic sessions with “wildlife models,” including crowd-pleasing kittens, cubs, or fawns bred specifically for that purpose. But as these animals get older and less photogenic, they are auctioned off as “surplus” to the highest bidders–a common practice of zoos as well. It is likely the same animals that appeared as cute babies on calendars, greeting cards, or other publications will end up a few years later at another game farm that does profit from the canned hunting of them.

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Grizzly Bear from a respectful distanceGrizzly Bear
This sow grizzly bear was photographed with a 600mm telephoto
from a supervised Forest Service observation platform along Fish Creek, in Southeast Alaska.
Photo © Jim Robertson
^http://www.wildwatch.org/Binocular/bino01/empathy.html]
 

Most photographers and photo editors do not differentiate between wild or captive animals when selling and publishing images. Using photos shot at game farms supports those who profit from exploiting animals by keeping them captive to serve as models for photographers, entertainment for tourists, or targets for trophy hunters. At the same time, these photos set a new, unnatural standard for closeness and intimacy with animals that the public expects to see in every future image.

And while on the subject of ethics, how ethical is it to top off a day of photographing waterfowl or ungulates with a dinner of poultry or red meat?

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Don’t all living beings deserve our compassion and respect?

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I had long heard that animals feel less threatened by someone who does not eat meat, but I wondered how long a human could survive without consuming the flesh of others. After six years as a vegan, I can attest to the fact that wild animals are not as fearful of me now, and that saying “no” to animal protein is healthier and easier than I ever would have imagined. >>

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Blue Mountains disappearing for profit

Tuesday, August 13th, 2013
Housing Development in the Blue MountainsStuarts Road, Katoomba
This site was intact undisturbed escarpment heathland so dense that it was impossible to walk into it.
[Photo by Editor 20130715, photo © under  ^Creative Commons]

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“The control of Nature” is a phrase conceived in arrogance, born of the Neanderthal age of biology and philosophy when it was supposed that Nature exists for the convenience of Man.”

~ Rachael Carson

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Then in ecological teachings and outdoor recreation they teach “minimal impact”  respect for the Natural environment:

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“Take nothng but pictures, kill nothing but time, leave nothing but footprints.”

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“The purist ecological approach remains a world away from all manner of industrial reality down the road.”

-Ed.

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Tassie Oak Flooring

Sunday, August 4th, 2013
Tassie oak flooring on new house Cliff Drive Blue Mountains 20120111New house for sale on the Blue Mountains Escarpment
featuring “Tasmanian Oak hardwood flooring”  as a key selling point.
[Photo by Editor, 20120111, Photo © under  ^Creative Commons]

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Tasmanian Oak, which is typically abbreviated as Tassie Oak, does not exist as a real tree, but as a contrived timber flooring brand marketed to household consumers by the timber industry.

The trees sourced to produce Tassie Oak Flooring are from old growth Tasmanian native forests that are either Eucalyptus delegatensis (Alpine Ash), or Eucalyptus obliqua (Stringybark or Messmate) or else Eucalyptus regnans  (Mountain Ash or Swamp Gum).

Eucalyptus Regnans is the largest flowering plant and hardwood tree in the world.  Historically, it has been known to attain heights over 100 meters (330 ft) and is one of the highest tree species in the world. The tallest measured living specimen, named Centurion, stands 99.6 meters tall in Tasmania.

Tasmanian Oak (Eucalyptus regnans)
Eucalyptus regnans
before becoming someone’s Tassie Oak floor

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Tasmania is well known to travellers looking for pristine beauty and unspoiled wilderness. Besides unique flora and fauna including the endangered Tasmanian Devil, it is also home to the giant Eucalyptus.  Tasmanian Tourism is all about marketing spin hiding the clearfelled old growth just out of sight of the tourist road.  Visit Mount Field and wonder over the majesty of the old growth, but dare not venture beyond to the tragic scale of wanton clearfell.

The reality is that  Australian Forestry Standard (AFS) “Chain of Custody” eco-label is an exploitative con by the timber industry.

On Forestry Tasmania’s website ‘Island Specialty Timbers’ at Geeveston claims to be a licensed Chain of Custody member, FTT CoC 08005, “which is your guarantee that all our raw material and products are Tasmanian fine timbers sourced from forests whose management is certified to the Australian Forestry Standard”.

A mature Eucalypt's 'timber profile' (Forestry Tasmania)
 Only ‘sawlog’ sections of MATURE large hardwood trees are suitable for flooring
If there are no branch knots in the timber, then the timber has come from the trunks of  mature large hardwood trees.
Such trees are not from plantations, but from rare and disappearing forest habitat.
Forestry Standard AS 2796 ‘Sawn and Milled Native Hardwoods’ is the driving force for logging old growth habitat.

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The supplier ‘Fine Timber Tasmania Inc.’ sells Tasmanian Myrtle (Myrtle Beech), Southern Sassafras, Leatherwood, Cheesewood, Musk, Blackwood, Eucalypt Burl, Figured Eucalypt, Huon pine, Celery Top Pine and King Billy Pine as ‘certified’.

The products of these ancient tree species are timber beams, posts, slabs and even raw logs – which simply can only come from old growth Tasmanian native forests.

Certification is AFS (Australian Forestry Standard) which has two separate standards

  1. Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) Certification – Australian Standard AS 4708
  2. Chain of Custody Certification (CoC) – Australian Standard AS 4707

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The only benefit seems to be so that some developer and real estate agent can say hey your floorboards come from Tasmanian Old Growth and you are part of the problem; part of the Chain of Ecological Destruction, driving demand that sustains 20th Century Industrial Native Logging.

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Styx_clearfell_(Alan_Lesheim_20110928)s

Tassie Oak Reality

Editor standing on a Eucalytus Regnans clearfelled in the Styx Valley
[Photo © Alan Lesheim 20110928]

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Blue Mountains tap water not worth drinking

Thursday, August 1st, 2013
Catalina Reservoir WS0395Blue Mountains drinking water tank with chlorine salt stains
Mineral salt efflorescence
Narrow Neck Road, Katoomba
[Photo by Editor, 20130507, Photo © under  ^Creative Commons]

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Rainwater, streams, surface water, ground water, aquifers and Australia’s Great Artesian Basin are all interconnected hydrology across Eastern Australia.

In the Blue Mountains plateau country, west of Sydney, sandstone-ironstone geology creates a subterrainean barrier to rainwater absorption and so the ground water slowly flows horizontally over longer periods.  This sustains upland swamps and wetland ecosystems.

Human built settlement across the central Blue Mountains ridgeland since the 1820s introduced sewage contamination into the downstream watercourses, gullies and gorge country below.  The raw sewage drainage piping into the valleys below the townships has recently been diverted expensively to contained closed system sewage infrastructure.  But urban runoff and dodgy stormwater overflows into legacy sewage mains cause ongoing leakages into the water catchments of the Blue Mountains.

Savvy local bushwalkers know not to drink the water from watercourses downstream of Blackheath, Springwood, Katoomba and other such townships.

Prudent government authority, Sydney Water, disinfects its drinking water reservoirs in the Blue Mountains, to be safe.

But some of the Blue Mountains water that falls as rain in a largely wilderness region, is captured as drinking water in a few reservoirs, then pumped by larged pipes up to large water tanks above  the Blue Mountains townships to enable gravity to deliver pressurised water to thousands of homes.

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 Catalina Reservoir WS0396
Second Blue Mountains drinking water tank with chlorine salt stains
Narrow Neck Road, Katoomba
[Photo by Editor, 20130507, Photo © under  ^Creative Commons]

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Ed:  Are we to now expect fresh green paint over the chlorine salt efflorescent tanks to hide the problem?

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Chloramine Tap Water

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Across New South Wales, Sydney Water routinely disinfects drinking water in its reservoirs to control the risk of prevalent and toxic E. coli, Cryptosporidium and Giardia bacteria contamination.

Sydney Water applies a derivative of chlorine known as chloramine in its reservoirs – a disinfectant formed by mixing chlorine with ammonia.  This is less toxic than the hypochlorous acid typically applied to swimming pools.  Given the history in the Blue Mountains of sewage and runoff downstream from upstream townships, Sydney Water ups the dosage of chloramine, to be sure.

Chloramine is a less effective disinfectant than the hypochlorous acid, but it is longer lasting and stays in the water system as it moves through the pipes that transport it to consumers (a process that can take three or four days).  For this reason, chloramine is often used alongside chlorine as a “secondary” disinfectant designed to remain in drinking water longer.  But what are the long term impacts of drinking Chloramine contained in drinking water.  What long term scientific studies have been done and publicly reported?

Chlorine by itself is a very dangerous material. Liquid chlorine burns the skin and gaseous chlorine irritates the mucus membranes. Concentrations of the gas as low as 3.5 parts per million can be detected by smell while concentrations of 1000 parts per million can be fatal after a few deep breaths.

In the Blue Mountains, the tap water is decidedly hardened in taste by the chlorine additive.   So should tap water in the Blue Mountains be drunk safely?

Chlorine BathBlue Mountains bath with a distinctive chlorine aqua tinge
[Photo by Editor, 20130502, Photo © under  ^Creative Commons]

 

So is the Blue Mountains tap water safe to drink?

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