The teenage survivor of a crash that killed his friend Nick Campo has met with the surgeons who saved his life.
This weekend has seen three serious traffic incidents in the state,two of them tragically involving fatalities in Carlisle and Norseman.
The state government has received $1.73 billion from the Transport Accident Commission over the past six years,bolstering its own coffers with more cash than the state-owned insurer spent on road safety upgrades.
The construction along the Mitchell Freeway southbound cost $209.6 million of state and federal government funds,and has been completed after months of work.
Tearful Alex Cullen called Eleanor Bryant “generous,wonderful and caring” after she died saving preschool children from the path of a water tanker.
A grandmother killed in a horror crash involving a car allegedly stolen by a teenager at gunpoint has been remembered for her kindness and devotion to her family.
High-powered vehicles could be next on the chopping block for P-platers as the state cracks down on passenger numbers for new drivers.
Could cutting speeds be the answer to the state’s spiralling road toll? A three-year,unprecedented trial aims to show the potential benefits of slower roads.
We’ve all seen the increasing media coverage of the deaths occurring on our roads. These reports only last a minute or two,but the devastation lasts a lifetime.
The family of the driver whose car ploughed into children at a Hawthorn East primary school has offered condolences to the family of 11-year-old Jack Davey,who was killed in the crash.
Michael Davey says his son Jack,who was killed when an SUV careered through a fence at a Hawthorn East primary school,blessed his family with love for 11 years.