 If I can just start by saying that today marks phase three of our Easter road toll campaign for 2012, and it's a very important day. The reason, of course, is multi-fold. The first is that we've got a lot of children returning to school after a holiday break, and that's always a difficult time. It can be problematic, young children excited to return to school, so we like to have a very good police presence and a very effective police presence in school zones over that period. I think the other thing that's important, of course, is the fact that school zone times in some instances will have changed across South East Queensland, and that's to bring them into line, so that all school zone hours in South East Queensland are between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. and, of course, in the afternoon from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. And that's standardized across South East Queensland now, so drivers need to be mindful of the fact that there may be some changes to the time zone times in their school zone areas. And I think the final thing to say is that at the end of school holidays there's still some holiday traffic on the road, still some people returning to both work and to school, so it's really important that people are quite vigilant whilst they're driving, particularly over this coming day and the remainder of the week. Eddie, you're taking those no excuses now, that's just a message people are going to get into their heads about at 7 a.m. to 9 and 2 to 4 p.m. I think that's the key, that standardisation is really important, 7 to 9, 2 to 4, every school day of the year, and I think if people remember that and if people are vigilant to make sure that they are checking their own school zones to see if there's been any sort of change, that's a really important thing. There is a high degree of vulnerability of road users in and around school zones. That's the nature of young children and roads, so we would urge people to take special care. Of course, as you know, this is the national youth week this week. The loss of a child or the injury of a child is terrible at any time. It would be a tragic irony if a child was to be injured or killed at a school zone during the national youth week. So you give fair warning that there will be sort of blitzes around the school zone? Yes, today and for the remainder of this week there will be a significant police presence and motorists will notice this in and around school zones. And of course that's because we are here to support parents, carers and teachers as they ensure the safe return of their children to school. Do you have any statistics on how many people would find in school zones over the past 12 months? No, I haven't got that information with me unfortunately, no. Well we find that it's far more common than it ought to be. We do spend a lot of our resources and times in and around school zones and I've got to tell you that we are routinely disappointed by the speed that some people travel through school zones at. Now I'd like to think that this discussion that we're having today and this information that's getting out into the community will underscore the point that school zones are areas in which there are vulnerable road users and it would be an absolute tragedy if one of our young children was killed as a result of speeding motorists in a school zone. One would assume you know drivers have enough smarts not to deliberately speed where they're akin so it's got to be a sort of complacency or something like that or just lack of awareness. I think you're right I think sometimes the driving task becomes quite mundane and it's not unusual for people to lose focus and lose concentration and I guess that's why we're urging people to take a good look around their school zones in the areas that they drive in these days to make sure that if there has been any change they're aware of that change. So I guess we're encouraging people just to focus on the task at hand and as I say particularly over this period as young children are returning to school as some families are still returning from holidays and of course with this change that some people will notice to schools own timings in their area. Do you have any information from this morning's blitzes as to how many people were caught or the speeds they were doing? No not yet that information will be accumulated over the course of the next day or two and we'll certainly have some information to look at that. I think what's important too is that the information that we gather today will inform future intelligent deployment of our traffic resources into the future. So this is a fairly major blitz that we're having around in and around school zones. If the results are disappointing in other words if there are lots of people that we locate speeding well you can bet that we'll be ramping up our enforcement at subsequent return to school periods. When exactly did those time zones change over? As of one minute past midnight today so that's one minute past midnight on the 16th of April. The rest of Queensland's coming in June is that right? Yes by July we anticipate that so the southeast corner of the state has become formalised, has consolidated its timings. Outside of the southeast corner of the state we anticipate by July all schools own times will come into uniform standard across the state.