 Good. Well, good afternoon everybody. It's my very sad duty to have to give you a rundown on what's been a horrific day on the state's roads, which is only half over at this stage. Started off at around midnight at Gorge Road at Rosedale in the Glaston District, a single vehicle accident there where the vehicle failed to negotiate a bend and rolled. 34 year old female driver was killed in that incident and her passenger survived and received some injury. At 25 minutes past midnight and Chambers Flat Road at Logan Reserve, at a single vehicle accident, the vehicle rolled and hit a culvert. Both the 26 year old driver and his 34 year old passenger were killed instantly in that incident. It appears that the passenger was not wearing his seatbelt and was ejected from the vehicle. At 2.44 this morning on the Pacific Highway at Beanlea, travelling northbound, there was a collision between a Bedford van and a semi-trailer in which tragically three people in the van have been killed. A 23 and a 24 year old male and a 33 year old female who were all passengers in the van were all killed and the driver has been treated for minor injuries. Then at 06.20 this morning at Anzac Avenue, a utility collided with a power pole that caused the pole to fall and hit a 79 year old pedestrian who was walking home from the shop. Sadly a very short time ago that gentleman was deceased at the hospital. And then at 10.47 on the Burke Development Road just outside of Chilago, we've had a single vehicle rollover and that's resulted in the death of a female passenger of that vehicle and another passenger was trapped and has been airlifted to Cairns Hospital. So tragically that makes a total of eight people who have been killed on the state's roads in the space of about 11 hours from midnight till 11am this morning. Absolutely horrific road toll as far as we're concerned. We've gone from a road toll yesterday of 93 to 102 now which is nine more than the same time last year. Whilst all of these accidents are different in many respects, one thing is common to them all and that is the driver error was involved in absolutely every one of these accidents. Whilst forensic crash investigations are ongoing, there is no doubt also that speed was a contributing factor in a number of these accidents and the failure to wear a seatbelt has cost at least one person their life. We just want to reiterate to the public that driving a motor vehicle can be a very dangerous occupation and we ask that whenever you're behind the wheel that you switch on and focus 100% of the time. If you fail to focus all of the time, a momentary lapse and a failure to think about the fatal four will result possibly in your death, the death of the passengers who are with you and more often than not innocent people who are sharing the roads with you. So we really ask people to concentrate when they are behind the wheel. Speeding continues to be a major issue for us and a major contributed to most of these accidents. What I'd like people to remember is that when you speed, you're more likely to lose control of your vehicle. When you do lose control of your vehicle, you're going to have less time to react and correct it. And if you have an inevitable crash that happens after that, the collision is likely to be serious or fatal because of the speed that you're doing. So we just encourage everybody to slow down and drive to the speed limit, drive to the road conditions and think about the fatal four. Think about drinking and driving, speeding, wearing your seatbelt and not driving while fatigued. The loss of eight people today is an absolute tragedy. We have eight families who are shattered and grieving as a result of these accidents and our condolences go out to those families. You're right, yes. They're not accidents. They're traffic crashes. They're entirely preventable and we know what causes them. And so does the general public. They've been very well educated about the causes of traffic crashes. And yet some people just don't seem to understand that they need to pay heed to the road rules and focus. We can't remember a day in the recent past where we've had such a horrific day. I'll just give you by way of example in the last two decades of Easter road campaigns we've had, we've never lost more than six people in any single Easter campaign. That's over five days. This is eight people in 11 hours. Absolutely. We were down yesterday publicising Fertility Free Friday telling people that, you know, the 1500 pairs of shoes they're indicating the number of people who lose their life on Australian roads every year. And following that publicity as midnight rolls on, we have had this just horror stretch of accidents which all could have been prevented. These are all the subject of driver error. That's the most frustrating thing. They weren't the result of mechanical error or bad roads, cars are getting safer, roads are getting better, driver behaviour is not. All we can do is just keep reinforcing the message and just remind people that's why we have a very strong enforcement focus anywhere, anytime for all breaches of the road rules but particularly the fatal four. Because we do not want to keep turning up to scenes of accidents like this and having to go and knock on the doors of shattered families and deliver death messages. That's our part of the equation. We don't want to do it. But we're continuing to have to do it because of the irresponsibility and lack of focus of some people. Slow down tonight, tomorrow and always. When you get in that car and you switch that engine on, switch your brain on with it and remember that whenever that car is going, you're at risk and the people who share the road with you are at risk. If you don't have any sense of your own survival and you don't care about your own mortality or that of the people who are with you, think about the other people who are on the road with you. They don't deserve to die because of your stupidity. No, not everywhere, fine and clear everywhere. The road's not to play. When a car is leaving the road and rolling a number of times, it's just speed, inattention, sky-larking, whatever it might be. We had another serious accident last night at Mount Nibo, a single vehicle accident. We had rolled. That was hooning. Luckily, there's not a fatality there but there's a seriously injured person. Well, it's frustration. I think I don't know how many different ways we can say the same thing. And to lose eight people in the space before midday on a day is just unbelievable. The statistics are not the thing. It's the people. Every one of those eight people has a family who are just devastated right now. Some of them contributed to their own death. Others didn't. But the net effect is still the same. We still have grieving mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters because of that. Eight families are just destroyed and they'll never be the same. We went to the Fertility Free Friday yesterday. A gentleman came up and spoke to us. He lost his 20-year-old son to a motorbike accident a couple of years ago. He's still devastated that he won't have his beautiful son. He will just never get over it. And none of the families of these road accident victims ever get over it. Often because it's such a tragic waste of life and so preventable. If you lose a family member to an incurable disease, that's one thing. But to have them just killed because of a moment's inattention or stupidity in a car, sometimes driven by somebody else, sometimes they have no say in their own death. That's incredibly frustrating and hard for families to bear. Thank you.