 Yeah, it's an absolute tragedy. Here we are, we're eight weeks into the year, and we've had nine deaths on the far northern roads. Sadly, the... Tragically, the far north now accounts for in excess of a third of the road fatalities in the attire state, and that is not a record that anyone up here should be proud of in any way, shape or form. We're here today united to talk and get our message out to the community that road safety is everyone's responsibility on the road. We've got police out there every single day enforcing the road rules and looking at four people who do the wrong thing. But we can't be everywhere at all times, and this is where we really need the community to take ownership of their driving and take ownership of their safety and the safety of their family and friends when they're out and about on their far north roads. We've done a full analysis of our fatal crashes this year and also our injury accidents, and sadly there is no one causal factor that we can continue to address. The last four fatals that we've had in the far north have been on our major highways, and police will be focusing a concerted effort on those highways over the coming days, weeks and months. At this time last year, we are well ahead of where we were last year, like I said, we've had nine fatals in eight weeks this year. The number of fatals we've had up here is by far the worst for this time of year for many, many years. You have to go back a long way, back to the dark days of road fatalities to see anything as bad as we've seen in the last two months. We've looked at a lot of areas and a lot of parts of the far north, and sadly at this time it looks like that a lot of the fatals are happening on our highways. It's down to a number of causal factors, down to inattention and just doing stupid things on the road and not following the road rules. Well, the fatal accident this morning is still currently under investigation by our forensic crash unit. The findings of that will be made in due course, but this one this morning follows on from another tragic loss of life yesterday afternoon up near Melinda. The Melinda accident was a single vehicle accident up there. Like the accident today, that matter is under investigation at the present time, and it's far too early to speculate on specific causes. But it's about us being here today to really reinforce with the far north community that we need them to take ownership on the roads. How do accidents like these impact? Yes, and what everyone has to realise is we've got nine families this year in the far north who are suffering, untold pain and suffering due to the loss of their loved ones. But that goes broader. That's their family, their friends, their colleagues and the communities they come from all have to put up with the pain of the loss of these people in our communities. That's an extremely good point. Sadly, at each one of these fatal accidents, police, Queensland Fire and Emergency Services and ambulance officers have to attend and are confronted with the sins that they put before them. To say that those people, those men and women can walk away after that and put it behind them is naive. We're all humans. We all have our emotions. And for our people to go to these accidents day in and day out in the far north, it is just something we need to stop. Are you guys considering getting into the proactive campaign after what's happened? I know it was in North Exorcism. Have you got a bit of a trouble with that? Yeah, absolutely. From the policing perspective here, we're developing our far north district policing road strategy. That will be finalised by the end of next week. And under that we will be focusing on numerous areas and activating numerous action plans in an attempt to stem the road toll and the injury crashes in the far north. Well, what people can expect is that there will be a heightened police presence on the roads and in the black spots where we identify them. But we'll also be looking at educating and trying to work with the community to get members of the community and road users to take ownership for their actions and to take ownership for their own safety. The Table Lans has run that campaign and signed it to help up the movement next. Would you consider something like this? Yeah, absolutely. The Table Lans has got the Will You Be Next road safety campaign. That is definitely one area that we're looking at expanding across the far north. And it's about asking road users that question, will you be next? Will you be the next fatality? Will you be the next injury on our roads? All good? Yeah.