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Life and death on NZ roads: Truckie on 40 years of horror from the driver's seat

Author
Cherie Howie,
Publish Date
Sun, 23 Jun 2024, 9:43am

Life and death on NZ roads: Truckie on 40 years of horror from the driver's seat

Author
Cherie Howie,
Publish Date
Sun, 23 Jun 2024, 9:43am

Warning: Graphic details

It was a spectacle that stunned motorists travelling north on the Waikato Expressway - an SUV 鈥渟creaming past鈥 between the left lane and the wire barrier, an eventual crash and the driver鈥檚 inexplicable decision to run into southbound lanes, where he was struck by another vehicle and died at the scene despite the desperate CPR efforts of passersby and first responders.

But the dramatic scenes near Hampton Downs nine days ago weren鈥檛 a surprise to everyone. Truckies see appalling driving every day, and are often first on the scene to clean up the mess. One tells Cherie Howie 鈥淚t never gets better helping emergency services pull bodies out of wreckage.鈥

It鈥檚 the warmth you remember in the weeks, months and even years after pulling a body out of a crashed vehicle, a veteran truckie says.

He鈥檚 been at the wheel of truck and trailer units for more than 40 years, and says he sees crashes on our roads every couple of days, including a dozen really bad ones that took lives.

Sometimes he鈥檚 driving past an earlier crash, sometimes he arrives moments after, and sometimes the horror unfolds right in front of his windscreen, leaving him to give immediate first aid and comfort, or - sometimes - help first responders remove the dead.

鈥淭he thing you realise when you pull a body out of a car crash is that it鈥檚 still warm. It鈥檚 quite horrible because the first time you do it, it鈥檚 still limp and warm.

鈥淵eah, they鈥檝e died. But they鈥檙e warm when you鈥檙e pulling them out, giving the ambulance guys a hand. And then sometimes you just put them straight on the ground, they don鈥檛 even go into a [stretcher] bed or anything.鈥

Even with care and respect, the dignity of the dead isn鈥檛 guaranteed.

鈥淚鈥檝e seen a lady鈥檚 tit fall out of her jersey and I was like, 鈥極h, you poor thing. That鈥檚 not the way everything鈥檚 supposed to go for you鈥.鈥

Emergency services at the scene of last week's fatal incident on the Waikato Expressway at Hampton Downs.
Emergency services at the scene of last week's fatal incident on the Waikato Expressway at Hampton Downs.

The North Island-based truckie contacted the Herald after reading about last week鈥檚 tragedy, and with his own message for motorists to take more care.

The Herald agreed not to name him because he doesn鈥檛 have permission from his employer to speak to media.

The living and the dead

鈥淭he stuff I鈥檝e seen鈥, says the driver, 鈥渋s out the gate鈥.

鈥淲e鈥檙e on the road all our lives. What you see is sometimes absolutely beautiful and then sometimes absolutely shocking.鈥

Beautiful moments are when a farmer鈥檚 moving stock on a road 鈥渁nd there are no cones, no flashing lights, no bulls*** and everybody just calms down and moseys their way through鈥, he says.

鈥淪o to me that鈥檚 patience, with everybody using their common sense. That鈥檚 good, Kiwi sort of stuff.鈥

There are "beautiful" moments of driver behaviour, such as around stock movement on roads, but bad behaviour far outweighs the good, the truck driver says. Photo / Amos Chapple
There are "beautiful" moments of driver behaviour, such as around stock movement on roads, but bad behaviour far outweighs the good, the truck driver says. Photo / Amos Chapple

Unfortunately, such moments are rare.

More common is dangerous overtaking, cutting off 50-tonne trucks, and a whole lot of distraction at the wheel that ranges from drivers making coffee to putting on makeup.

And, the catastrophic aftermath.

鈥淭he number of times I鈥檝e had to take evasive action and not hurt somebody is amazing. I鈥檝e hit one - they pulled out in front of me in a 100km/h, narrow area and they were only doing 30km/h and there鈥檚 no way I could stop.鈥

The survival of the two elderly women inside relied on his split-second decision-making, the truckie says.

鈥淚f I hit them where I was I would鈥檝e pushed them into the oncoming traffic. But if I hit them to the right hand side of the car that would鈥檝e pushed them off to the left, and I did - it shot them through a fence.鈥

The pair were shaken - but alive.

The deadly sleep-in

Others aren鈥檛 so lucky, like the delivery driver decapitated when the overturned trailer of another truck crashed into his much smaller vehicle.

It was the first fatal crash the truckie was directly exposed to.

鈥淚 had a look in the cab and his leg was sitting on the passenger seat on its own.

鈥淚 knew this guy - we鈥檇 pass in the mornings, and I鈥檇 call him up on the CB [radio] and go, 鈥楬ow are ya?鈥 And the next day he no longer exists.鈥

He also knew the other driver, who was so distraught he asked others for a gun to kill himself, the truckie says.

鈥淸He鈥檇] come around the corner too fast because he was late - he鈥檇 slept in - and rolled his trailer straight into the cab of the other guy.鈥

He sees a crash on our roads every couple of days, the truck driver says. Image / Richard Dale
He sees a crash on our roads every couple of days, the truck driver says. Image / Richard Dale

The deadliest crash he鈥檚 seen had an element of bad luck - one vehicle struck another in black ice between Taup艒 and Rotorua - but while the two women wearing seat belts in one car survived, only one of the unbuckled quartet in the other car also lived. .

鈥淎ll I see in front of me is two cars just go bang and fire apart backwards from each other. By the time you get there, there鈥檚 still stuff falling out of the air.

鈥淚 could tell there鈥檚 three dead straight away 鈥 when I felt their heads, they were soft at the front and back.鈥

Overtaking, cutting off, distraction

That incident was more than 20 years ago, but our driving鈥檚 become worse since, the truckie says.

Every day other drivers change lanes too close to his truck, when they should be leaving a six-to-seven car length gap, while others juggled putting on makeup or making coffee while negotiating heavy traffic.

鈥淵ou see them trying to pour hot water into a mug while they鈥檙e in three lanes of traffic 鈥 and still doing about 15km/h.鈥

Dangerous overtaking, including on blind corners, is another common sight, he says.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 work out the mentality. What the hell are you doing? Do you know you could鈥檝e killed yourself quite easily? But it鈥檚 hard to tell people that because some just think they鈥檙e bulletproof.

鈥淭hey probably haven鈥檛 seen what I鈥檝e seen.鈥

The married father and grandfather just wants everyone to get home safely, and without the trauma he and other truck drivers are left to make sense of.

Witnesses to last week鈥檚 tragedy now share that burden, he says.

鈥淣obody wants to see anybody die. When you see the bad ones you think about it for a week, and then it slowly goes away.

鈥淏ut it never completely leaves you.鈥

Cherie Howie is an Auckland-based reporter who joined the Herald in 2011. She has been a journalist for more than 20 years and specialises in general news and features.

SUICIDE

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