Department of Transport and Main Roads explained

Preceding1:Department of Main Roads
Preceding2:Queensland Transport
Jurisdiction:Queensland
Headquarters:Brisbane
Employees:10,000+
Minister1 Name:Bart Mellish
Minister1 Pfo:Minister for Transport and Main Roads
Chief1 Name:Sally Stannard
Chief1 Position:Director-General
Agency Name:Department of Transport and Main Roads
Type:department

The Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR), is a department of the Queensland Government. TMR was formed in April 2009 by merging Queensland Transport and the Department of Main Roads.[1] TMR manages Queensland's 33,000 km state road network, which includes 3,100 bridges.

TMR employs more than 10,000 people,[1] and provides customer service centres, marine operation bases and regional and divisional offices. The department works with Queensland Rail, port authorities, other state and federal government departments, local governments, industry, and the community.

Following the 2012 state election, Premier Campbell Newman appointed one Minister for the whole department. In 2015, Labor headed by Annastacia Palaszczuk won the state election. Jackie Trad was appointed Minister for Transport and Mark Bailey was appointed Minister for Main Roads, Road Safety and Ports. Bailey gained the Transport portfolio from Trad after the 2017 state election and the department once again reported to a single minister.

Initiatives

Because Queensland driver licences were susceptible to fraud the department initiated a smartcard driver licence project in 2003.[2] [3] The project has suffered from long delays and cost overruns. The transition to the new cards commenced in late 2010, and the new cards will replace laminated licences as they come up for renewal, expected to be within 6 years.[4]

The Here For Life campaign was launched in 2009 and has been credited as being a great success in motorcycle rider safety.[5]

Director-General

The current Director-General of the Department of Transport and Main Roads is Sally Stannard.[6]

Organisational structure

The department is split into five operational divisions: Policy, Planning and Investment; Customer Services, Safety and Regulation; Infrastructure Management and Delivery; Corporate; Translink.[1]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Who we are . Department of Transport and Main Roads . 26 February 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120131034152/http://www.tmr.qld.gov.au/~/media/15fb02a5-2bf4-4a42-8f71-e8ed1d1b7e31/who%20we%20are.pdf . 31 January 2012 . dead .
  2. https://www.efa.org.au/Publish/efasubm-qt-nqdl.html Queensland Smart Card Driver Licence Proposal
  3. News: Smartcard planning not so smart: Auditor-General . Daniel Hurst . 14 July 2011 . 21 June 2011 . Brisbane Times . Fairfax Media .
  4. Web site: About Queensland driver licences . 7 November 2017 . 7 November 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171107112401/https://www.tmr.qld.gov.au/Licensing/Queensland-driver-licences/About-Queensland-driver-licences . dead .
  5. News: Motorcyclists praise rider safety campaign . Joel Whelan . 14 July 2011 . 6 July 2011 . ABC News . Australian Broadcasting Corporation .
  6. Web site: Our Director-General . 2024-01-26 . Queensland Department of Transport and Main Roads.