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Boral extends partnership with Road Safety Education Limited

Boral has renewed its longstanding renewed its longstanding partnership with Road Safety Education Limited (RSE), as part of its commitment to Zero Harm, extending to the responsibility of road safety and better educating drivers and passengers.

Boral has been a corporate partner of the learning organisation and not-for-profit since 2018.

RSE is behind the Ryda road safety program that has been delivered to more than 735,000 young Australians nationally.

“We are proud to be a longstanding partner of RSE and the Ryda program. Through the various programs we have helped to deliver, we have seen first-hand the engagement and benefits students have had in talking to Boral drivers and learning about the trucks and heavy vehicles and, more importantly how they can make safe choices around them,” Richard Pearson, executive general manager, Asphalt said.

It is also a founding principal partner of National Road Safety Week, an annual initiative that aims to highlight the impact of road trauma and ways to reduce it, supported by governments and businesses across Australia and New Zealand, including Boral.

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Boral’s announcement coincides with this year’s National Road Safety Week which runs from 11-18 May.

Tens of thousands of students each year participate in Ryda school programs, in which they learn the tools, habits and behaviours to stay safe on roads as both drivers and passengers.

“We are pleased Boral has recommitted to its partnership with RSE and is helping deliver much-needed, potentially life-saving heavy vehicle safety education. We need to do more than just teach a young person the skill of controlling and manoeuvring a vehicle. We must also equip them with the skill of critical thinking and appreciation for safety on shared roads,” Terry Briss, group CEO/managing director of Road Safety Education said.

Boral provided input into the development of a Ryda topic that sees students investigate the challenges faced by heavy vehicle drivers and how to predict any actions they may need to take to accommodate them.

There have also been opportunities for heavy vehicles to be present at the workshops to help students understand, with a real-life experience, the risks and considerations when sharing the road with trucks.

Participating students get to talk to a Boral driver and sit in the truck’s cabin to learn first-hand about the risk factors such as truck blind spots and stopping distances.

Road fatalities continue to rise each year, with more than 1300 people killed on Australian roads in 2024, a 3.8 per cent increase on the previous year.[1] 

Traffic injury is the biggest killer of Australian children under 15 and the second-biggest killer of all Australians aged between 15 and 24.[2]

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