GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #13 | Page 8

CARAVANNING AND THE LAW WORDS: MAX TAYLOR IMAGES: MARTY LEDWICH/RVEETHEREYET.COM IF YOUR VAN IS OVERWEIGHT, YOU’RE RISKING A HEFTY FINE. ROADSIDE INSPECTIONS HAPPEN AROUND AUSTRALIA AND POLICE HAVE GENUINE ENFORCEMENT POWERS… Every now and again, social media catches fire with news of a police blitz on caravan safety and towing compliance. Invariably, it goes that on a certain highway, police are pulling over caravanners, weighing the rigs, and issuing fines. Police around Australia have become more proactive when it comes to enforcing the laws that govern safe and legal towing. And their enforcement powers are very real. But what actually occurs during a roadside caravan check? And what are the penalties that apply to caravanners who have hitched their wagon to an unsuitable tow vehicle, or who have otherwise broken the rules? 8 gorv.com.au POWER TO STOP Police have various powers under the national Road Safety Act. The act confers police with the power to stop and inspect any vehicle on the road. They also have powers to ensure motorists follow direction. “For instance, if a police officer inspected a vehicle or caravan and found it to be unsafe or unroadworthy, they could direct the owner not to use that vehicle until certain things had been done to it,” Sergeant Graeme Shenton of Victoria Police said. Sergeant Shenton has been a driving force behind various caravan safety inspections and educational campaigns in in Victoria,