Category Archives: Hume Travel Radio Network

Two teens charged following pursuit with stolen car – Ashmont

Two teenage boys have been charged following a pursuit with a stolen car in Ashmont yesterday.

About 7.45am (Friday 1 January 2016), police from Wagga Wagga Local Area Command attempted to stop a red Toyota Corolla on Bardi Street, Ashmont.

The driver allegedly failed to stop and a pursuit was commenced. The pursuit was terminated a short time later due to safety concerns.

Another pursuit was commenced a short time later and again terminated due to safety concerns.

Investigations revealed the Corolla had been stolen from Flowerdale earlier that morning.

Police also received reports that the driver of the Corolla drove at two cyclists on Ashmont Road, Ashmont, at about 7.30am (Friday 1 January 2015) in an attempt to hit them.

About 3.30pm yesterday (Friday 1 January 2016), following investigations, officers from Wagga Wagga Local Area Command attended a home in Ashmont where they arrested two teenage boys, aged 14 and 15.

The 15-year-old was charged with a number of offences including; take and drive conveyance, police pursuit not stop drive dangerously (x3), use offensive weapon in company with intent to commit serious indictable offence, drive whilst disqualified (x3), and predatory driving (x3).

The 14-year-old was charged with being carried in conveyance without consent of owner.

Both boys were refused bail and are due to appear at a Children’s Court today (Saturday 2 January 2016).

Investigations are continuing and police are urging anyone with information, or anyone who witnessed the incident or similar incidents to come forward.

Youths sought after traffic incidents – Wagga Wagga

Police from Wagga Wagga are appealing for public assistance to help them locate several youths who were allegedly involved in several traffic incidents earlier today.

About 7.30am today (Friday 1 January 2016), Police at Wagga Wagga Local Area Command received reports that a stolen red Toyota Corolla had nearly run down a cyclist on Ashmont Avenue at Ashmont after it crossed to the wrong side of the road.

Shortly after police were advised that a passenger in the same vehicle had also attempted to grab the backpack of a cyclist on Ashmont Avenue, Ashmont.

The vehicle followed the rider who eventually escaped to a nearby service station to report the incident.

The vehicle was located by Highway Patrol officers and general duties police a short distance away in Bardia Street.

After it failed to stop as directed by the officers a pursuit commenced. The pursuit was stopped and then recommenced several times due to the reckless manner in which the stolen car was being driven.

The officers were able to identify the 15-year-old Ashmont youth driving the Toyota which had three other people in it.

The vehicle was abandoned about 8am in Callaghan Street and two youths aged 13 and 17 were arrested nearby.

Their details were obtained and they were released pending further inquiries while the Toyota was seized for forensic testing. The second cyclist’s backpack will also undergo forensic examination.

Police have appealed to the community for information about any other incidents involving the stolen car or its occupants to come forward. Anyone with information should contact Wagga Wagga Police or Crime Stoppers.

Man stabbed during alleged neighbour dispute – Goulburn

A man has been hospitalised and another man has been arrested following a neighbour dispute in Goulburn.

Just before 6pm yesterday (Wednesday 30 December 2015), a 23-year-old man and a 49-year-old man became involved in a verbal altercation outside a house on New Street.

During the incident, the younger man allegedly stabbed the older man a number of times.

Police and Ambulance Paramedics were called to the location and the injured man was treated at the scene before being taken to Goulburn Hospital. His injuries are not considered life-threatening.

Police arrested the younger man and he was taken to Goulburn Police Station where he was charged with wound with intent to cause grievous bodily harm as well as aggravated break and enter and resist arrest.

He was refused bail and will appear in Goulburn Local Court today (Thursday 31 December 2015).

Two women killed in separate accidents in western NSW

Two women have been killed and two children have been critically injured in three separate road accidents across the western region on Boxing Day.

Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of a female pedestrian who was killed on the Newell Highway south of Coonabarabran.

The woman died when she was struck by a vehicle early Saturday morning.

In another accident, a 26-year-old woman became the eighth person to die on New South Wales roads this holiday period, when her car collided with two other vehicles near Yass.

Police say the victim died after her sedan hit two oncoming cars on Lachlan Valley Way.

The two drivers of the other vehicles, who are both men, have been treated for minor injuries in Yass Hospital.

Two boys, aged 11 and nine, are also in hospital after their parent’s ute left the Hume Highway and hit a tree near Goulburn.

The children suffered critical injuries, while their mother and father weren’t hurt.

Man dies in accident on property near Wagga Wagga

A report will be prepared for the Coroner after the death of a man in a workplace accident near Wagga Wagga today.
Sometime between 9.30am and 1.45pm (Wednesday 23 December 2015), a 55-year-old horse handler was on a property on Burrandana Road, Mangoplah, when he became trapped under the tailgate of a large horse trailer.

He was discovered deceased by another worker at 1.45pm.

Police from Wagga Wagga Local Area Command attended and commenced an investigation.

Safework NSW investigators are also in attendance and a report will be prepared for the Coroner.

The incident is not considered suspicious.

Three men charged after drugs found in hotel stairwell – Wagga Wagga

Officers from Wagga Wagga Local Area Command have charged three men following the discovery of prohibited drugs in a stairwell at a hotel.

About 1pm (Monday 21 December 2015), police were called to a hotel on Lake Albert Road, after three bags of prohibited drugs, believed to be methamphetamine, were located.

Officers seized the bags and an investigation was commenced.

Detectives attended a hotel room and spoke to a 47-year-old man. On searching the room amphetamine and a glass pipe were seized.

The man was issued a field court attendance notice for possess prohibited drug and possession of equipment to administer.

He will attend Wagga Wagga Local Court next year (Thursday 3 February 2016).

While at the location a car drove into the car park, officers spoke to the driver who was subjected to a Roadside Drug Test (RDT), which indicated a positive result.

The man was arrested and his car was searched. Police allegedly located 3.5g of amphetamine and an electronic control device.

The 34-year-old was taken to Wagga Wagga Police Station, where he underwent a secondary drug test with an alleged positive result.

He was charged with supply prohibited drug, possess prohibited drug, two traffic related offences and was refused bail to appear at Wagga Wagga Local Court today (Tuesday 22 December 2015).

While speaking to the man in the car, officers saw another man leave a hotel room, they stopped and spoke to him.

Police searched the hotel room and seized 85g of amphetamine, with an estimated street value of over $30,000, over 3g of heroin, an electronic control device, knives and counterfeit notes.

The 47-year-old was arrested and taken to Wagga Wagga Police Station, and charged with supply prohibited drug x2, and possess counterfeit money.

He was refused bail to appear at Wagga Wagga Local Court today (Tuesday 22 December 2015).

Inquiries are continuing.

More than 300 fires break out across the state as temperatures soar

Residents were facing a nervous night on Saturday as fires continued to rage across Victoria following a day of record-breaking heat.

As the temperature soared above 40 degrees across the state, more than 300 fires broke out on Saturday.

Several homes were lost in a grassfire near Scotsburn, south of Ballarat, that burnt through more than 3000 hectares.

While a burst of rain slowed its progress in the afternoon, that Scotsburn blaze was one of a number that were still burning at 10pm as firefighters braced for a night of strong, changeable winds and continued heat.

At least one fire was allegedly deliberately lit, with a 34-year-old homeless man charged with reckless conduct endangering life, reckless conduct endangering serious injury and committing an indictable offence while on bail in relation to a fire at Epping on Melbourne’s northern outskirts.

He was remanded to face Melbourne Magistrates Court on Sunday.

More than 50 fire crews and four air tankers — including two from New South Wales — were battling the Scotsburn blaze on Saturday night, while watch-and-act alerts were still in force for fires near Wandin and Marysville.

There was little reprieve expected overnight, with the temperature not expected to dip below 30 degrees before midnight and a forecast wind change.

Earlier in the day, firefighters from three Country Fire Authority trucks survived two separate “burnovers” near Scotsburn. The officers were forced to retreat to their trucks as they became trapped by a fast-moving section of fire.

The firefighters turned on their trucks’ sprinkler systems and pulled down their protective heat shutters.

“They enacted their safety procedures that they’re trained for. They had a successful outcome and they went straight back out on the fire ground,” a CFA spokeswoman said.

Hundreds of firefighters were on the ground during the day, while more more than 50 aircraft – including Firebirds and Helitacks – attacked the blazes from above.

By 3.30pm on Saturday, emergency services had received more than 400 calls.

Among the blazes early in the day were two large fires in the outer reaches of Melbourne – in Wandin North and Epping.

Wandin North resident Geoff Riddle was at home when his view of the Yarra Ranges was suddenly obscured by billowing smoke.

Mr Riddle believed the fire started less than a kilometre or two from his house and four-hectare horse property in Cormilio Drive.

He enacted his fire plan, alerted his wife and rushed to move horses off the property.

As he moved one of the horses from a bottom paddock, it became clear that his property was under serious threat.

“I think the main thing is you really don’t understand what goes on until you experience it,” he said after the extreme danger had passed, and as a team of firefighters doused burning and blackened trees just over his boundary fence.

“It’s pretty daunting when you’ve got that wall of flames coming at your house. And you’ve got all your animals and your property. And everything’s there, and everything is in jeopardy, so it’s a bit of a worry.”

Authorities announced an emergency warning for Wandin North – a town of about 3000 people – just a few kilometres away from the blaze.

Shortly after, residents on the Warburton Highway in Wandin North could be seen hosing down rooftops.

Resident Matt Horton said embers more than 10 centimetres long landed on his property.

Mr Horton, a plumber, attached a rooftop sprinkler system to his house shortly after Black Saturday in 2009. The sprinklers were used on Saturday for the first time to protect against a bushfire, delivering a constant spray of water over the roof.

“Mate, it’s the first time I’ve turned them on for a fire. To be honest, hopefully it’s the last,” he said. Mr Horton said many residents left town when the fire started. “It was like a ghost town, everyone cleared out,” he said.

The emergency warnings were downgraded and the fire was contained on Saturday afternoon.

Meanwhile, 20 people were taken to hospital with heat-related conditions.

Paramedics were called to 50 heat-related cases throughout the day, as the temperature hit 41.2degrees in Melbourne at 3.20pm. The state’s highest temperatures were not far from Melbourne, with 45.1 degrees recorded at Avalon shortly after 3pm.

Despite the heat, four children had to be rescued from locked cars, frustrating authorities who had spent the week warning parents of the dangers.

Bailey’s Garage stands intact long after Holden and Hume Highway leave Gunning

White as a lighthouse and as well-maintained, with a striking red trim, Bailey’s Garage displays the name of Holden, even though the carmaker pulled out of the village decades ago.

Three years before Australia’s first Holden rolled off the assembly line in 1948, the Southwell family were selling Pontiacs, Buicks and Chevrolets for General Motors from their garage, which faced the Hume Highway.

“We clocked up 50 years in Australia before Holden did,” Craig Southwell, the third-generation owner, says. General Motors presented the family with a badge recognising the 50 years, only to close the dealership years later because they were not selling enough Holdens.

“We sold 156 cars in one year,” Southwell says. At the time Bailey’s Garage employed 13 mechanics and two spare parts people as well as family members.

“Dad used to go down every week to Sydney to pick up a new car. We would have to go down and drive them back in those days. They took the dealership off us in 1995 after we went 50 years. It was a shame, it was the little guys who did a lot of the stuff for Holden.”

Amplifying his sadness has been the loss of other car dealerships in bush towns. “Cootamundra, Yass, Crookwell, all these places had Holden dealers, the only dealer left in Yass is Toyota. There’s no [Holden] dealership in Crookwell,” Southwell says.

“It’s sad, we really liked the fact we sold Holdens. We weren’t making money out of it really, it was a nice thing to think, this is what we do.”

In the 1940s, when Frank Bailey who built the garage died, Southwell’s grandfather Vern, who owned a garage down the road at Dalton, brought the place and agreed to Mrs Bailey’s request not to change the name.

“You don’t need something with your own name on it, and it is easier for something to become an institution if it hasn’t got your name on it,” says Southwell. “We still get people ringing up asking for Mr Bailey.”

Years later Southwell decided he didn’t like the blocky letters added to the facade in the 1970s. “I put the paintwork back to the original. I went with what they had on the original letterhead.” He asked a local signwriter to reproduce images of old Holdens which adorn an exterior wall. People take photographs of it, and filmmakers ask him if they can use the front as a backdrop.

Bailey’s Garage once opened seven days a week. Even when it had closed for the day, people still managed to get hold of them to ask for petrol or mechanical help. More reliable these days, cars still run out of petrol after hours. And their drivers still have a remarkable knack of finding Craig Southwell.

“They seem to track you down, they ring you up at 4 o’clock in the morning saying why aren’t you open? Um, it’s 4am,” he says with a sigh.

His father Doug ran the NRMA depot for many years. “My dad would have to go out to all the accidents, there was no [police] rescue, the tow-truck guys got people out with the ambos and police all at the same time,” he said.

Southwell does not miss the highway which bypassed Gunning in 1995, nor the procession of heavy trucks.

“They would come through in the middle of the night, you would just see them thundering through town,” he says. “They would come through at 200 miles an hour. People couldn’t pull up because there was too much traffic. I reckon there are more people now because there is no traffic.”

Southwell did his mechanical apprenticeship at Bailey’s, and employs two other mechanics. Today electrical issues cause most breakdowns, due to all the computer-run devices in cars. Servicing cars for Gunning people sustains the garage.

“We also get quite a few people from Goulburn, some from Yass, a few from Canberra come out,” says Southwell. So why would someone drive from Canberra to Gunning for a car service?

“We don’t lie to them. I suppose we are cheaper,” he says. “The automotive game doesn’t have a real good reputation with what they do to people. We try to tell people exactly what is going on.”

After looking over a bill for a mechanical service in Canberra for a nurse visiting the village, Southwell said to her:

“One thing you want to ask them is why they are charging you for 5.5 litres of oil. Your car only holds 4.2 litres and they are charging $40 a litre for oil.”

Bits and pieces discarded over the years sit in corners of the big workshop, bringing in collectors who occasionally rifle through it all. Someone helped themselves years ago to the tops of the old bowsers on the footpaths.

He and his wife Sam run the school buses and employ four or five casual drivers. Fuel, oil and mechanical repairs are the core of the business and unlike most petrol outlets, Bailey’s does not sell soft drinks, milk, bread or lollies.

“It’s stuff we don’t need, because we are a garage and not a service station,” Southwell says with pride. “A service station doesn’t have a garage, in my opinion.”