TAC ROUND - Show up for your team. Slow down on the road.

The Allan Labor Government welcomes the hundreds of thousands of Victorians who will become road safety ambassadors this weekend, as grassroots football and netball clubs take part in Road Safety Round.

Minister for Roads and Road Safety Melissa Horne joined the Transport Accident Commission, AFL Victoria and members from Springvale Football Netball Club, to launch the round with ambassador and former Western Bulldogs player Mitch Wallis.

Wallis, who now plays for St Kevin’s in the Victorian Amateur Football Association, has been a passionate road safety ambassador since the tragic death of his mother-in-law Katie, who was hit by a car in Melbourne in 2022.

Road Safety Round, in its sixth year, will see Victoria’s regional and suburban clubs don blue armbands to pay tribute to everyone killed or injured on the state’s roads, and ‘Band Together’ for road safety.

The campaign is the cornerstone of the TAC’s partnership with AFL Victoria and has developed into a key milestone of the regional and metropolitan leagues’ fixtures.

So far this year, 156 people have lost their lives on Victoria’s roads and 84 of those have been on regional roads, where footy and netball club members are covering thousands of kilometres for games and training every week.

This year, clubs are being asked to educate members about the dangers of speeding, encouraging their members to "Show up for your team. Slow down on the road."

Peer-to-peer conversations at local sporting clubs are vital in changing attitudes, creating a culture that values road safety and keeping everyone safe on Victoria’s roads.

AFL teams, including Essendon, Geelong and the Western Bulldogs, will support Road Safety Round by wearing the blue armbands during training this week.

 

More information about Road Safety Round can be found at www.tac.vic.gov.au/bandtogether