Tragedy on the Kings Highway: Three Lives Lost in Horrific Head-On Crash Near Monga
It's the kind of news that makes you set down your morning cuppa and just stare blankly out the window. Another horrific crash on the Kings Highway. This time, just south of Queanbeyan, near the small community of Monga, three people have lost their lives in a head-on collision. You hear the sirens, you see the air ambulances, and your heart sinks because you know it's going to be severe. And it was. Three families torn apart on a stretch of road we all know only too well.
This Morning's Grim Reality Check
I was half-listening to the chat on a local radio programme earlier—Tuesday, the 20th of October, not that dates carry much weight when you're talking about lives lost—and the presenters were taking calls. Almost every local who rang in had a Kings Highway story. A near-miss with a logging truck. A mate who came off near the bends. It's become part of the folklore around here. But this morning wasn't about near-misses. Police have confirmed that two vehicles collided head-on in conditions that, frankly, weren't even that bad. It's a stark reminder that this highway doesn't need rain or fog to turn deadly; sometimes, a split-second misjudgement is all it takes.
A Road Under the Microscope for Decades
Look, this isn't news to anyone who's lived through a few Canberra winters or driven down to the coast for a holiday. The ACT Access Roads: Supplementary Volume—that thick report gathering dust in council offices—has pages and pages of SCID (System for Crash Investigation Data) analysis dedicated solely to the Kings Highway. If you've ever dug into that data, the numbers jump out at you. It's not just a road; it's a statistical anomaly. The volume of traffic, the mix of locals in utes and tourists in caravans, the tight sections where the trees come right up to the edge—it's a recipe that's been brewing trouble for years. The SCID work basically confirms what we've all been saying down the pub: this road punishes mistakes harder than most.
It's Not Just the Kings – Known Black Spots
And it's not isolated. If you look at the wider network, you see the same patterns on other stretches that demand respect. Places like:
- Avenue P – a straight stretch that tricks people into speeding, but with intersections that have claimed more than their fair share.
- Beebe Bridge – the approaches there can be deceptive, especially when the sun's in your eyes or the road surface is greasy.
- The Kings itself, obviously, particularly the winding sections around Monga and on towards Batemans Bay.
These aren't just dots on a map; they're spots where blokes like me have said a quiet prayer after watching someone pull a risky overtake.
What Now for the Highway?
After a tragedy like this, the talk inevitably turns to upgrades. More barriers, better signage, maybe even a few more overtaking lanes. And sure, we need all that. The SCID analysis in that ACT Access Roads volume has been recommending safety improvements for years. But the truth is, you can't engineer out every risk. You can't concrete over human error. What you can do is pay attention. Slow down. And remember that every time you head up that highway, you're driving on a road that doesn't forgive. My heart goes out to the families of the three people who won't be coming home. Let's hope their loss serves as a wake-up call for the rest of us.