Major development after 840kg metal spill which caused traffic chaos
A truck driver has been charged over an incident in which 840kgs of metal scraps spilled onto the Pacific Highway on the Central Coast and sparked traffic chaos for 10 hours.
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The driver of a truck which spilled hundreds of kilos of metal fragments onto the Pacific Motorway on the Central Coast, damaging hundreds of vehicles, will face court later this year after being charged by police.
Traffic was brought to a standstill on the Pacific Motorway on May 2 after a truck spilled 840kg of metal pieces across a 30km stretch from Ourimbah to Mount White at about 5am.
It was estimated that 300 cars had their tyres punctured as they ran over the tiny pieces of metal, closing the southbound lanes of the highway.
It took 10 hours to re-open the highway - prompting some people to abandon their cars - as a massive clean up effort got underway to remove pieces of finely ground steel from the road.
There were no reports of injuries and at the time police said it was lucky the incident did not result in a serious accident.
At the time, police spoke with the driver of a heavy vehicle tipper which was towing a trailer.
On Saturday, the 46-year-old driver was given a court attendance notice after being charged with driving a heavy vehicle not complying with loading requirements.
The man is due to appear in Hornsby Local Court on July 10.
In a statement earlier this month, trucking company NJ Ashton apologised for the incident.
“We’d like to thank all motorists, and anyone else impacted in some way, for their patience today. The driver is devastated and profoundly apologetic — as are we,” the company said in a statement.
Originally published as Major development after 840kg metal spill which caused traffic chaos