13.8 C
Byron Shire
June 24, 2026

Easter police road safety blitz

Latest News

NSW budget and the Northern Rivers

The Minns government says it's handed down a budget which locks in major funding for North Coast health infrastructure, alongside targeted cost-of-living relief designed for regional households and disaster recovery, as locals continue to face higher costs.

Other News

Putting their money where their mouth and conscience is

Climate action group Rising Tide say they will disrupt business at Tweed City ANZ today, as local long-term customers withdraw their life savings from the bank.

Where is the real cost in rail v trail?

When the state government closed the one daily train service on the Casino to Murwillumbah line, which records show...

Artist Gerwyn Davies exhibits at Tweed Gallery

From 3 July, a major new body of work by Gadigal/Sydney-based artist Gerwyn Davies will be exhibited at the Tweed Regional Gallery & Margaret Olley Art Centre.

Citizen science last line of defence for threatened species

Native forest logging is again in the spotlight in NSW, following Monday night’s Four Corners investigation into Forestry Corporation NSW’s failure to protect nationally endangered species.

Six dwellings proposed on flood-prone Mullum block

Six units are proposed at the eastern end of New City Road, Mullumbimby, on a site that was inundated during the 2022 floods. Submitted by Duncan Band's Kollective, Development Application (DA) 10.2026.269.1 at 73 New City Road is on public exhibition with Byron Shire Council, and sits within the Shire's flood planning area.

Eleven winners at Byron Bay Herb Nursery

The Byron Bay Herb Nursery continues to create constructive pathways to achievement with twelve students from Byron Bay Herb Nursery’s disability support program recently graduating with a Certificate II in Horticulture.

The Easter long weekend traffic operation has now concluded, with four lives lost on NSW roads. Police had a high-visibility presence across the state during Operation Easter 2026 from 12.01am Thursday 2 April 2026 to 11.59pm Monday 6 April 2026.

This police operation involved officers from Traffic and Highway Patrol Command with the assistance of general duties and specialist police from all commands and districts across the state. A double demerit period targeting speeding, mobile phone use, seatbelt and helmet offences was also in place for the same time period.

Over this long weekend four people lost their lives, which occurred in the northern and southern regions.

Across the state, police issued 15,711 Traffic Infringement Notices, including 4,800 for speed related offences, 558 for mobile phone usage, and 326 restraint offences.

Police conducted more than 317,891 breath tests, with 319 drink driving offences and conducted 11,646 drug tests with 935 drug driving offences detected, with 333 major crashes reported.

Four died on NSW roads this Easter.

Road toll

The NSW Minister for Police and Counter-terrorism Yasmin Catley said the long weekend road toll was a reminder of the consequences of unsafe driving.

‘The loss of four lives on our roads is devastating and our thoughts are with their families, friends and the first responders who attended these tragic incidents,’ she said.

‘Police saturated our roads over the long weekend, but enforcement alone cannot prevent every tragedy. Every driver has a responsibility to themselves, their passengers and every other road user to make safe decisions behind the wheel.

‘One poor choice can cost lives and leave a lasting impact on families and communities. With the Anzac Day long weekend just around the corner, we’re urging drivers to heed these warnings – slow down, stay focused and think carefully about the responsibility you have when you get behind the wheel of a car.’

Traffic and Highway Patrol Commander, Assistant Commissioner David Driver said any life lost on the roads was one too many. ‘Four people lost their lives over the long weekend. That meant police officers delivered heartbreaking messages to loved ones and four families experienced unbearable grief,’ Assistant Commissioner Driver said.

‘Frustratingly and disappointingly, drivers continued to make dangerous and reckless decisions behind the wheel and did not appreciate the risk to themselves and other road users. NSW Police will be out in force across the school holidays and Anzac Day long weekend.

‘Police continue to urge drivers to slow down, avoid distractions, manage their fatigue, and not drink or take drugs and drive.’

NSW Police will conduct another traffic operation across the Anzac Day long weekend from Friday 24 April 2026 to Monday 27 April 2026, where a double demerit period will also be in effect.

Regional statistics: Northern Region

  • Total infringements: 4,269.
  • Speed infringements: 1,527.
  • Breath tests: 48,086.
  • PCA charges: 85.
  • Drug test: 283.
  • Positive drug-driving tests: 259.
  • Mobile phone: 68.
  • Major crashes: 74.
  • Fatalities: 2.


For four decades The Echo has printed the stories some people loved, some people hated, and some pretended not to read. If you want us to keep telling the truth, the real truth, not the sugar-coated version. We’ll need your support to keep the presses rolling.

If you are a local business owner help us and in turn we help you. All The Echo asks for is advertising, not a free ride. It is every advert in The Echo and on www.echo.net.au, which creates the space for all the stories and coverage of community events, happenings and concerns.

If you are a reader you can become a sponsor of The Echo. Your support keeps the us independent.

Even a small one-off or regular donation from you will help keep the echo’s independent voice alive and strong.

Support Us

Become one of the supporters who helps keep independent, local journalism alive in the Byron Shire by contributing anything from as little as the cost of a coffee each month.

You're Wonderful, Thank you for supporting independent journalism in the Byron Shire

You’re supporting The Echo, thank you

Your contribution is keeping independent, local journalism alive in the Northern Rivers.

Because of supporters like you, we can keep every story free for everyone — no paywall, no exceptions. Your money goes directly to funding our newsroom of 40-odd local workers covering the stories that matter to this community.

Tell us what you think, give us your opinion

The Echo loves your letters and comments and is proud to provide a community forum on the issues that matter most to our readers and the people of the NSW north coast. So don’t be a passive reader, email us your epistles at editor@echo.net.au.

The letters deadline for The Echo is noon Friday. Letters longer than 200 words may be cut. The publication of letters is at the discretion of the letters editor. Please remember to include your full name, address and telephone number.

Online comments are no longer available.

Appeal to locate missing woman

Police are appealing for public assistance to locate a woman missing from the Kempsey area.

Citizen science last line of defence for threatened species

Native forest logging is again in the spotlight in NSW, following Monday night’s Four Corners investigation into Forestry Corporation NSW’s failure to protect nationally endangered species.

Site confirmed for future high school at Pottsville

The NSW government says it has secured a site for a future high school in Pottsville, delivering on its commitment to future-proof public education for the growing Tweed community in the Northern Rivers.

Eleven winners at Byron Bay Herb Nursery

The Byron Bay Herb Nursery continues to create constructive pathways to achievement with twelve students from Byron Bay Herb Nursery’s disability support program recently graduating with a Certificate II in Horticulture.