NIG/Specific/TBT-NIG-003

Night Traffic Management

Night WorkingSpecificNight Traffic Management

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Night Traffic Management

Toolbox Talk Record

Ref: TBT-NIG-003  |  Issue: 1  |  Date: March 2026
PresenterProject
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What?

  • Night traffic management involves installing, maintaining, and removing temporary signing and guarding during darkness.
  • Reduced driver visibility at night means traffic management must be more conspicuous with enhanced lighting and reflective materials.
  • All traffic management operatives working at night must wear Class 3 hi-vis clothing with enhanced reflective strips.
  • Illuminated signs, retroreflective cones, and lit arrow boards are essential components of night traffic management layouts.
  • Vehicle-mounted crash cushions and impact protection vehicles are critical on high-speed roads during night operations.
  • Installation and removal of traffic management at night is the highest-risk phase — operatives are exposed to traffic in darkness.
  • Driver behaviour changes at night — reduced traffic volumes lead to higher speeds, and impaired or fatigued drivers are more common.
  • Lighting of the work area must be sufficient for workers to carry out tasks safely without creating glare for approaching drivers.
  • Communication between the traffic management team and the works crew must use radios — verbal signals are unreliable in darkness.
  • Fatigue management is essential for night TM operatives who carry out physically demanding work during unsocial hours.

Why?

Invisible workersWorkers without enhanced reflective clothing are invisible to drivers at night — Class 3 hi-vis with reflective strips is mandatory.
Higher speedsQuieter roads at night encourage faster driving — a vehicle striking a worker at higher speed is more likely to cause a fatality.
Installation exposureSetting up and removing TM at night exposes operatives to live traffic in the dark — it is the most dangerous moment of the shift.
Do Don't
  • Wear Class 3 hi-vis clothing with enhanced reflective strips for all night TM work.
  • Use illuminated signs, retroreflective cones, and lit arrow boards in all layouts.
  • Deploy impact protection vehicles on high-speed roads before night works begin.
  • Install and remove traffic management using the safest sequence to minimise exposure.
  • Light the work area sufficiently without creating glare for approaching drivers.
  • Use radios for all communication between the TM team and the works crew.
  • Monitor driver behaviour and report any concerns about speeding or near misses.
  • Follow fatigue management procedures for night shift traffic management operations.
  • Check all TM equipment is correctly positioned and visible throughout the shift.
  • Brief the team on the night-specific risks and enhanced precautions before starting.
  • DON'T work at night without Class 3 hi-vis with reflective strips at all times.
  • DON'T use non-illuminated signs or standard cones for night traffic management.
  • DON'T work on high-speed roads at night without impact protection vehicles deployed.
  • DON'T expose yourself to live traffic unnecessarily during TM setup and removal.
  • DON'T create driver glare from work area lighting aimed towards approaching traffic.
  • DON'T rely on shouting or hand signals — use radios for all night communication.
  • DON'T assume drivers can see you at night — enhanced visibility is the minimum standard.
  • DON'T work through fatigue — night shift TM requires alertness for personal survival.
  • DON'T leave displaced or damaged TM equipment in place — replace it immediately.
  • DON'T skip the night-specific briefing — darkness changes every aspect of the risk.

See also: Night Working Safety Awareness | Chapter 8 Signing and Guarding

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