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Without their blame sponge, our elected representatives might be forced to choose between having their cake and eating it too. (Image: The Spinoff)
Without their blame sponge, our elected representatives might be forced to choose between having their cake and eating it too. (Image: The Spinoff)

PoliticsSeptember 16, 2024

Who will miss Auckland Transport the most if it goes? The most anti-AT councillors

Without their blame sponge, our elected representatives might be forced to choose between having their cake and eating it too. (Image: The Spinoff)
Without their blame sponge, our elected representatives might be forced to choose between having their cake and eating it too. (Image: The Spinoff)

A bill aimed at getting rid of AT might go before parliament. No one will miss AT more than the local politicians who use it as an easy blame sponge.

Auckland Transport staffers pretended to take notes as the councillor lectured them about buses. Their organisation had approved a plan to run public transport more frequently through her plush suburb, and she thought it would hurt businesses and ruin the vibe. “She told us ‘every 30 minutes at most should be sufficient’,” says one of the staffers in the line of fire. 

That same councillor had voted for citywide increases in bus frequency. She’d joined a push to make a reluctant AT reallocate more road space away from cars toward public transport. Later that day, she turned up for the photo op cutting the ribbon on the new service. Once the cameras went away, she continued to criticise the buses to constituents and behind the scenes.

The councillor’s contradictory behaviour is in keeping with a lengthy tradition for our elected representatives. Auckland Transport hasn’t exactly helped itself when it comes to implementing progressive change. It spent years in a state of terrified paralysis after a local crank’s axe attack on a traffic island, and once successfully argued in court that it shouldn’t have to comply with the council’s own climate goals. But even in the moments it’s seemed ready to overcome its pathological aversion to building cycleways and bus lanes, it’s been hampered at every turn by councillors who vote for progressive actions and then vociferously oppose their implementation.

Auckland Transport has become the ultimate blame sponge for councillors who don’t want to pay the electoral cost of defending their own policies and positions. During his election campaign, mayor Wayne Brown consistently made the case for cheap, basic cycleways. But when one caused controversy on Upper Harbour Drive, he stood over it pulling a “WTF” face.

Is it AT’s fault that the motorists of the North Shore don’t know how to drive between the white painted lines?

In office, Brown has made the case for lifting parking revenue and raising fines on people who park illegally. When AT’s efforts to follow through on those aims in the city centre caused a minor kerfuffle, he criticised its process, saying it was “a poor effort and I’m not happy about it”.

The mayor has also called for dynamic bus lanes to be rolled out across the city. He wants the power to make these changes quickly, arguing persuasively in an opinion piece for The Post that the consultation requirements foisted on councils by central government are burdensome, unfair, and a contributing factor in the chorus of complaints about local government red tape.

Good points from mayor Wayne Brown in The Post.

Imagine AT’s surprise then when it attempted to clear some parking for dynamic bus lanes on Karangahape Road, only to meet forceful criticism from the mayor over a lack of consultation

Brown is hardly an outlier. Every councillor in the last local government term voted for Te Tāruke-ā-Tāwhiri, Auckland’s climate plan, which calls for massive cuts to carbon emissions, driven in large part by reducing driving, increasing public transport, walking, and cycling trips, and building dense housing in areas where those alternative transport options are most feasible.

Many of those same councillors voted to oppose building apartments and townhouses near train stations. They suffered a lengthy freakout over AT’s plans to potentially remove parking from 3.25% of the city’s road network over 10 years to make way for more buses. When the transport organisation proposed spending 1% of its budget on cycleways, they abstained on the vote.

In this context, AT has often struggled to choose which of the councillors’ competing instructions to prioritise. When it chooses to heed one directive, it will often receive criticism from the people who issued that directive for not listening to their simultaneous directive to do the opposite of what they called for, which has led to the organisation becoming terrified of doing anything at all.

Late last month, Marlborough-based NZ First MP Jamie Arbuckle introduced a members bill to disband AT and bring transport planning inside the council. Transport minister Simeon Brown has made sympathetic murmurings about the bill’s intention, as has his fellow mayoral Brown.

It might be a good idea. The current situation isn’t working that well. But no one will miss AT more than the politicians who complain about it the most. For so long, they’ve had the best of both worlds, voting for progress and not having to face the music when it causes disruption or upsets the NZ Herald. Even better, the organisation they criticise literally isn’t allowed to defend itself. When its chief executive attempted to gently push back on Brown over the city centre parking fiasco, it generated such an outpouring of political affront he almost got fired

With that organisation gone, Auckland’s councillors might come under more pressure to face the consequences of their own decisions. Maybe they’ll find someone else to blame. Maybe they’ll still shirk responsibility as much as possible. This is politics after all. But at least sometimes they’ll have to make the difficult choice they’ve avoided for so long: have their cake, or eat it too.

Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

SocietySeptember 16, 2024

‘It was quite baffling’: Police call driver on motorway to say ‘stop using your phone’

Image: Tina Tiller
Image: Tina Tiller

A roadside police officer spotted a driver allegedly on his phone – so searched his number plate, found his details and called him up. Stewart Sowman-Lund has the details in this special report for The Bulletin.

An Auckland motorist was surprised to receive a phone call from a police officer telling him to stop using his mobile phone – while he was still driving.

The driver, who The Spinoff has agreed not to name, admits interacting with his dash-mounted phone to check the navigation on a recent journey, but said it was counterintuitive to then be called up. 

“I was headed down state highway 16 city bound. I passed a [highway patrol] car, and 15 or 30 seconds later I got a phone call from an unknown number,” the driver explained. He answered, with the phone still mounted on the dash and on speaker. “They identified themselves as ‘the police’ [and asked] ‘why are you on your phone’.” 

The driver’s response? “Well, I’m talking to you.”

He presumed the stationary police car spotted him as he drove past, then searched the car’s number plate to find his details, including phone number, as registered owner.

The driver said the phone call was received while he was still travelling on the motorway at more than 80km/h. He’d never been called by a police officer before. “It was quite baffling, being startled by having the police phone you while still driving. It was quite a shock.”

The police officer allegedly verified the driver by reading out his number plate and home address. “I admitted it, yes, I did use my phone – it was in my line of sight, but where it is on my dash, it’s as much in my line of sight as the air con. It was confronting to say the least, but I gave my details.” A $150 fine arrived in the mail a few days later.

In comments to The Spinoff, a police spokesperson initially said that calling a motorist to discuss their driving was not standard practice. However, they later added that it was “not common” but, under certain circumstances, “police will occasionally contact registered vehicle owners to discuss driving behaviour”.

The spokesperson added: “In this instance, the officer involved would have been concerned enough to have contacted the driver via phone, as part of immediate follow-up actions.”

In response, the driver told The Spinoff it was more dangerous answering the phone and having a conversation with the officer than it had been adjusting his navigation. “[It’s] incredibly counterintuitive to potentially replicate a dangerous behaviour that they are trying to discourage,” he said.  

Given the public messaging around distracted driving, the driver said he was “shocked that they would ring me while driving”.

The police spokesperson said they made “no apology” for targeting “high-risk driving behaviours”. According to the transport agency, it is permitted to use a mounted phone while driving – though the official advice is that it’s safer not to use it at all.

In follow-up comments, police claimed the driver had been holding his phone, and said the officer had mouthed to the driver to “get off the phone” when he passed them on the motorway. The driver disputed this and questioned how he would have been expected to see what a police officer was mouthing on the side of the motorway as he drove past.

Asked for further details on when a police officer might choose to interact with a motorist in this way, police declined to answer. “Appreciate that you have further questions, but we have said everything we are going to say on this matter.”

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— Editor-at-large

Both police and the government have in recent months signalled a tougher crackdown on drivers using their mobile phones. In February, prime minister Christopher Luxon said he was willing to consider higher penalties for motorists. “People should not be on their phones while driving,” he told TVNZ’s Breakfast. Currently, the fine for being caught is $150 – the same penalty for driving more than 51 metres in a bus lane.

The number of drivers fined by police for using their phones rose by 25% between 2022 and 2023, with nearly 60,000 tickets handed out last year.

So far, the government has not announced any changes to how distracted drivers are penalised. Transport minister Simeon Brown told The Spinoff that distracted drivers are “a danger to themselves and others”. He reiterated that the government was open to raising the cost of a fine and said that this year’s government policy statement on land transport (GPS) included a commitment to review penalties for traffic offences, including consideration of indexing the value of infringements to inflation. “I am expecting to undertake this work over the GPS period,” Brown said.

Transport minister Simeon Brown (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

In 2022, a pilot programme saw Waka Kotahi roll out cameras capable of detecting when a driver was using their phone. In the first two months of the six-month trial, more than 50,000 “potential mobile phone use offences” were detected. Police were not involved in the trial and the findings did not lead to enforcement action or warning letters.

A Waka Kotahi spokesperson confirmed no cameras are currently being used to detect distracted drivers, and those used in the 2022 trial need “further trials and a law change before they can be used to detect offences”.

It’s expected that more intelligent cameras will eventually be rolled out as police hand over responsibility of the road camera network to the transport agency. Earlier this year, reported the Herald, the first “smart cameras” were installed on a dangerous stretch of Northland highway. However, at this stage they are only being used to catch speeding drivers. Given the cameras can read number plates and scan body heat, there have been concerns raised about privacy.

Data from the Ministry of Transport shows that between 2020 and 2022, 287 drivers were involved in fatal or injury crashes caused by cell phone distraction. 

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