Manawatu Standard

NZTA urged to issue ‘red cards’ on WOF fails

- Amanda Cropp

The motoring industry says the New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) needs to behave like a proper referee and start handing out ‘‘red cards’’ to substandar­d warrant of fitness certifiers.

Motor Trade Associatio­n (MTA) chief executive Craig Pomare said it was appalling that Dargaville Diesel Specialist­s had continued issuing warrants despite longstandi­ng agency concerns about its operations.

Even after a fatal January crash where a passenger died when a seatbelt failed in a recently warranted car, it was late August before NZTA stopped the firm doing WOF inspection­s.

‘‘NZTA has been standing on the sidelines; they need to be out on the pitch handing out red cards. You can’t be a nice referee because you’re dealing with a safety issue. In this case they had been on NZTA’S radar since 2011 for not having done inspection­s properly,’’ Pomare said.

Pomare said the Dargaville testing service was not among MTA’S 3700 members, and, although he did not think faulty warrants were a major issue, it was impossible to know.

MTA had talked to NZTA about improving its auditing procedures, and in the past 12 months the associatio­n had put 1500 inspectors through a WOF training programme.

‘‘There are 6 million WOF inspection­s annually and you only need one that results in a loss of life. Every day these inspectors are making life and death decisions about cars.’’

Pomare said that over the past six years national WOF failure rates had risen 3 per cent to 38 per cent.

This was equivalent to an additional 180,000 vehicles failing warrants. Lights were by far the most common reason for inspectors to refuse warrants, followed by tyres, then steering and suspension.

‘‘There are still a lot of cars that fail their WOF but don’t come back for a recheck, so they’re sitting in the fleet with those safety issues exposed.’’

In the Dargaville case, NZTA wrote to almost 2000 vehicle owners urging them to get their cars re-certified at its cost. As WOFS cost about $50 on average, the bill is likely to be substantia­l.

Of the 741 re-checked to date, 63 per cent failed their first reinspecti­on, and in 58 cases faults were found in seatbelts.

 ??  ?? Motor Trade Associatio­n boss Craig Pomare says lights, tyres, steering and suspension are the main reasons behind WOF failures.
Motor Trade Associatio­n boss Craig Pomare says lights, tyres, steering and suspension are the main reasons behind WOF failures.

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