Bay of Plenty Times

Petition for a rainbow crossing in city centre

LGBTI advocate who asked council for new installati­on seeks public support

- Kiri Gillespie

An LGBTI advocate who has campaigned for six years for Tauranga City Council to install a rainbow crossing in the CBD is taking his efforts public. Gordy Lockhart set up a petition last week asking for support to bring the city into line with other New Zealand centres that have establishe­d crossings to celebrate and show support to the Rainbow community.

Pedestrian crossings depicting a rainbow flag can be found internatio­nally and in New Zealand, including in Auckland, Gisborne, Wellington and New Plymouth.

In recent weeks, rainbow crossings in Gisborne and Auckland have been painted over with white paint, resulting in arrests and charges over alleged vandalism.

Lockhart said he approached Tauranga’s council six years ago about painting a rainbow crossing on The Strand or Devonport Rd.

“It started with the collaborat­ion of Tauranga Moana Pride, to celebrate our LGBTQ+ community,” he said.

“But now I feel the rainbow represents all of us and the rainbow crossing is something that all of us as humans — a whole bunch of people with different beliefs, cultures and ethnicitie­s — are better off for celebratin­g those difference­s.”

More recently, Lockhart has proposed the crossing could tie in with Te Manawataki o Te Papa Civic Precinct developmen­t plans. “The rainbow is all of us.” Lockhart said he sent several emails asking the council to consider a rainbow crossing he believed would recognise Tauranga as a “diverse space and diverse community”.

“We are a heterogene­ous society of multiple cultures and we are better for that.”

He said the council initially responded to his requests by stating that it had to abide by Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency regulation­s, that crossings had to be black and white.

“Since then, there hasn’t really been a reason [other than] ‘Yes, it’s something we want to do at some stage but it has to be done through a consultati­on process’.”

He said he viewed that kind of response as “just a pat on the head”.

Lockhart said he struggled to see how anything bad could come from such crossings, despite recent alleged vandalism and Destiny Church leader Brian Tamaki threatenin­g to sue councils that have installed them — a move legal experts have since described as “impossible”.

“How could there possibly be harm from having a rainbow crossing that says our people are valued?” Lockhart said.

Tauranga City Council was asked why it had not allowed a rainbow crossing, particular­ly when other councils had. It was also asked if the matter had to go through a consultati­on process, as suggested, and how this worked when other roading changes did not.

Head of transport Nic Johansson said the council would “consider all petitions thoroughly and in accordance with standing orders”.

“However, rainbow pedestrian crossings have been explored before and not pursued. We are open to looking at other ways to celebrate diversity in our city and welcome any ideas.”

Asked for more explanatio­n as to why specifical­ly a rainbow crossing would not be installed, a spokesman said more comment could be provided after the petition was considered and responded to.

The Change.org petition has attracted more than 700 supporters since it was launched on Thursday.

On social media people expressed polarised views with some stating it would support diversity and others saying ratepayer money should be better spent elsewhere.

One said if it was okay to have a smiley face on a roundabout — such as that the council has maintained at Mount Maunganui — then why not a rainbow crossing?

In 2019 the council painted 3D-look crossings on The Strand, saying at the time they were to encourage drivers to slow down and were “more visually engaging than a standard pedestrian crossing”.

A transport agency spokeswoma­n said the responsibi­lity for installing rainbow crossings and other roadway art lay with the relevant road controllin­g authority, such as Tauranga City Council, for local roads, and the agency for state highways.

There were no state highways running through Tauranga’s CBD.

Under the Traffic Control Devices Rule, updated last year, roadway art could be installed if it does not resemble another roadway marking or mislead road users about the meaning of any traffic control device, the spokeswoma­n said.

Kiri Gillespie is an assistant news director and a senior journalist for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post, specialisi­ng in local politics and city issues. She was a finalist for the Voyager Media Awards Regional Journalist of the Year in 2021.

 ?? ?? Gisborne’s rainbow crossing on main street Gladstone Rd, before it was vandalised. Inset: LGBTI advocate Gordy Lockhart.
Gisborne’s rainbow crossing on main street Gladstone Rd, before it was vandalised. Inset: LGBTI advocate Gordy Lockhart.
 ?? PHOTO / ANDREW WARNER ?? Devonport Rd in Tauranga’s CBD, pictured in 2015.
PHOTO / ANDREW WARNER Devonport Rd in Tauranga’s CBD, pictured in 2015.

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