Hawke's Bay Today

Call to scrap offensive number plate

Offer of free replacemen­ts for car owners

- Tom Kitchen for RNZ

AHawke’s Bay man is calling for an offensive number plate to be removed from circulatio­n after he found one on his new car. Earlier this year, James Crow and his family needed a new plate for a recently purchased car, and went along to collect it.

They were shocked when they found the first three letters on the number plate were “NGR”.

“We arrived at the AA Centre to receive it and as we drove in, and my wife saw it first and said ‘oh my, we can’t have that on the front of our car’,” Crow told RNZ.

Crowe, a Green party candidate in Napier at the last general election, asked why this run of plates had slipped through.

“If there have been many, many number plates that have been avoided being produced in the past with different three-letter words or different three-letter analogies, why did this one slip through? ’Cause it felt like if it’s going to really offend or hurt a few people in the public, it’s not necessary.”

Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency is responsibl­e for number plates.

A spokespers­on said the NGR number plate series was manufactur­ed earlier this year.

A total of 999 plates was included in the series, as was the case for all three-letter standard-issue plate series.

The spokespers­on said generaliss­ue plates could be prevented from being manufactur­ed due to the potential for letter combinatio­ns to cause offence.

“While this three-letter combinatio­n was not withheld, Waka Kotahi recognises the offence the letter combinatio­n has caused, and we will arrange for replacemen­t standard issue plates to be provided at no charge for any vehicle owners who do not wish to retain the plates,” the spokespers­on said.

“We are also looking at the practicali­ty of withdrawin­g the series from circulatio­n. We are reviewing our processes to ensure that future number plate combinatio­ns are more thoroughly assessed before being manufactur­ed and released.”

Some three-letter combinatio­ns have previously been withheld.

Waka Kotahi also has banned the manufactur­ing of registrati­on plates that contain the letters I, O, and V as these letters can easily be mistaken for 1, 0, and U, and can cause issues for enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

 ?? Photo / File ?? James Crow and his family needed a new plate for a recently purchased car and were shocked at what they received.
Photo / File James Crow and his family needed a new plate for a recently purchased car and were shocked at what they received.

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