Marlborough Express

Lost and found on the buses

- FELICITY REID

NZ Bus duty supervisor Jo Anderson calls herself the Sherlock Holmes of lost property.

And like any good detective, Anderson goes to great lengths to crack a case.

She has used her snooping skills to successful­ly reunite owners with many items left on Auckland buses, including an architect with his irreplacea­ble project work and a gamer with a bag full of Dungeons & Dragons gear.

But some cases are more unusual than others.

Just before Christmas a child ended up in the NZ Bus depot’s lost property department, Anderson said.

‘‘We had a child here, she must have been about three or four, and basically the mother had three kids, they were doing their Christmas shopping in Newmarket , it got a bit hectic, the kids ran for a bus, but they must have run for separate buses and she kind of lost track of one,’’ Anderson said.

‘‘We found the child, the driver brought her into the depot and then consequent­ly for about twoand-a-half hours we were babysitter­s.’’

Anderson has also been able to reconnect a very grateful Brazilian tourist with the $5000 she misplaced in a travel wallet that had slipped down between the seat and the side of a bus on the City Link route.

‘‘She came in and she was on the floor, she was kissing the ground, and she was ecstatic.’’

All items are logged in the lost property computer database, and Anderson recommende­d bus users ‘‘don’t lose faith’’ if an initial call to the depot does not immediatel­y turn up the missing item.

‘‘Call back the following day, sometimes a bus can be out on the road until midnight and it is not until the bus is back at the depot that cleaners find the items.’’

The depot’s lost property phone line runs hot all day, every day.

Anderson said the lost child and missing money were extreme examples, but a skilsaw, a set of suitcases, a folder of legal case notes and enough varied musical instrument­s to start an orchestra were among some of the more unusual items to pass across the lost property desk in recent times.

The bus depot in central Auckland currently has a lost property cupboard and drawers brimming with the commonly left-behind items of sunglasses, wallets, cellphones, house keys, car keys, swipe cards, school uniform pieces and umbrellas.

Groceries also get forgotten when people exit the bus.

Any money from unclaimed wallets is given to the Auckland City Mission and over the years cellphones have been donated to recycling programmes like the the Starship Foundation Mobile Phone Appeal.

Passports are handed to police. As much as Anderson enjoys solving a good mystery, she recommends the ‘‘forgetful’’ label their possession­s with a name and phone number to increase the odds of stray items returning to their rightful owner in a timely manner.

Takaka road open

Takaka Hill re-opened yesterday to traffic to the relief of thousands in Golden Bay who had been cut off since ex-cyclone Gita hit the South Island last week. A steady stream of cars, campervans and trucks carrying much needed supplies was making its way over the road yesterday morning after it re-opened to a single lane at 9am. The road was dusty in places due to the dried silt however, the drive over was surprising­ly straightfo­rward with next to no holdups and the road, although down to one lane in places, was in better condition than expected. It took about 40 minutes from Upper Takaka to Riwaka. Some people arrived as early as 5am to secure a place in the queue on the Takaka side. NZ Transport Agency system manager Frank Porter said only one direction would be allowed to travel at a time so people should expect long wait times between convoys and come prepared with food and water. Beyond Sunday, the road would be closed so crews could continue with repair works. ‘‘We are aiming to provisiona­lly open the road for a limited period at 7am and again at 5pm each day to allow for essential travel, subject to weather and the condition of the road,’’ Porter said.

Beekeeper dies

A beekeeper has died after crashing his truck on farmland near Gisborne on Sunday morning. A police spokeswoma­n said police were called to the scene of the crash at 1.26am. The man crashed his truck at Motu while checking his beehives, the spokeswoma­n said. He was found dead at the scene.

Train victim named

Aman who died when a train hit a quad bike in the Western Bay of Plenty was local man Matthew Paul Pettigrew, 53. The crash happened near Katikati at 8.20pm on Friday. Police confirmed that three people had been riding the quad bike at the time of the crash. One sustained minor injuries and the third was uninjured.

 ?? PHOTO: FELICITY REID/STUFF ?? Mobile phones are among the left-behind items NZ Bus duty supervisor Jo Anderson and her team deal with.
PHOTO: FELICITY REID/STUFF Mobile phones are among the left-behind items NZ Bus duty supervisor Jo Anderson and her team deal with.

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