Otago Daily Times

Wof changes could raise cost

- PHIL PENNINGTON

WELLINGTON: The cost of a warrant of fitness could be forced up as mechanics spooked by a clampdown decide to get out of doing inspection­s.

The Motor Trade Associatio­n (MTA) warns this could happen, especially if coupled with a push — which it is backing — to change what the outdated warrants system covers to include such items as hightech radar.

‘‘We’ve heard from inspectors who’ll continue as mechanics or repairers but stop being inspectors because of the added compliance that may come,’’ MTA chief executive Craig Pomare said.

‘‘What the [NZ Transport] Agency have said is ‘we’re going to reshape who gets to be an inspector, reshape the training and profession­al developmen­t required, then reshape the auditing and testing of them’.

‘‘So I think, quite naturally out of that, we may lose a large number of inspectors because they don’t meet the higher standards and I think that’s a positive thing for the industry.’’

The NZTA has been ramping up its inspection­s regime after admitting in October to years of failing to enforce road safety rules.

An Invercargi­ll vehicle tester has just lost his authority to issue warrants of fitness after complaints about the quality of his work, in the first case of its kind in the South Island.

Thousands of vehicle owners will receive vouchers for free rechecks from the NZTA, after it revoked The WOF Man owner Donald Stewart McLean’s vehicle inspecting authority on Wednesday afternoon, and that of his business.

It cited his failure to properly inspect brakes, exhaust systems and corrosion repairs.

The NZTA said it had held concerns about Mr McLean’s warrant of fitness inspection­s for about seven years.

It comes after a spate of suspension­s in the North Island, affecting more than 20,000 vehicles.

Mr McLean has vowed to fight the decision in court.

A damning investigat­ion released earlier this week showed that not only did the NZTA’s frontline inspectors lack the power to suspend garages, senior managers had little idea how to do it.

William Ball (65) died from injuries in a crash in which his seatbelt failed, less than a month after a Dargaville garage had issued a warrant to the car.

Uncertaint­y by a panel of senior managers over who could suspend the garage contribute­d to eight months of delays in doing so.

The report also showed the only people at the agency who actually did have that suspension power — a fourperson adjudicati­on team — were too busy to look at the Dargaville case as they spent 90% of their time on commercial work, not

car warrants.

The agency’s frontline staff, the investigat­ion found, had ‘‘no meaningful way’’ to take urgent action even when public safety was at stake.

NZTA board chairman Michael Stiassny said none of the failings discussed in the report were news to him.

‘‘Unfortunat­ely, no,’’ he told RNZ. ‘‘There’s nothing here that surprises.

‘‘This is just a confirmati­on, sadly, of a position that we put forward as we found it late last year.’’ That discovery — which he made when he took the chairman’s job last April — came late.

The failings had been well known for years by the MTA and others in the industry, who say they raised the alarm with the agency.

‘‘Unfortunat­ely, in many instances that hasn’t gone anywhere,’’ Mr Pomare said.

‘‘The concerns that we as an industry had about rogue operators, about poor processes, about the inability of frontline inspectors . . . to be able to get stuck in and deal with those rogues, that’s all now . . . being dealt with, so we’re delighted.’’

‘‘If there are rogues in the industry they need to be dealt with,’’ Mr Pomare said.

AA Motoring Services general manager Stella Stocks said the change would be good as long as there was a fair process for garages to appeal.

‘‘If we can give the people who are monitoring the providers more power to make good decisions quickly, then that’s got to be better for vehicle safety,’’ Mrs Stocks said.

However, a trainer of mechanics, Brent Greenlees, of Auckland, said a fundamenta­l failing had not been reported on, and must be looked at.

‘‘Training for warrant of fitness inspection, and certificat­e of fitness inspection, once you become a vehicle inspector is not compulsory. It’s all voluntary.’’

He saw Wof inspectors who had not kept pace with rapid changes in technology that governed car safety systems ‘‘time and time again’’.

‘‘It’s not safe,’’ Mr Greenlees said.

Mr Pomare said the MTA was talking to the NZTA about training mechanics, and updating the Wof checks themselves.

Among the fixes Mr Stiassny was shepherdin­g through was a law change so the agency could force people to get their warrants redone.

They had already partially tightened up the quality management system that inspectors worked under and would keep working on that and tightening up other regulation­s throughout 2019, Mr Stiassny said.

The investigat­ion report did not address who is accountabl­e at the agency for the failings.

Mr Stiassny said they would get to that in due course. — Additional reporting Giordano Stolley

❛ If there are rogues in the industry they need

to be dealt with

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