Speed-limit bungle: The invalid tickets
Up to 25 councils may have forgotten to set speed limits on their roads, meaning tens of thousands of tickets could be invalid.
The Government moved urgently last night to fix the blunder, rushing through a law change to validate the speed limits and any tickets issued since 2004.
Auckland Council is not believed to be affected by the retrospective legislation, which Transport Minister Simon Bridges said was required for public safety.
“We haven’t wanted to create seri- ous legal uncertainty and a safety situation where obviously people might feel that they could speed on our roads,” he said.
Mr Bridges admitted that the blunder meant there had technically been no speed limit on a number of roads for up to 11 years.
“Of course, that is not going to be the legal position because this law change will be retrospective,” he said.
So far, just one local body, the Kapiti District Council, was confirmed to have expired speed limits. Mr Bridges said up to 25 councils might be in the same situation.
“We can be almost certain it’s more than Kapiti District Council. How many and who, I cannot say.”
Under law changes made more than 10 years ago, councils were given responsibility for setting speed limits on all roads except those with 100km/h limits.
These included roads outside schools where the speed limit dropped to 20km/h and stretches of highway where drivers were forced to slow down as they passed through townships.
Councils had to review their speed limits every five years or they expired.
Kapiti council officials approached the Government a month ago, saying they were concerned that its speed limits might have expired and other councils might be in the same position.
“They had a legal responsi- bility to review those within five years and then a grace period of two years and that didn’t happen,” Mr Bridges said.
In 2012, Auckland Council introduced a bylaw that amalgamated the speed limits set by the seven territorial councils that merged to form the Super City. It is unclear whether any of those seven had failed to conduct a speedlimit review.
The Labour Party’s spokesman on transport, Phil Twyford, said that given the number of councils likely to be affected, the number of invalid speeding tickets could be in the tens of thousands.
Mr Bridges said: “We don’t know how many but clearly a considerable amount of infringement notices . . . have been issued and we couldn’t have the legal uncertainty that goes with that.”
Over the past five years, the total number of speeding tickets issued on all roads nationwide ranged between 50,000 and 80,000 a month.
The minister said the Government’s top legal experts looked at a range of options for resolving the issue, but it was decided that retrospective legislation was the only way to fix it.