Goff sets sights on clampers
Mayor and Labour’s Wood to submit bill to Parliament seeking to regulate enforcers
Momentum building against cowboy clampers as Auckland’s mayor rejoins the fight to properly regulate the industry. Phil Goff and Labour’s consumer affairs spokesman Michael Wood intend to submit a local bill in Parliament asking for more powers to regulate private parking enforcement.
The move comes after a Herald investigation showed parking enforcers were clamping wheels within seconds of their owners leaving one Mt Eden car park, forcing distressed drivers to pay on-the-spot fees of $150 to have the clamp released.
Goff was extremely outspoken about wheel clamping when he was the MP for Mt Roskill, calling parking enforcers bullies who were running is a “money-making racket”.
When approached this month he was initially reluctant to take action on the issue, but now appears to be taking a stronger stance.
He said that despite the introduction of a voluntary code of practice in 2015, the issue of clamping was “the same as it’s always been”.
“I think too often there’s a temptation to use [clamping] as a moneymaking exercise.”
Hefty fees were “totally out of proportion” for a few minutes of parking, even if the driver was in the wrong.
Goff would be seeking responses from council to see if the bill has wider support once Wood had cleared its submission with the clark’s office, he said.
Labour has also submitted a private member’s bill seeking to make the current voluntary code of conduct which regulates parking enforcement compulsory — but it has been in the ballot for more than a year.
Local bills avoid the usual members’ ballot and have priority in Parliament over ordinary members’ bills.
Goff hoped the act of submitting a local bill would be an incentive for Consumer Affairs Minister Jacqui Dean to act faster on a nationwide solution for the issue.
Dean told the Herald she was waiting for advice from officials about wheel clamping but had not had time to look into it yet.
National MP for Auckland central Nikki Kaye has also said she would be looking into clamping.
Wood said he believed the minister was choosing not to prioritise the issue.
While Dean was new to the role, having taken on the portfolio last December, Wood said so far he wasn’t impressed with her handling of consumer issues.
“There have been two serious issues that have come up in that time — free-range eggs, and this issue, and there isn’t exactly a lightning speed action to either of them.”