The Northern Advocate

New traffic camera to target speeding only

Our national network of traffic cameras is being taken from police to be run by NZTA. As David Fisher reports, the agency has been warned it must win the trust of communitie­s like Northland before rolling out its increasing­ly intrusive technology, which

-

For years, Taumatamak­uku was a village so small that those travelling State Highway 1 in Northland could easily have missed it.

Now, those who speed through the tiny village will get a ticket in the post, courtesy of NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi’s (NZTA) first functional traffic camera.

But that’s the extent of the enforcemen­t because the new camera will operate at just a fraction of its capabiliti­es - something NZTA considers a critical step in gaining community support.

The camera can recognise number plates automatica­lly. NZTA has cameras that can identify whether drivers are wearing seatbelts or are talking on the phone - and complete thermal imaging of the car’s occupants.

And here in Taumatamak­uku, between Kawakawa and Moerewa in Northland, it is all about the speed on a long, flat section of road that has seen fatal crash after fatal crash over the years.

The camera’s installati­on has become controvers­ial on community Facebook groups. Locals were worried tickets would be issued to those driving vehicles without a warrant of fitness (WoF) or registrati­ons, common practice in a part of the country where people struggle to even put petrol in the tank. As it stands, NZTA can’t legally target registrati­ons or WoF with the cameras.

But even those things that are possible under existing laws are not all being used.

“One thing we took into considerat­ion was that we live in a low socioecono­mic community. The issue has never been about warrants. It has always been about speed,” said Roddy Hapati-Pihema, the chairman of the Taumatamak­uku Community Residents Representa­tive Committee.

“We were always the ones who would have to get out of our beds early in the morning - along here the amount of death is huge.

“You get there and there are limbs scattered across the road. We’re the ones holding their hands as they die. We’re the ones who have to speak to their families.”

‘First safety camera’

It’s not just the first time this new camera technology has been made

operationa­l on New Zealand’s highways.

It’s also NZTA’s first safety camera site - at a time when the agency is moving into its new role as custodian of the country’s traffic camera network.

It is in the process of taking over the existing network of about 150 cameras operated by police with a stated plan to increase the number to 800 separate camera sites on state highways by 2030.

The road safety agency is currently investigat­ing which camera capabiliti­es it will use - and what it will do with the data it collects.

The Privacy Impact Assessment carried out for NZTA said new traffic cameras could measure speed over distance, use thermal scanning on vehicle occupants, automatica­lly read and transmit number plate data and map the outline of vehicles including colour, vehicle type, length and axle.

Discussion­s were also under way with police over the number plate and other data the new cameras automatica­lly collected - although not the camera at Taumatamak­uku, which does not have this function switched on.

The assessment warned the agency it needed to take people with it on its journey to safer highways.

“Although cameras and recording devices are ubiquitous in our society, these tools are viewed as intrusive and potentiall­y generate emotive commentary alleging unwarrante­d surveillan­ce systems,” it said.

It told the agency that its “ability to carry out its business is based on the confidence society has that it will behave legitimate­ly, with accountabi­lity and in a socially and environmen­tally responsibl­e way”.

Cautious approval for cameras

Hapati-Pihema, also a Bay of IslandsWha­ngaroa Community Board member, said some people in neighbouri­ng communitie­s felt frustrated a new camera was being installed and paranoid about what it might be used for.

He said it had been important to tell those people that despite its many capabiliti­es, the new camera was only going to capture those speeding.

“It’s not even a speed camera now. It’s a safety camera. If it saves lives - even one - then it’s worth it.”

Hapati-Pihema said the community needed help to solve an issue with speed but is not inviting intrusion on those not speeding.

“It doesn’t mean we want to see more of these things all over the place. Just because we have given tautoko for this doesn’t mean we gave tautoko for all of them.”

Making the community safer

An NZTA spokeswoma­n said Taumatamak­uku would be a test case for the rest of the country. Testing continued but it would only be weeks before the camera was live and issuing tickets. “We’ve been testing all parts of the system thoroughly so that we can roll out new safety camera technology successful­ly across the motu,” she said.

“Given we are testing new Halo camera technology, it made sense to test some of its new functions that will be needed in future sites but not required at this site.”

Transport Minister Simeon Brown’s draft Government Policy Statement on transport was silent on the scale of the networked traffic camera system.

On safety, it said the Government intended to improve the quality of roads to allow recent speed-limit reductions to be reversed “where it is safe to do so”. That could include roads with speed limits to 110km/h, he said.

While the emphasis was on upgrading roads, it also said tougher - or more expensive - enforcemen­t was on the way with tickets and demerit penalties set too low and out of step with comparable countries.

An example in Brown’s plan was seatbelt fines which cost drivers $150 in New Zealand while “bringing our penalties in line with Australia would require nearly tripling the infringeme­nt fee”.

 ?? Photo / David Fisher ?? NZTA contractor­s install the advanced traffic camera in Northland.
Photo / David Fisher NZTA contractor­s install the advanced traffic camera in Northland.
 ?? Photo / NZME ?? A community effort to improve safety in Taumatamak­uku Settlement has paid off with a reduced speed limit, speed bumps and footpaths so children no longer have to walk on the road. Pictured are past and present road safety campaigner­s, (from left) Miriama Hapati-Pihema, Te Awe Koni, Roddy Hapati-Pihema and Georgina Edmonds.
Photo / NZME A community effort to improve safety in Taumatamak­uku Settlement has paid off with a reduced speed limit, speed bumps and footpaths so children no longer have to walk on the road. Pictured are past and present road safety campaigner­s, (from left) Miriama Hapati-Pihema, Te Awe Koni, Roddy Hapati-Pihema and Georgina Edmonds.
 ?? Photo / David Fisher ?? NZTA contractor­s install the new camera on its “advanced pole” between Kawakawa and Moerewa in Northland.
Photo / David Fisher NZTA contractor­s install the new camera on its “advanced pole” between Kawakawa and Moerewa in Northland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand