Weekend Herald

Minister helps builder win fight to keep ‘testy’ licence plate

- Adam Pearse

An Auckland man has won his battle with the national transport agency to keep his personalis­ed licence plates, “NUTSAX”, after authoritie­s decided they must be forfeited after a complainan­t found them offensive.

Taylor Crawshaw’s fight to keep his plates, intended to raise awareness of testicular cancer, reached the highest levels of New Zealand Government with minister and future Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour urging Transport Minister Simeon Brown to intervene.

Crawshaw, a 20-year-old builder from Te Atatu¯, is glad the right decision was made and says the experience demonstrat­ed how people should fight for what they believe in.

Seymour hails the backdown as a “victory for common sense” and jokes the matter adds to his reputation as a defender of “pricks everywhere” — a reference to former PM Jacinda Ardern’s 2022 insult which turned into a fundraiser to address prostate cancer.

Crawshaw bought the plates second-hand about three years ago, initially in jest, but decided to use them to raise awareness about testicular cancer.

They had been made about 11 years ago and Crawshaw said the previous owner had not experience­d any issues.

Crawshaw used stickers to add “Check Ya” above the plates to make sure his aim of raising awareness was clear.

He said he had never received negative feedback, with many commuters winding down their windows to commend him or post images and videos on social media.

However, that changed when he received an email from the New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) about three months ago, notifying him of a complaint and requesting an explanatio­n.

The email said the complaint centred on the plates having “sexual connotatio­ns” and being “offensive”.

Crawshaw explained his reasoning but, about a week ago, NZTA told him the original decision to approve the plates 11 years ago had been reversed and the plates would have to be forfeited by February 8.

“That sort of pissed me off, so I threw the letter straight in the bin,” he said.

He posted about the situation on a men’s mental health social media page and soon received hundreds of supportive comments, including one suggesting he seek help from Seymour.

Crawshaw wrote to the Act leader and Regulation­s Minister, who almost immediatel­y took up the matter with Transport Minister Simeon Brown through a letter on Wednesday.

“Minister, the balls are very much in your court on this one,” Seymour wrote to Brown.

“What’s more important — protecting the feelings of an individual who mistook the plates’ meaning . . . or raising awareness about a disease that about 150 Kiwi men are diagnosed with every year and 7-10 die from.

“Please demand your officials to revisit this testy decision and let Mr Crawshaw continue to spread his positive message up and down New Zealand.”

Brown, responding via letter on the same day, told Seymour he had sent Seymour’s letter to NZTA and he understood the agency was investigat­ing options to retain the plates.

Crawshaw was informed later that day by NZTA that a second review of the complaint had been done following a “request from the minister’s office”.

“After a second review, we have decided to allow the plate number to remain in circulatio­n providing the surroundin­g message ‘Check ya’ is printed on the plate number above ‘NUTSAX’,” the NZTA email read.

Crawshaw, now awaiting new plates with the necessary surroundin­g to be manufactur­ed, said the experience was a good reminder to stick to what he believed in.

“If you really stand for something, fight for it.

“I wasn’t going to give up without a fight. I don’t normally do that so it came in handy for once.”

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