Far North’s first fixed speed camera attacked


The Far North’s first fixed speed camera in Taumatamākuku in Northland.

The Far North’s first fixed speed camera is out of action less than a week after it was turned on.
Photo: Supplied / NZTA Waka Kotahi

The Far North’s first fixed speed camera has been vandalised less than a week after it was switched on.

The camera was installed beside State Highway 1 between Kawakawa and Moerewa, at the request of residents in the nearby settlement of Taumatamākuku after a series of fatal crashes.

After a lengthy trial phase, the camera was finally turned on last Monday.

The chairman of the Taumatamākuku Community Representatives Committee, Roddy Pihema, said he had been informed by the Waka Kotahi / New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) the camera stopped working at 12.30am on Saturday. He checked the camera and found it had been damaged with a pick or similar implement.

Pihema said the damage was disappointing because the camera was installed at the behest of the community, and only affected people who were breaking the 80km/h speed limit through Taumatamākuku.

“The whole point of putting it there is to protect our community in Taumatamākuku. People might not understand that because it’s down the road from us, but it’s had a real impact on speed already.”

The towns on either side of the settlement, Kawakawa and Moerewa, were not affected because the highway through those areas was subject to a 50km/h urban limit.

“Our community is between them. We’re in an 80km/h zone, dropped from 100km/h, and that’s why the camera is important to us.”

There were claims the camera had been installed as a revenue-gathering exercise for NZTA or the government, but Pihema said that was not the case.

At the community’s request, all other functions – such as automatic number plate recognition – had been removed from the camera, so the only people affected were those who broke the speed limit.

He said people also complained the camera was a waste of money, but now money would have to be spent repairing it.

He put the vandalism down to a “kickback” during the past week, and the belief of some motorists that they were entitled to speed through the settlement.

NZTA has been contacted for comment.

During the past two years the Taumatamākuku Community Representatives Committee has succeeded in reducing the speed limit on the highway and within the settlement, as well as having speed bumps and footpaths built so children and kaumātua and kuia no longer have to walk on the road.

The camera was the first fixed speed camera in the Far North and the first installed by Waka Kotahi in Northland.

Police operate two fixed speed cameras elsewhere in Northland – at Te Kamo in Whangārei and Kaiwaka in the Kaipara District.



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