A road trial on Links Avenue in Mount Maunganui continues to confuse people with one warning sent to a woman who didn't even drive down the street.
On April 5 Sandra Riggir drove along Golf Road, past the intersection of Links Avenue, and a few days later she received a warning letter in the mail for using the bus lane on Links Avenue.
'At first, I was panicked,” she says.
'I thought, oh my God, what have I done? Because I know I didn't go to Links Avenue.”
Sandra contacted Tauranga City council about her warning and was told she shouldn't have received it.
'I haven't been provided with a satisfactory answer as to why,” she says.
'The logic of it escapes me.”
The Ōtūmoetai resident is concerned other people may have been ticketed incorrectly and paid without challenging it.
The eastern end of Links Avenue has been turned into a bus lane for authorised vehicles only, as part of a four month trial to reduce traffic volumes and increase safety on the street.
Anyone caught driving through the bus lane will be fined $150.
In the last three weeks more than 9500 vehicles have driven through the bus lane attracting $1.43 million in fines as of Monday, May 9.
During the first two weeks of the trial, only warnings were issued and 8500 were sent out.
Hastings woman Anne-marie Reid was showing her Rottweiler puppy at a dog show in Palmerston North at the time she received a fine.
'I thought, well, how the hell can that be? It's absolutely impossible,” says Reid about opening the letter containing the fine.
'I can't be in two places at once.”
She doesn't even know where Links Avenue is in Mount Maunganui and hasn't been to the city recently.
Anne-marie Reid was brassed off after receiving an infringement. Photo: Supplied.
Anne-marie is frustrated she has had to spend time disputing the infringement.
'I was brassed off because I knew it was going to be a lot of telephone calls, emails, and a lot of shagging around.
'I know what the councils are like, they take their sweet time.”
She is also worried the fine won't be cleared correctly and could result in further penalties or prevent her from travelling.
'If they don't process it properly and they miss it, then it just goes unpaid and I don't want to go through that hassle,” says Anne-marie.
The woman is the second case of a person getting fined whilst being in another city.
Local Democracy Reporting spoke to Christchurch man James Tomlin who received a warning despite being in Christchurch.
James was concerned someone was using altered licence plates with his registration.
More than 9500 fine have been issued for using the Links Avenue bus lane. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.
For all three cases Tauranga City Council blamed human error.
The bus lane is monitored by an Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) camera.
Council regulation monitoring team leader Stuart Goodman says human error has resulted in the registration being entered incorrectly and an infringement being issued.
'The process that is in place requires a warranted parking officer to review the evidence collected by the camera, before an infringement is issued,” says Goodman.
'Less than 1 per cent of processed warning letters and infringement notices have included inaccuracies – 99 per cent have been sent out correctly.
'Like anything, there is a small margin for error, one per cent is incredibly low.”
Goodman says if people that believe they have received an incorrect or unjust fine they can dispute this.
Information about how to dispute a fine is outlined on the infringement notice, he says.
Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.
3 comments
Lane to motoring misery
Posted on 11-05-2022 22:43 | By Get our roads
Why cant the Council just leave things alone, what have they done to think they know better than residents and commuters that have to sit in this stifled city every week day from 6am to 7pm at night just to get to work and home. TGA has been let down by the democratic process who first voted the idiots in before the commissioners and then again by the government who appointed the idiot commissioners in, all the while getting ripped off by rates rises for what exactly, bus and cycle lanes when everyone has busy lives and public or bike dont work, no one is gonna get us out of this Tolley mess LOL. That's my Tolley good idea. LOL
Links Ave trial needs to be ended
Posted on 12-05-2022 09:42 | By jed
Links Ave is a busy road and school children do need to take care. But, in saying that, there have been no deaths, and I'm not aware of any cycling injuries. Closing Links was a terrible decision, costly, and all that is wrong with Tauranga council. The Maunganui Rd road works are the next issue... they should have finished this in a couple of days . Instead, these have been going for weeks... what is wrong with the council? They should never be putting in a traffic island, the blake park improvements are also terrible.
Human error
Posted on 12-05-2022 13:20 | By CliftonGuy
Of course it was human error. The biggest human error was the one who decided to block off Links Avenue, itself a misnomer if ever I saw one.
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