Learner driver 'glad' police pulled her over

Ian Sadler and Dennis Bidois created the Awhi app which is used by police officers across the country.

An app created by two Tauranga police officers has made waves overseas for its simple approach to reducing reoffending rates within communities.

When police find someone in need of help – such as a Rotorua woman who drove on her learner’s licence for years – they can break the reoffending cycle by making a referral to relevant services. Harriet Laughton catches up with the cops behind Awhi.

A woman driving on her learner’s licence for 15 years says she is “glad” police pulled her over and fined her after they referred her to a programme that helped her pass her restricted test in three weeks in February.

Rotorua’s Careylee Ngatai says she “just gave up” after she failed her restricted licence four years ago and if she had not been pulled over she says she would still be driving her son around on her learner’s licence.

The police referral to the local licensing support programme was made through an app called Awhi – te reo Māori for “help” and an acronym for Alternative Ways of Help Intervention.

Awhi was created in 2018 by two Tauranga police officers to help reduce reoffending and it was so successful the country’s driving testing system initially became “overloaded” by people booking their tests.

Ian “Saddles” Sadler and Dennis “Den” Bidois say they created the app to help police “solve the symptoms” of crime.

Dennis says the app went “viral” within New Zealand and overseas and is available to every police officer in the country.

The app was replicated in Canada and Australia in 2022.

Ian and Dennis were tasked with cutting down the reoffending rate within their community, and it only took an hour to come up with the idea for Awhi, a referral tool police used to connect people needing help to the relevant services that could support the person’s particular needs.

Ian, then a highway patrol officer and now a senior performance analyst for the national road policing centre, created the technology for the app while school community officer Dennis fostered relationships with providers and police.

Ian Sadler is behind the technology for the app designed to help break the reoffending cycle.

The referral process takes “under two minutes” after the person consents and all officers need to do is fill in the blanks on a pre-populated email sent to a service provider.

“We came to the realisation we have a whole bunch of service providers in the community and a whole bunch of people who need to talk to them, but there was nothing in the middle connecting the people needing help,” says Dennis.

He says referrals are made “as well as” not “instead of” disqualifications, fines and arrests.

After its launch in Western Bay of Plenty in 2018, word spread and it expanded to the Eastern Bay of Plenty and Waikato East in the first three to four months and achieved a national rollout in May 2022.

To date, about 81,000 referrals have been made nationally, including about 18,600 in the Bay of Plenty – 8300 in Rotorua and 5200 in Tauranga.

Dennis says the high number of Rotorua referrals is due to a Rotorua and Tokoroa-based organisation called Moving Mountains NZ, which helps people – including Careylee – pass their driver licence tests.

Most referrals are related to road policing and family wellbeing, which accounted for 57.51% and 23.8% of the country’s referrals respectively. Addiction services, mental health and accommodation follows.

Dennis says after they started making referrals to organisations that could help people get their driver licences, wait times for tests increased drastically across the country.

“We overloaded the system because all these people figured out, ‘man, I’m actually ready’,” says Dennis.

Ian says the app has helped some people out of a cycle of police interactions. He shares another driver licensing story.

He says a woman had been in contact with police 41 times before she received her referral when pulled over for driving with a passenger on her restricted licence.

A fortnight later, she passed her full licence and landed her first full-time job doing deliveries.

Ian says police have not stopped her since.

“We get called because of the symptoms. We solve the symptoms. You’re under arrest for hurting your wife. But what’s the problem?” says Dennis.

“Because if we don’t solve the problem, he comes back, the problem is still there, and we arrest him again and again and again.”

Ian says the app is used to help non-offenders as well.

For example, he has sometimes pulled over a car full of young people and referred them all to get their licence.

“As time went on, I’d be talking to the driver and people from the back seat would be going, ‘hey Mr, can I get one of those Awhi things?’” Sadler said.

‘Punishment is not the main goal’

Moving Mountains chief executive Nouha Tavita says after the app launched, client numbers “went through the roof”.

In the last financial year, 80% of its clients gained their full licences, 76% gained their restricted, and 95% gained their learner’s.

Nouha says they are “far exceeding the national rate for success”, with NZ Transport Agency data showing a 52% pass rate for the calendar year so far.

Moving Mountains data reveals the main barriers people face to sitting their driver’s test were low literacy and numeral skills, financial barriers, confidence, and not having access to a roadworthy car.

The Ministry of Social Development granted funding for the programme last year, meaning any person with an Awhi referral is fully covered for their test and is given driving lessons from one of six teachers in the Bay of Plenty.

Nouha says she receives calls about clients in court asking about their participation in the programme, and she says it can help the judge be in their favour if they are engaged.

“Punishment is not the main goal anymore.”

-Bay of Plenty Times.

3 comments

Great initiative

Posted on 05-08-2024 17:32 | By tia

Well done Sgt Sadler and Const Bidois. It is not all about ticket writing.


I do understand....

Posted on 05-08-2024 23:27 | By groutby

...the reasoning behind this and am sure the intention is well meaning....but....getting a full driver licence is clearly and accurately explained in law, and the requirements stated within.
If it is now possible to 'reconfigure' standards to enable a licence to be obtained even after a length of time for some, then does it suggest a potential further reduction in not only driving standard but also not needing to take self responsibility for ones own actions....again.
I have always understood that 'ignorance of the law' is no excuse.....it would seem that further erosion of that basic principle is alive and well....
Look, well done to those who have finally taken responsibility but if we continue to 'spoon feed' so many without enforcing the law clearly in the first place, then standards can do nothing other than continue to reduce including breaking the law....


@Groutby

Posted on 06-08-2024 15:23 | By morepork

A good post, which I read several times and thought about. You toched one of my "buttons": personal responsibility. We have had Nanny State governments for so long now that generations are growing up EXPECTING, as of right, to have everything drop in their lap. Values like Respect, Responsibility, and Consideration, are not fashionable any more. "It wasn't my fault, I had an unhappy childhood and that wasn't my parent's fault..." And so on.
Nobody takes responsibility for anything, and when things go wrong we see blame and deflection. As if a problem is somehow diminished by having someone to yell at.
If Awhi helps people, I'm all in favour, but I'd rather see a grass roots movement towards responsibility and personal accountability. Graeme Dingle Foundation programs in schools are a much under-recognized and under-supported move in this direction. "Kiwi Can" is an outstanding program in this regard.


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